Trump's troubles in Arizona mount with coronavirus surge
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[July 08, 2020]
By Joseph Ax
(Reuters) - Arizona has served as a
southwestern bulwark for Republicans for decades, voting for a
Democratic presidential candidate only once since 1948.
But a surge of coronavirus cases in the state and President Donald
Trump's uneven response to the pandemic have compounded the troubles
already facing his re-election bid.
Since Trump won Arizona in 2016, suburban voters in the country's
fastest-growing county, Maricopa, have soured on him, the state's
Democratic-leaning Latino population has continued growing and
transplants from more liberal places have helped Democrats add 60,000
more voters to their rolls than Republicans.
Now the intensifying pandemic – Arizona on Tuesday reported its highest
daily total of deaths yet – is endangering Trump's support even among
some Republican-leaning voters. Randy Olsen, 65, voted for Trump in
2016, but he plans to support Democratic presidential candidate Joe
Biden in the Nov. 3 election.
"He's disrespecting the experts," Olsen said of Trump's response to the
virus, noting his refusal to endorse face masks. "He's looking out for
himself only and isn't looking out for anybody else."
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Chuck Coughlin, a Republican strategist in Phoenix, said Trump's
handling of the crisis was costing him with key demographics in Maricopa
County, including older voters and well-educated suburban whites. The
county includes more than half the state's population.
"I expect it's very damaging with that portion of the electorate that
Trump needs to persuade," Coughlin said.
Since the end of May, Biden, a former vice president, has led in four of
five state polls and holds an average advantage of 3-1/2 percentage
points in a state Trump carried by the same margin four years ago,
according to the poll-tracking website RealClearPolitics.
Trump campaign spokeswoman Samantha Zager said the president's record in
Washington, plus the large Republican Party field operation in the state
compared with Biden's nascent team, would deliver Arizona for Trump
again.
Trump chose Phoenix for his first official trip out of Washington after
the pandemic in early May and returned two weeks ago. His campaign has
more than 70 staffers on the ground and has held more than 2,000 events,
Zager said.
But Biden's campaign increasingly views Arizona as a top target, part of
a growing national shift in his favor in recent months. Campaign manager
Jen O'Malley Dillon told campaign volunteers that she mentions the state
so often it has become a joke among her staff.
"It is a true battleground state for the presidential for the first
time," she told a Biden fundraiser two weeks ago.
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NEW PATHWAYS TO VICTORY
While the trio of historically Democratic Rust Belt states that carried
Trump to victory in 2016 – Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin –
continue to garner attention from both parties, polls suggest Sunbelt
states like Arizona, Florida, North Carolina and even Georgia have
opened new pathways to a Biden victory.
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President Donald Trump speaks during an event on reopening schools
amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in the East Room at
the White House in Washington, U.S., July 7, 2020. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque
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Democrats are confident they can replicate the winning formula of
Kyrsten Sinema, who in 2018 became Arizona's first Democratic
senator in more than two decades.
Like Sinema, Biden is a moderate who eschews liberal proposals such
as Medicare for All and the Green New Deal.
Biden could benefit from the popularity and campaign infrastructure
of Democratic Senate candidate Mark Kelly, a former astronaut who
has held a double-digit lead in recent surveys in his race against
Republican Senator Martha McSally.
In a briefing for reporters in May, O'Malley Dillon said she planned
to focus both on increasing turnout and persuading voters who
previously voted for Republicans not to support Trump, with a
special focus on Latinos and voters under the age of 30.
Strategists in both parties said suburban voters, particularly
women, who polls show have shifted away from Trump would determine
whether Biden can carry the state.
Other Democrats argue, however, that Arizona's Latino population,
which has grown three times as fast as the white population since
2014, is the more crucial voting bloc.
Latino voter turnout rose to 49% in 2018 from 37% in 2008, according
to state and federal data compiled by One Arizona, a coalition of 23
organizations focused on Latino civic participation.
Biden has been criticized for not doing more to attract Latino
support. But Hispanics' growing disapproval of Trump's performance,
which according to Reuters/Ipsos polling increased to 43% in June
from 23% in April, could create an opportunity for Biden.
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Chuck Rocha, a former adviser to Bernie Sanders' presidential
campaign who runs a Latino-focused independent political action
committee, Nuestro PAC, said focus-group testing showed the
coronavirus was boosting anti-Trump sentiment among Latinos, who
have been disproportionately hurt by the pandemic.
The group will launch a multimillion-dollar advertising campaign
focused on Arizona in the coming weeks, Rocha said. Priorities USA,
a pro-Biden super PAC, is airing Spanish-language ads in Arizona
blaming Trump for failing to contain the virus.
"The pandemic has changed the dynamics of everything," said Chad
Campbell, a former Democratic state lawmaker. "The fact that Donald
Trump is spending time and money here this early on shows you how
much trouble he's in."
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Additional reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt,
Andrew Hay and Chris Kahn; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Peter
Cooney)
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