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Showing Original Post only (View all)Do Americans Remember the Actual Trump Presidency? - Kilgore, New York Magazine [View all]
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No matter what you think of Donald Trump, there is zero doubt that two events during his presidency will forever leap off the pages of history books and dwarf anything else that happened: the outbreak of a pandemic that killed over a million Americans and a mob attack on the U.S. Capitol aimed at preventing Joe Bidens confirmation as president-elect. But when the New York Times/Siena polling outfit asked voters to describe the one thing they remembered most from Donald J. Trumps presidency, only 5 percent of respondents referred to Jan. 6, and only 4 percent to COVID. 39 percent cited Trumps behavior as most memorable, and another 24 percent named the economy.
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The Times own analysis of these rather startling numbers attributes them to recency bias, suggesting that voters are letting their current concerns (particularly about inflation) distort their memories of the not-so-distant past. But they also suggest that voters have formed a fixed opinion of Trump and his presidency that may be very difficult to change. If COVID and January 6 are not front of mind when voters think of 2020 and 2021, and the economy as it was in 2019 is recalled as Elysian, what does that say about the Biden campaigns efforts to remind people of Trumps responsibility for the reversal of Roe v. Wade? Will voters accept that a Very Bad Thing that happened long after Trump left office was actually his fault?
As it happens, a new survey of registered voters was released last week from Navigator Research showing that a sizable number of Americans, incredibly enough, held Biden responsible for the overturning of Roe v. Wade and the elimination of the federal right to an abortion. That opinion was held by 34 percent of self-identified independents, 32 percent of Black voters, and 42 percent of Hispanic voters. It helps explain why the Biden campaign is devoting so much energy to connecting the dots between Trumps Supreme Court appointments and the Dobbs decision. But it also suggests public perceptions of Trump are very hard to change, and thats a big problem for Democrats.
In the end, unless the mood of the electorate about current conditions in the country gets a lot sunnier, Bidens reelection prospects depend almost entirely on making this a comparative contest in which a plurality of voters firmly reject Trump based on what they know about the 45th president. You dont have to hate Trump to observe that he actually took his predecessors middling economy and did everything within his power to increase inequality, bungled the federal response to COVID-19 and worsened its human and economic impact, and then became the first losing presidential candidate since 1876 to refuse to concede defeat once the states certified his opponents victory. But if persuadable voters dismiss all that and think of him as a foulmouthed, erratic politician who nonetheless showered them with prosperity, then he will be hard to beat.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/do-americans-remember-the-actual-trump-presidency/ar-BB1mkhiD