As Trump returns to the road, some Democrats want to bust Biden out of
his basement
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[May 09, 2020]
By Trevor Hunnicutt, Elizabeth Culliford and James Oliphant
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - While President
Donald Trump traveled to the battleground state of Arizona this week,
his Democratic opponent for the White House, Joe Biden, campaigned from
his basement as he has done throughout the coronavirus pandemic.
Those optics have some Democrats increasingly concerned.
The freeze on in-person campaigning during the outbreak has had an
upside for Biden, giving the former vice president more time to court
donors and shielding him from on-the-trail gaffes.
But the coronavirus lockdown also has deprived Biden of chances to
showcase what allies see as his major asset contrasting with Republican
Trump in a time of crisis: his empathetic personality.
"I personally would like to see him out more because he's in his element
when he's meeting people," said Tom Sacks-Wilner, a fundraiser for Biden
who is on the campaign's finance committee.
With Biden badly overshadowed by Trump and a few national opinion polls
showing his lead ahead of the Nov. 3 election slipping, some Democratic
operatives are urging the Biden campaign to boost his profile, worried
the broadcasts from his basement in Delaware are falling short.
Onetime campaign advisers to former President Barack Obama penned two
op-eds this week calling on Biden to raise the tempo of his campaign
through more robust digital operations and help from celebrities, former
rivals and Democratic governors at the forefront of the pandemic
response.
Several allies also are encouraging Biden's team to consider visits such
as to essential workers, if those could be done safely and in line with
public health guidance.
"The Biden campaign is going to have to think about ways in which they
can drive the news every day, and that is a challenge during the
crisis," said Joel Benenson, a pollster who worked for Obama and 2016
Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton. "The president has the bully
pulpit."
Biden, a classic retail politician whose social media following pales in
comparison with Trump, himself has expressed frustration with the
limitations of communicating with voters remotely.
At the same time, he has routinely bashed Trump's push to reopen the
U.S. economy more quickly despite the concerns of public health experts
who fear a second wave of coronavirus cases if social distancing is
relaxed too soon.
Though his team wants to campaign in person as soon as doing so is safe,
no imminent public appearances are planned.
"The health and safety of our supporters, staff and the American people
is our top priority, and our decision-making on how to campaign will be
guided by public health experts with that in mind," said Biden campaign
spokesman TJ Ducklo.
'CANDIDATE OF SANITY'
While Trump's stop in Arizona on Tuesday was not an official campaign
trip, it demonstrated the advantages the presidency affords him.
As he pledged more than $600 million in coronavirus response aid to two
Native American nations, standing with tribal leaders in person, Biden's
campaign sent a message on Facebook pledging to "stand with" native
people in their fight against sex trafficking.
Trump was heavily criticized, however, for not wearing a mask while
greeting workers in Phoenix at a mask-making facility, where a sign
noted masks were required. A video of his appearance at the factory, as
the song “Live and Let Die” played in the background, went viral.
Trump's overall popularity has been mostly flat throughout the crisis,
with the number of adults who approve of him wavering between 40% and
45% from March to May, according to Reuters/Ipsos national opinion
polls.
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President Donald Trump looks at an assembly line machine
manufacturing protective masks being shown to him by Honeywell's
Vice President of Integrated Supply Chain Tony Stallings during a
tour of Honeywell's facility manufacturing masks for the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Phoenix, Arizona, U.S., May 5, 2020.
REUTERS/Tom Brenner/File Photo
Despite mounting economic damage that saw 20.5 million Americans
lose jobs in April, most Americans have consistently said in polls
they want to maintain social distancing to protect themselves from
the virus.
"Trump has decided to go all-in, risk the death," said John Morgan,
a Florida trial lawyer who has raised money for Biden.
Biden, he said, has to be the "candidate of sanity and security."
Trump campaign spokesman Tim Murtaugh said Trump has a duty to
protect both the safety of Americans and the economy.
"We have to get moving again when and where it's safe, because
long-term economic inactivity comes with its own set of problems,"
Murtaugh said.
'REFERENDUM ON TRUMP'
Biden advisers said the more critical months for the campaign would
be in the fall, when more voters will be paying attention than they
are during the pandemic that has infected more than 1.25 million in
the United States and killed over 76,000 people.
Meantime, Biden has made near daily appearances virtually, for media
interviews, fundraisers, late-night comedy shows and Instagram
events with famous people such as soccer star Megan Rapinoe. He has
begun to film on the property outside his home, providing a more
varied set of backdrops.
The Biden campaign's video content was viewed 113 million times
online in March and April, a campaign official said.
On Thursday, Biden was interviewed by news outlets in battleground
state Florida, held an event on Zoom with black leaders in
Jacksonville and hosted a virtual rally for Tampa voters.
His campaign also again denied an allegation by former Senate staff
assistant Tara Reade, who in March accused Biden of sexually
assaulting her in 1993 and on Thursday said he should drop out of
the White House race.
With no travel schedule, Biden has spent more time calling donors,
aiming to close the approximately $180 million gap he had with the
Trump campaign at the end of March.
Biden held several fundraisers since mid-April that took in more
than $1 million each.
"There's a huge cash deficit to make up right now," said an adviser
for a former rival Democratic presidential campaign. "If Joe Biden
has the luxury of sitting in a room and calling 100 rich people a
day, do it."
Biden campaign advisers say another immediate goal is to find more
ways to put Biden's personality on display.
His campaign recently tweeted a video in which Biden's eyes well up
with tears as he speaks on a call with an intensive care nurse who
describes herself as "tired" and "scared every day."
Jim Margolis, a Democratic Party ad maker, said there is only so
much Biden can do from home while Trump gets non-stop coverage. But
with scientifically questionable medical advice and frequent
misstatements, Trump's unfiltered media appearances have done more
harm than good, Margolis said.
"At the end of the day, this campaign should fundamentally be about
Donald Trump," Margolis said. "It needs to be a referendum on Donald
Trump."
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt, Elizabeth Culliford and James
Oliphant; Additional reporting by Joseph Ax, Steve Holland and Chris
Kahn; Editing by Colleen Jenkins, Soyoung Kim and Grant McCool)
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