Trump's positive test underscores that this is the Coronavirus Election
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[October 03, 2020]
By James Oliphant and Michael Martina
WASHINGTON/DETROIT (Reuters) - President
Donald Trump's positive test for COVID-19 confirmed what most voters
already knew: This is the Coronavirus Election.
During the closing stretch of the presidential race, Trump had worked
furiously to shift public attention away from the virus and his handling
of the pandemic, urging more states to open up fully and claiming the
worst was over.
But the disclosure of Trump's illness on Friday shredded those
arguments, returning the virus to center stage with just a month to go
until the Nov. 3 election, and reminding voters yet again of the biggest
public health crisis in a century that has killed more than 200,000 of
their fellow Americans.
"The more of the spotlight is on coronavirus, the worse it is for the
president," said Dennis Darnoi, a Republican strategist in the key
battleground state of Michigan that Trump won by less than a percentage
point in 2016.
Even worse for the president, however, may be that his downplaying from
the outset of the danger posed by the virus has come back to haunt him
in the most personal way, making Democrat Joe Biden's prudence during
the campaign look prescient.
A White House official said on Friday that Trump will move into a
special suite at the Walter Reed military hospital near Washington for
the next few days as a precaution, adding doctors urged the move so he
could get immediate care if needed.
With Trump's health uncertain, his battle against Biden could be on hold
for an indefinite period of time, with Trump unable to travel, stage his
signature rallies or attend fundraisers during the election's final
phase as millions are already casting their votes.
More than 2.8 million Americans have voted early for November's
election, according to the U.S. Elections Project at the University of
Florida. At this point in 2016, fewer than 75,000 people had submitted
early ballots.
The White House said on Friday it was exploring ways for Trump to
communicate with the public during his quarantine. Biden, who said on
Friday he tested negative for coronavirus after sharing the debate stage
with Trump on Tuesday, meanwhile has signaled he intends to campaign as
normal, proceeding with an event in Michigan on Friday as planned.
Trump's illness stands to send a confusing signal to supporters, many of
whom now share his skepticism of using mail-in ballots for the election,
wearing masks, practicing social distancing and other virus-related
safety protocols.
Trump has repeatedly belittled Biden for his light travel schedule and
for often wearing a mask in public. He also boasted about holding large
rallies featuring maskless supporters packed together, claiming there
had been "no problem whatsoever."
"One of the judgments voters are making is which candidate would have
better managed the response to the coronavirus and who has the
leadership to lead us out of this national emergency," said Ben LaBolt,
a former top aide to Democratic President Barack Obama.
ON THEIR MINDS
Even as Trump has repeatedly suggested the country had turned the corner
in the pandemic, voters have felt differently.
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Following U.S. President Donald Trump announcing that he has tested
positive for the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), workers at where
his campaign rally was to be held later in the day pull down signage
at Orlando Sanford International Airport in Sanford, Florida, U.S.,
October 2, 2020. REUTERS/Phelan Ebenhack
Every week since March, roughly eight out of 10 American adults have
said they are personally concerned about how the virus was
spreading, according to Reuters/Ipsos polls. That includes about 9
in 10 Democrats and nearly 7 in 10 Republicans.
It is also top of mind among a plurality of Americans who are
expected to cast ballots in the election. The latest Reuters/Ipsos
poll, conducted Sept. 29-Oct. 1, found that 26% of likely voters
said the most important factor driving their choice for president
was the candidates' perceived ability to help the nation recover
from the pandemic. They were less likely to cite other drivers, such
as the candidates' plan for the economy or the need for a "tough on
crime" president.
In that regard, Biden has held a clear advantage. The latest poll
found that 50% of likely voters said Biden would be best to deal
with the coronavirus, while 39% said Trump would be better.
Indeed, Biden has made Trump's handling of COVID-19 a primary theme
of his campaign, while Trump has instead tried to focus on economic
recovery, "law and order" in the face of national protests over
racial justice and most recently, his choice of conservative Amy
Coney Barrett for the U.S. Supreme Court to replace late liberal
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
A PERILOUS PAUSE
The pause in campaigning comes as Trump runs against the clock to
change the trajectory of a re-election effort that polls show him
losing. He also has been falling behind Biden in fundraising,
allowing Biden to dominate the airwaves with ads.
Trump's campaign had been encouraged by positive economic news
coming out of key battleground states such as Arizona and Florida,
as well as polls that show voters still tend to trust Trump over
Biden on the economy, according to one campaign adviser who asked to
remain unidentified to speak candidly.
Scott Hagerstrom, who managed Trump's 2016 campaign in Michigan,
said the president's bout with the virus could engender some
sympathy in voters. "He'll be able to say, I went through it. I
survived."
Should he make a swift recovery, the same defiant Trump likely will
emerge claiming victory over COVID-19, said Joe Trippi, a veteran
Democratic operative who managed Howard Dean's 2004 presidential
campaign.
"He is still Donald Trump," Trippi said.
(Additional reporting by Steve Holland, Trevor Hunnicutt and Chris
Kahn; Editing by Soyoung Kim and Daniel Wallis)
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