Coronavirus poses new challenge to Trump's re-election bid
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[March 13, 2020]
By Steve Holland and Joseph Ax
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald
Trump faced one of the gravest threats of his political career as the
coronavirus pandemic spread, leaving fellow Republicans to worry that
the White House's response and the hit to the economy would harm his
re-election prospects.
U.S. stock market indexes that Trump has touted throughout his term as
evidence of his success plunged into bear market territory on Thursday -
a day after he tried to calm Americans' fears with an Oval Office
address that promised economic stimulus and a 30-day travel ban for
Europeans.
Some Republicans worried that the measures were too little, too late for
an administration that for several weeks minimized the risk of the
COVID-19 respiratory disease caused by the virus that has killed at
least 39 Americans.
"The president's early downplaying and politicizing of the virus hurt
his credibility and will make people question the administration's
readiness from now until the day this passes," said Mike DuHaime, a
Republican strategist who ran Chris Christie’s gubernatorial campaigns
in New Jersey.
"The president's greatest strength has been the economy. If the stock
markets continue to tank, and real people begin to hurt financially, it
will hurt the president politically."
Trump emerged triumphant last month after his Senate acquittal in a
Democratic-led impeachment drive, ready to ride high on a strong economy
as a crowded field of Democratic candidates bickered over who was best
to take him on in November's general election.
The narrative quickly changed. Moderate Democrats in the past two weeks
have consolidated their support behind former Vice President Joe Biden
over liberal Senator Bernie Sanders. They are betting that Biden can
draw support from across the party, as well as from suburban moderates
and disaffected Republicans.
Biden seized the chance to offer a contrast to voters with his own
coronavirus speech on Thursday. He lambasted the administration's
handling of the crisis while seeking to portray himself as a steady,
experienced hand in the face of a public health emergency.
"I'd rather be Joe Biden than Trump right now," said a Republican
official close to the White House. "A month ago, Trump is looking at
Bernie Sanders and a strong economy and rising favorability after
impeachment. Coronavirus cannot have a positive impact."
Trump's re-election campaign defended the president's actions and in a
statement accused Biden of trying to "capitalize politically and stoke
citizens' fears."
The growing threat from the coronavirus forced Trump on Thursday to
reverse course and suspend his large campaign rallies.
"The safety, security and health of the American People is President
Trump's top priority right now," the Trump campaign said in a text.
'ADVERSARIAL RELATIONSHIP WITH THE TRUTH'
Noting that Trump had called the disease a "foreign virus," Biden warned
against "xenophobia" and said the coronavirus "does not discriminate
based on national origin, race, gender or ZIP code."
Biden laid out his own plan for dealing with the outbreak, including
emergency paid sick leave for workers and widely available free testing
for the virus, saying the number of tests should number in the
"millions, not the thousands." The Trump administration has been
criticized for failing to produce enough tests to meet demand.
"This virus laid bare the severe shortcomings of the current
administration," the former vice president said in his 20-minute address
from his home state of Delaware. "Public fears are being compounded by
pervasive lack of trust in this president fueled by an adversarial
relationship with the truth."
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President Donald Trump speaks about the U.S response to the COVID-19
coronavirus pandemic during an address to the nation from the Oval
Office of the White House in Washington, U.S., March 11, 2020. Doug
Mills/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
Sanders, who has vowed to remain in the race despite lengthening
odds, also bashed Trump's handling of the crisis. He called for
stronger action by government agencies to halt the spread of the
virus and for measures such as paid sick leave and unemployment
compensation for those affected.
"During a crisis we must make sure that we care for the communities
most vulnerable to health and economic pain," Sanders told reporters
in his hometown of Burlington, Vermont.
A Trump supporter and fundraiser said the coronavirus outbreak had
been politicized, like every issue in the United States.
"The battle lines are drawn," said Jim Worthington, a health club
executive in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. "If you like Trump, you
think he's done all the things right, like cutting off travel to
China. If you're a Democrat, you think the opposite.
"I think he's been ahead of the issue, and the media has really
overhyped it," Worthington said, adding that he thought the virus
should be taken seriously.
The crisis has reshaped the contours of the presidential campaign.
Democratic officials announced on Thursday that Sunday's televised
debate between Biden and Sanders would be moved to Washington from
Arizona.
Officials had already decided not to allow an audience into the
debate hall, citing contagion concerns.
Biden, Sanders and Trump have all canceled campaign events in recent
days after warnings from public health officials about holding
large-scale gatherings. Arizona, Florida, Illinois and Ohio hold
Democratic nominating contests on Tuesday.
Biden's campaign on Wednesday converted planned rallies in Florida
and Illinois into "virtual" events and on Thursday said all staffers
would begin to work from home beginning Saturday. Sanders' staffers
will also work from home, reaching out to voters online instead of
holding large events or door-to-door canvasses, his campaign said
Thursday.
Late Thursday, Trump's campaign said its events would also all be
conducted in a virtual setting, including moving training sessions
online.
One Republican strategist said Trump's handling of the coronavirus
was hurting him now but that it was too soon to gauge its impact on
his long-term political prospects. Reuters/Ipsos polling from March
9-10 showed 55% of Americans disapproved of Trump, while 40%
approved, largely unchanged from the past year.
"A few weeks ago, the president’s supporters were very dismissive of
the virus. Today, they are being very silent," the Republican
political operative said. "It’s a supply chain issue, and he’s the
supply chain president. When he says we have test kits on the ground
and we don’t, that’s a real problem."
(Reporting Steve Holland in Washington and Joseph Ax in Princeton,
New Jersey, additional reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt, Jarrett
Renshaw, Susan Heavey, Jason Lange and Sharon Bernstein; Editing by
Scott Malone, Jonathan Oatis, Lisa Shumaker and Daniel Wallis)
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