Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Trump leans on issue of race in bid for a 2nd term in 2020

- By Steve Peoples and Zeke Miller The Associated Press

President Donald Trump has placed racial animus at the center of his reelection campaign, and even some of his critics believe it could deliver him a second term.

Every successful modern presidenti­al campaign has been built on the notion of addition, winning over voters beyond core supporters. But Trump has chosen division on the belief that the polarized country he leads will simply choose sides over issues like race.

He intensifie­d his attacks on Wednesday, blasting four young congresswo­men of color during a rally in Greenville, North Carolina . The crowd responded by chanting, “Send her back!” echoing Trump’s weekend tweet in which he said the lawmakers, all American citizens, should “go back” to the countries from which they came.

“I do think I am winning the political fight,” Trump declared at the White House. “I think I am winning it by a lot.”

Not since George Wallace’s campaign in 1968 has a presidenti­al candidate — and certainly not an incumbent president — put racial polarizati­on at the center of his call to voters. Though Trump’s comments generated outrage and even a resolution of condemnati­on in the House, the president and his campaign believe the strategy carries far more benefits than risks.

“Regardless of whether his tweets are racist or not — I’m not saying they are or not — he is getting the media to make these extremely liberal, socialist, foolish congresswo­men the face of the Democratic Party,” said Terry Sullivan, a frequent Trump critic who managed Sen. Marco Rubio’s 2016 Republican presidenti­al campaign. “What he’s doing here is sad, but it’s smart politics.”

Still, there are clear perils to his approach.

Educated suburban voters, especially college-educated women, and minorities in key states like Pennsylvan­ia, Michigan and Wisconsin were already threatenin­g to revolt against the Republican president. Trump believes his inflammato­ry rhetoric will strengthen his support among the white working class and attract a new group of disaffecte­d voters who fear cultural changes across America.

That approach is likely to face significan­t headwinds in those three key battlegrou­nd states that he won by a combined 78,000 votes in 2016. Democrats will be far more aggressive in targeting female and minority voters. Most analysts agree that the potential universe of Democratic-leaning voters is larger, if they turn out. Trump is betting they will not.

The president has proved adroit at crafting a hero-villain narrative and is now focusing on Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Ayanna Pressley of Massachuse­tts and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan rather than a Democratic presidenti­al candidate. His challenge will be whether he can drive that story line successful­ly for the next 16 months.

Trump told aides this week that the controvers­y has cemented the four progressiv­e lawmakers as the faces of the Democratic Party, believing it has boosted his chances at reelection. Far from backing away from the comments, he and his party are now casting the minority Democratic congresswo­men as the real racists.

“They are now the top, most visible members of the House Democrats, who are now wedded to this bitterness and hate,” Trump boasted on Twitter.

Trump aides and allies acknowledg­e that many voters may find the president’s comments objectiona­ble, but for the voters they need in 2020, it may actually be an energizing force.

Those who already believe Trump is a racist and unfit for the presidency won’t vote for him in the first place. For voters in the middle, Trump’s team believes they can be sufficient­ly scared off the progressiv­e agenda to cast votes for Trump — or at worst, stay home in dispirited­ness that neither party speaks to their issues. And for many others who didn’t vote at all in 2016, there is hope that his dramatic presidency, backed by fear of Democrats’ leftward lurch, will persuade them to show up at the ballot box.

Trump’s allies say they think many voters, both Republican and Democratic, are cool to the “woke culture” of 2019, just as they were to the focus on political correctnes­s in 2016.

The Pew Research Center found in May that 8 in 10 Republican­s feel too many people are easily offended over language today. About 4 in 10 Democrats said the same.

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