With pandemic dominating U.S. election, older voters turning away from
Trump
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[October 09, 2020]
By Chris Kahn and James Oliphant
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Many older Americans
have turned away from President Donald Trump this year as the
coronavirus ravages the country, eroding an important Republican support
base that helped propel him into the White House in 2016, Reuters/Ipsos
polling data shows.
Trump and his Democratic opponent Joe Biden now split American voters
aged 55 years and older almost evenly: 47% say they are voting for Biden
on Nov. 3 while 46% back Trump, according to Reuters/Ipsos national
surveys in September and October.
That could be an alarming sign for the president, who trails Biden with
25 days to go before the election.
Republicans have relied on the support of older Americans in national
elections for years, routinely benefiting from a demographic that
consistently shows up in force on Election Day.
Trump won the 55-plus age group by 13 percentage points in 2016,
according to exit polls. Mitt Romney, the Republican presidential
nominee in 2012, achieved the same margin.
Reuters/Ipsos state polls also show Biden outperforming Hillary Clinton,
the 2016 Democratic presidential nominee, among older voters in a
handful of battleground states, where seniors make up an outsized
proportion of the electorate.
Winning those states will be critical to the outcome of the 2020 race:
whoever takes the most battleground states will be on track to win the
Electoral College and the White House.
Biden is beating Trump among older voters in Wisconsin by 10 points and
drawing about the same amount of support as Trump is with that
demographic in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Florida and Arizona, according to
the state polls conducted in mid-September and early October.
Four years ago, Trump won older voters in each of those states by 10 to
29 points.
Half of the older voters in the five battleground states blamed the high
number of COVID-19 cases and deaths in the country - nearly 7.6 million
cases and more than 210,000 deaths - on "poor leadership and policy
decisions from President Trump," the polls show.
Randy Bode, 59, a Republican in Douglas, Arizona, who voted for Trump in
2016, said he was disappointed with Trump's suggestion that people could
protect themselves from COVID-19 by drinking bleach.
"He shouldn't be saying the things he's saying" about the coronavirus,
he said.
Bode, who is now undecided, is also concerned about Trump's efforts to
repeal the Affordable Care Act and how that would leave millions of
Americans without health insurance during a health crisis.
"He's had four years to come up with a plan, and he hasn't done it," he
said.
A DETERIORATING BASE
Trump's standing with older Americans has deteriorated this year as the
novel coronavirus swept the country, closing thousands of businesses and
overwhelming the health care system that seniors rely on more than
others.
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President Donald Trump speaks outside the White House, where he is
being treated for the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Washington,
U.S. in this still image taken from social media video released on
October 8, 2020. @realDonaldTrump/via REUTERS
Sixty-one percent said this week in a national Reuters/Ipsos poll
that they disapprove of the president's handling of the coronavirus,
up 12 percentage points from May. And Trump's net approval for his
response to the virus dropped among all Americans to its lowest
level since Reuters started asking the question in early March.
Among older Americans, 83% were concerned about the threat that the
coronavirus poses to their personal health and safety.
“Seniors were much more worried about COVID than younger Americans,”
said Alex Conant, a Republican strategist whose firm has spotted a
similar trend in its polling data.
Trump’s campaign has been working to stop the bleeding, and last
weekend he dispatched Vice President Mike Pence to campaign at The
Villages, the conservative retirement community in central Florida.
On Thursday, while still convalescing at the White House from his
recent coronavirus infection, the president addressed America's
seniors in a video, calling them his "favorite people in the world"
and pledging to make new virus-fighting drugs available to them for
free.
“You are vulnerable and so am I,” Trump said. “We’re going to take
care of our seniors.”
The Trump campaign pointed to an executive order he signed last year
aimed at bolstering Medicare, the national insurance program for
Americans 65 and older.
“President Trump and his administration remain laser-focused on
protecting our most vulnerable citizens, including our nation’s
senior citizens,” said Ken Farnaso, a Trump campaign spokesman.
Biden is also pitching directly to older voters, particularly in
Arizona and Florida.
His campaign has been running ads featuring a Florida couple who
can't see their grandchildren because of the pandemic. Other ads
have focused on Trump’s threat to eliminate the payroll tax, which
funds Social Security.
Conant said Trump needs to figure out how to bring seniors back into
the fold - and fast.
“It’s crucial,” he said. “Trump will not win without strong support
from senior voters.”
(Reporting by Chris Kahn and James Oliphant, Editing by Soyoung Kim
and Sonya Hepinstall)
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