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Politics

Trump Bends To Reality, Buckles Under Political Pressure

President Trump is having to face the reality that his approach to the coronavirus crisis has hurt him politically. This week he decided to change course, at least for now.
Brendan Smialowski
/
AFP via Getty Images
President Trump is having to face the reality that his approach to the coronavirus crisis has hurt him politically. This week he decided to change course, at least for now.

With COVID-19 cases going up in places key to his reelection and his poll numbers in those same places going down, President Trump has been boxed in to shifting course.

Let's recap. This week, as NPR's Ayesha Rascoe recounted on NPR's Morning Edition Friday, Trump:

  • Endorsed wearing masks, calling it "patriotic" after resisting wearing them publicly for months.
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  • Acknowledged that the pandemic will likely get worse before it gets better after months of dismissing its seriousness.
  • Backed away from his insistence that schools reopen this fall, having previously threatened to pull what small federal funding schools receive.
  • Canceled the in-person Republican National Convention that was supposed to take place in Jacksonville, Fla., after lambasting North Carolina's governor for not being able to guarantee that an in-person convention could be allowed to take place in his state by August. And though Trump made fun of Democrats for planning a virtual convention, the GOP convention will now be largely virtual, too.
  • Make no mistake, this is Trump politically crying uncle.

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    Polls have shown him tanking against Democrat Joe Biden in states such as Pennsylvania and Florida. These are places he won in 2016. Biden is now up by an average of more than 7 points in Pennsylvania. A Fox News poll released Thursday has Biden up 50% to 39%.

    In Florida, among the closest states in the past several presidential elections, it's a remarkably similar story. Biden is ahead on average by more than 7 points, and a Quinnipiac poll out Thursday put Biden up 51% to 38%. That's up from what was just a 4-point Biden lead in April in the same poll.

    How important are these numbers? If Biden were to hold onto everything Hillary Clinton won in 2016 and add Pennsylvania and Florida, it would be enough to put Biden over the threshold to win. He'd be at 281 electoral votes. A candidate needs 270, a majority of the 538 available electoral votes.

    The Trump campaign argues that the polls are wrong, that they are undersampling Republicans. That's an argument they have made for years. In 2012, in fact, there was an effort to "unskew the polls" from Republicans, presenting new, "corrected" numbers from each survey.

    In that alternate reality, Mitt Romney was winning. But on Election Day, the unskewers were wrong, and Barack Obama won reelection. In 2016, national polls were pretty dead on — Hillary Clinton led by an average of 3 points overall before Election Day, and she won the popular vote by 2.

    Where the real problem lay was in the states, particularly in the Midwest. Some pollsters with sterling track records before 2016 wound up being inaccurate. There have been efforts underway since the last election to try and fix that.

    Trump is not one to yield or bow to pressure. But this is the lowest point of his presidency politically — and now, not even he can deny the trouble he's in, even if his team isn't saying so publicly.

    If you don't believe the polls, just look at the body language. Trump's campaign has been asking for more debates than the already-allocated three with Biden, his campaign manager was demoted, and now there's this reboot effort.

    As bad as it looks right now for Trump, Democratic strategists and the Biden campaign fully expect the race to tighten. They believe Biden's support with independents, who might lean toward Trump, is likely soft. In other words, many of those voters may very well go back toward Trump by the fall if they sense he's handling things marginally better.

    But with the election just 101 days away, Trump is running out of time to win them back.

    "I could say I'm fully responsible," Trump said Tuesday when asked if he's responsible for American deaths because of downplaying the severity of COVID-19. "But, you know, one day, we had a virus come in... ."

    With a solid — and growing — majority of Americans saying they disapprove of how Trump has handled the worst pandemic in a century, if he loses, expect that to be one of the things history remembers about his presidency and this election.

    Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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