Commentary: Pandemic is hurting Trump's 2020 campaign
By Daniel W. Drezner / Special to The Washington Post
It would be difficult to deny that the covid-19 pandemic has hurt Donald Trumps reelection chances and hurt them badly. Trumps team, of course, will try to change the narrative. They will game out various ways to respond, like proclaiming the country is on the mend and China is bad. But as Nate Silver recently observed, that does not mean the White House knows what its doing.
One example of this is the administrations persistent rhetoric on getting the economy moving despite evidence that, you know, it will also cause a lot more Covid-19 deaths. Former FDA commissioner Scott Gottlieb noted over the weekend on CBS Face the Nation that, while mitigation didnt fail, I think its fair to say that it didnt work as well as we expected. We expected that we would start seeing more significant declines in new cases and deaths around the nation at this point, and were just not seeing that. This suggests any actual reopening of the economy will lead to a surge of new cases and new deaths.
None of this will stop Trump and his Team of Sycophants from trying to gamble on a more upbeat outcome. Trumps team appears to be engaging in a weird mix of wishcasting and truthful hyperbole to gin up a narrative in which the economy is bouncing back. But this is happening at the same time that the novel coronavirus refuses to subside. New Yorks Ed Kilgore noted, He and his advisers apparently think they can goose the economy into a steep recovery before he faces voters, at the considerable risk of enabling another, perhaps even deadlier, wave of coronavirus infections. The one thing reasonably clear is that if this gamble fails in any major particular, so will his presidency.
Absent any real change in the economy, the Trump administration could always attempt to rely on a cocktail of truthful hyperbole and symbolism. Engage in gestures like winding down the coronavirus task force to foster the illusion of progress. Talk up the nominal reopening of states even if real economic activity continues to sag. If it works on the stock market, maybe it will work on voters.
The big problem with this strategy, however, is that Trump cannot rely on his normal symbolic props to persuade the audience. And even he knows this. Trump acknowledged on Twitter a few days ago: We are all missing our wonderful rallies, and many other things! He also told the New York Post that he misses the rallies: I hope were going to be able to get the rallies back before the election. I actually think its very important. I think that would be a big, a big disadvantage to me if we didnt, if we couldnt have the rallies back. People are wanting the rallies. They want to have them so badly. They were informative but they were fun. By people, he means Trump.
https://www.heraldnet.com/opinion/commentary-pandemic-is-hurting-trumps-2020-campaign/
Iliyah
(25,111 posts)stealing the ECs won't work . . .
Republicans are plotting to steal the election again with the help of foreign countries. Mueller warned us this will happen. They had to shut him down along with others.
machoneman
(4,007 posts)Last edited Fri May 8, 2020, 02:34 PM - Edit history (2)
just opened up in mainly southern red states are empty. Proving that our fellow American red voting southerners aren't nearly as stupid
as even I thought.
Watch for either the malls to close or that businesses in those malls that chose to re-open early close once again due to lack or traffic. From the pics and a few reporter's vids I saw of totally empty parking lots around those malls, it won't take long for the mall owners to wise up and close up again!
Skittles
(153,160 posts)FUCK him