The Morning Call

Clock ticking amid Trump tumult

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A sudden halt in Trump’s expensive television advertisem­ents last week highlighte­d the campaign’s challenge. It came two weeks after a staffing shakeup and two months after Brad Parscale, Trump’s previous campaign manager, unleashed a “Death Star” ad blitz on Biden that only coincided with the president’s support falling even further.

The campaign downplayed the ad pause, saying new campaign manager Bill Stepien wanted to analyze when and where Trump’s advertisin­g message was being delivered. A significan­t amount of TV ad time has already been reserved from Labor Day until the election, and the campaign rebooted its advertisin­g this week.

The purchase was made with an eye on the new electoral calendar. The old adage that most of America doesn’t start paying attention to a campaign until Labor Day has been tossed aside in a year in which the novel coronaviru­s has killed more than 155,000 people in the U.S. and rewritten the rules of American society.

The new ad campaign will be a national buy but also target states that are among the earliest to vote. Trump campaign officials said the focus in August will be on states where more than half of the ballots will be cast before Election Day.

“The digital countdown clock on the wall may say 90-some days, but we all know the calendar is condensed with early voting,” said campaign communicat­ions director Tim Murtaugh.

Still, the Trump campaign has been wavering for weeks. It has struggled to land effective blows on Biden. Trump and his allies have recently sought to tie Biden to the extreme leftist elements of his party — an uneasy fit for a moderate who has been in the public eye for more than four decades.

The campaign has all but pulled the plug on competing in Michigan and, privately, acknowledg­es deficits in vital battlegrou­nd states like Florida, Wisconsin and Arizona, though it insists the margins are manageable and smaller than what is reflected in public polling. They also downplayed the chances of losing reliably Republican states, though Trump did make a campaign stop in Texas last week.

Trump’s support collapsed after the pandemic reached America’s shores and crushed its economy. With the Republican National Convention scaled back and rallies seemingly impossible to hold, Trump is running out of headline-grabbing set pieces to change the momentum of the race. Many around the president are focused on the debates as perhaps the best chance, pushing for more showdowns with Biden to increase the chance of the former vice president faltering on stage.

“A lot of people are going to start voting before Sept. 29. The idea that they would not have seen one presidenti­al debate by then, to me, seems ridiculous,” said former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a Trump ally. “I think we should either move the dates up or add additional debates.”

The president’s advisers are also trying to reimagine a campaign without its trademark rallies. Trump has been traveling to both smaller campaign gatherings and official events in swing states — on Friday, he attended one of each in Florida — and White House aides are readying a calendar full of day trips for the weeks ahead.

The convention is also being redrawn. Trump will likely travel several times during the last week of August, when the massive gathering was initially scheduled. He’s expected to stop in North Carolina during one day of the dramatical­ly revised convention.

Trump will also deliver an acceptance speech in a highprofil­e location on the Thursday of what would have been convention week, according to campaign and White House officials who requested anonymity to discuss planning. While Trump has customaril­y taken a multiweek vacation at his Bedminster, New Jersey, golf course in August, there is not one currently slated.

The president has noted to advisers that it was later in August 2016 when he brought in Steve Bannon and Kellyanne Conway to his campaign, the eventual winning campaign leadership combinatio­n. But the president was behind until late that October when FBI Director James Comey announced the reopening of an investigat­ion into Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton, a seismic event that reshaped the race.

As Trump sows doubt about the integrity of the election this year, questions are swirling about access to voting during the pandemic as well as the potential for more foreign electoral interferen­ce. Campaign advisers are increasing­ly pinning their hopes on the unlikely occurrence of another big October surprise, such as the developmen­t of a coronaviru­s vaccine.

But some Republican­s believe there is still time to make a more effective response to the virus the center of his case for a second term.

“By the speed at which news and events move in 2020, it’s not necessaril­y the case that he is running out of time,” said Ari Fleischer, former press secretary to President George W. Bush. “Much of the public will not pay attention to what he will say on law and order and the economy until he gets over the COVID hurdle first.”

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? President Trump’s advisers are trying to envision a campaign without rallies like this one in June in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
EVAN VUCCI/AP President Trump’s advisers are trying to envision a campaign without rallies like this one in June in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

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