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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums"counting on people being so traumatized on a day-to-day basis that they will forget his inaction"
Wartime President? Trump Rewrites History in an Election YearWASHINGTON With the economy faltering and the political landscape unsettled as the coronavirus death toll climbs, a stark and unavoidable question now confronts President Trump and his advisers: Can he save his campaign for re-election when so much is suddenly going so wrong?
After three years of Republicans championing signs of financial prosperity that were to be Mr. Trumps chief re-election argument, the president has never needed a new message to voters as he does now, not to mention luck. At this point, the president has one clear option for how to proceed politically, and is hoping that an array of factors will break his way.
The option, which he has brazenly pushed in recent days, is to cast himself as a wartime president who looks in charge of a nation under siege while his likely Democratic opponent, former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., is largely out of sight hunkered down in Delaware. This gambit, however, requires a rewriting of history Mr. Trumps muted approach to the virus early on and its far from clear if many voters will accept the idea of him as a wartime leader.
Then there are other variables that he and his allies hope will fall in their favor: that the outbreak of the virus will slow and, in the warmer months, dissipate; that the states will get it under control; that the federal governments steps taken so far will flatten the curve; that Mr. Biden and the Democrats will look impotent and inconsequential by comparison; and that enough voters will move past his initial efforts to play down the viruss dangers.
The great unknown, of course and the tremendous risk to Mr. Trumps political fate, no matter what he says or does is that the human cost, the economic toll, and the longevity and course of the pandemic are all X factors that will most likely play out for months and could be strongly salient if not severe by the time of the November general election.
In perhaps the best-case scenario for Mr. Trump, the patina of a wartime president could prove to be influential with casual voters who dont dig into the details of his belated response to the coronavirus, which included dismissing the criticism of his handling of the threat as a Democratic hoax and contributing to a slow start in testing for the virus.
He is counting on people being so traumatized on a day-to-day basis that they will forget his inaction, said Douglas Brinkley, a professor of history at Rice University. Its better for him to be a wartime commander in chief than someone who, when the big crisis hit, misread it completely.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/elections-2020/wartime-president-trump-rewrites-history-in-an-election-year/ar-BB11ymOe?ocid=st2
GusBob
(7,286 posts)He will love that
I bet he is missing golf though
We may never see a pic of him golfing until Aug
Aquaria
(1,076 posts)Already, stations are cutting off his pressers, and expect the networks themselves to do it more often, as disgust grows from the public and pundits with how dishonest and wasteful of everyone's time his substitute rallies are.
This is why people need to start tuning out when his hideous visage pollutes the airwaves. The networks stopped airing his rallies when the eyeballs on them collapsed to only the deplorables. Once they realize that viewers are changing the channel or (worst of all) powering down their sets entirely at the site of the treasonous scumbag, they'll cut off the pressers, too, and show only clips of the rare useful info. And of course, the most egregious lowlights, too, to give the news cycle red meat to fill their empty hours.