Waterloo Region Record

Virus and racial unrest force change on Trump campaign

Support for president declining among voters in key states, officials say

- JONATHAN LEMIRE AND ZEKE MILLER

than five months before voters will decide his fate, U.S. President Donald Trump is confrontin­g a vastly different political reality than he once envisioned. For starters, if the election were held today, he’d likely lose.

The president, West Wing advisers and campaign aides have grown increasing­ly concerned about his re-election chances as they’ve watched Trump’s standing take a pummelling first on his handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic and now during a countrywid­e wave of protests against racial injustice. His allies worry the president has achieved something his November foe had been unable to do: igniting enthusiasm in a Democratic party base that’s been lukewarm to former vicepresid­ent Joe Biden.

Trump was facing tougher political prospects even before the death of George Floyd, the Black man who died after a white Minneapoli­s police officer pressed his knee for almost nine minutes into Floyd’s neck last month.

COVID-19’s mounting human and economic tolls — and the president’s defiant response — cost him support among constituen­cies his campaign believes are key to victory in November. His signature rallies had been frozen for months, and his cash advantage over Biden, while vast, wasn’t growing as quickly as hoped because the pandemic put a halt to highdollar fundraiser­s.

Internal campaign surveys and public polling showed a steady erosion in support for Trump among older people and in battlegrou­nd states once believed to be leaning decisively in the president’s direction, according to six current and former campaign officials not authorized to speak publicly about private conversati­ons. The campaign recently launched a television ad blitz in Ohio, a state the president carried by eight percentage points four years ago, and it sees trouble in Arizona and warning signs in once-deep-red Georgia.

Trump aides have warned the president that the renewed national conversati­on about racial injustice and the president’s big “law and order” push have animated parts of the Democratic base — Black and younger voters — whose lagging enthusiasm for Hillary Clinton in 2016 cleared the way for Trump’s narrow victory.

“I have polls,” Trump told Fox News Radio on Thursday, dismissing a spate of public surveys showing him trailing Biden in key states. “Just like last time, I was losing to Hillary in every state, and I won every state.”

Though outwardly confident, Trump has complained to advisers in their roughly weekly White House meetings about the perception that he is losing to Biden and has pressed his aides for strategies to improve his standing. Late last month, the Trump campaign moved two veteran political aides into senior leadership roles, reflective of an effort to bring more experience to the campaign team. And on Friday, the campaign brought on board former communicat­ions chief Jason Miller as a senior adviser.

The White House seized on better-than-expected economic news Friday — the nation added 2.5 million jobs in May and the unemployme­nt rate fell — with an over-the-top victory lap, selling it as a sign of a postpandem­ic economic comeback that the president’s advisers believe will be the single most important factor in victory in November.

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