100 days ahead of vote, faltering Donald Trump banks on ‘silent majority’

Democratic rival Mr. Biden, who says he is fighting for “the soul of America,” implored voters to make Mr. Trump a one-term President.

July 27, 2020 02:34 am | Updated 02:34 am IST - Washington

File photo of Democratic presidential hopeful Joe Biden and US President Donald Trump.

File photo of Democratic presidential hopeful Joe Biden and US President Donald Trump.

President Donald Trump mounted a strident defence on Sunday of his wavering re-election bid with 100 days to go in a campaign that has seen him underwater in the polls — and banking on the “silent majority” he vowed will bring him victory.

The 74-year-old Republican has struggled with setbacks on numerous fronts, facing mounting criticism over his handling of the coronavirus outbreak and the resulting economic pain, and failing to land punches on his opponent, Joe Biden .

Also read: Joe Biden calls Trump the country’s ‘first’ racist President

In the latest blow to his hopes to be returned to the White House on November 3, polls released Sunday showed his support cratering in three critical battleground states.

“The Trump Campaign has more ENTHUSIASM, according to many, than any campaign in the history of our great Country - Even more than 2016,” Mr. Trump thundered on Twitter.

Also read: Can Joe Biden defeat Donald Trump in November?

“Biden has NONE! The Silent Majority will speak on NOVEMBER THIRD!!! Fake Suppression Polls & Fake News will not save the Radical Left.”

Mr. Trump’s 77-year-old Democratic rival Mr. Biden, who says he is fighting for “the soul of America,” implored voters to make Mr. Trump a one-term President.

“In 100 days, we have the chance to set our nation on a new path. One where we finally live up to our highest ideals and everyone has a fair shot at success,” he tweeted.

Also read: Obama, Biden release video of chat as part of digital campaign

With the coronavirus killing more than 1,000 Americans a day, the President, who is at his best soaking up the adulation of supporters at live events, has been forced to cancel his rallies and ditch the Republican convention in Florida next month.

Shortcomings

The pandemic, which has infected 4.2 million Americans and killed almost 150,000, is ravaging the US economy and — with the outbreak largely under control in Europe and Asia — has highlighted the shortcomings of the US response.

The president has also lost support over his handling of historic uprisings against racism and police brutality, angering local communities with incendiary rhetoric and a pledge to “surge” federal agents into numerous major US cities.

Also read: Biden attacks Trump’s handling of COVID-19 as U.S. cases rise

That all is not well in Team Trump’s misfiring re-election bid was perhaps most evident in the president’s recent demotion of bravado campaign manager Brad Parscale.

With overall approval ratings permanently stuck in the low 40 percent range, he is the first president to seek re-election after impeachment.

Also read: Millions of Americans suffering because of Trump’s ‘incompetence’: Biden Campaign

Mr. Trump is offering a vision of chaos under his opponent, in which Mr. Biden’s desire to “abolish the American Way of Life” would turn US cities into crime-infested wastelands.

But he has largely failed to expand his fervently loyal base with a pitch that boils down to claiming Mr. Biden will have Americans “cowering to radical left-wing mobs.”

New polling of registered voters from three swing states released Sunday showed Mr. Trump trailing badly.

In Florida, the president garnered 46% support against 51 percent for Mr. Biden — while in Arizona, the challenger was four points ahead, with 49%.

Also read: Trump refuses to commit on accepting election results

‘Divisiveness and dysfunction’

In Michigan, Mr. Biden’s lead stands at 52% to 40% — a larger lead than the RealClearPolitics average of recent national polls, which puts the former vice president ahead by 8.7 points.

Mr. Trump carried all three states in 2016, although he won Michigan by fewer than 11,000 votes.

Meanwhile, Mr. Biden is running an unprecedented campaign from his Delaware home, with no rallies, few news conferences and the space to sit back and watch Mr. Trump lurch ever deeper into trouble.

But the President is keen to remind those who discount him that, with grim polling in 2016, he comfortably beat all comers for the nomination before defeating Democratic rival Hillary Clinton.

Maryland’s Republican governor Larry Hogan, who didn’t vote for Trump in 2016 and is seen as a potential candidate in 2024, told CNN on Sunday he was unlikely to endorse the president this time around.

“The election is 100 days away. I think early voting starts in 60 days or less. We’re getting very close for the American people to make that decision,” he said.

“I think, quite frankly, a lot of people like me are frustrated with the divisiveness and dysfunction on both sides and don’t feel like we have two great choices.”

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