POLITICAL
MEMO
As Election Day Arrives, Trump Shifts Between
Combativeness and Grievance
The president is sounding notes of bravado and exasperation at the end of a divisive campaign. But he may have severed himself from the political realities of a country in crisis.
Maggie
HabermanAlexander BurnsJonathan Martin
By Maggie
Haberman, Alexander Burns and Jonathan Martin
Nov. 2,
2020, 2:55 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/02/us/politics/trump-campaign.html
President
Trump arrives at Election Day on Tuesday toggling between confidence and
exasperation, bravado and grievance, and marinating in frustration that he is
trailing Joseph R. Biden Jr., whom he considers an unworthy opponent.
“Man, it’s
going to be embarrassing if I lose to this guy,” Mr. Trump has told advisers, a
lament he has aired publicly as well. But in the off-camera version, Mr. Trump
frequently exclaims, “This guy!” in reference to Mr. Biden, with a salty
adjective separating the words.
Trailing in
most polls, Mr. Trump has careened through a marathon series of rallies in the
last week, trying to tear down Mr. Biden and energize his supporters, but also
fixated on crowd size and targeting perceived enemies like the news media and
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the federal government’s infectious disease expert whom he
suggested on Sunday he might try to dismiss after the election.
At every
turn, the president has railed that the voting system is rigged against him and
has threatened to sue when the election is over, in an obvious bid to undermine
an electoral process strained by the coronavirus pandemic. It is not clear,
however, precisely what legal instruments Mr. Trump believes he has at his
disposal.
The
president, his associates say, has drawn encouragement from his larger
audiences and from a stream of relatively upbeat polling information that
advisers have curated for him, typically filtering out the bleakest numbers.
On a trip
to Florida last week, several aides told the president that winning the
Electoral College was a certainty, a prognosis not supported by Republican or
Democratic polling, according to people familiar with the conversation. And
Mark Meadows, the White House chief of staff, has responded with chipper
enthusiasm when Mr. Trump has raised the idea of making a late bid for solidly
Democratic states like New Mexico, an option other aides have told the
president is flatly unrealistic.
His mad
dash to the finish is a distillation of his four tumultuous years in office, a
mix of resentment, combativeness and a penchant for viewing events through a
prism all his own — and perhaps the hope that everything will work out for him
in the end, the way it did four years ago when he surprised himself, his
advisers and the world by winning the White House.
But by
enclosing himself in the thin bubble of his own worldview, Mr. Trump may have
further severed himself from the political realities of a country in crisis.
And that, in turn, has helped enable Mr. Trump to wage a campaign offering no
central message, no clear agenda for a second term and no answer to the woes of
the pandemic.
Most people
in the president’s inner circle share his optimism about the outcome of the
race, even as they fight exhaustion and the president’s whipsawing moods,
interviews with more than a dozen aides and allies showed. But some advisers
acknowledge that it would require several factors to fall into place. They
spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive internal deliberations.
Republican
lawmakers have offered less rosy assessments of his prospects, and in private
some Trump advisers do not argue the point. One high-ranking Republican member
of Congress vented to Mr. Meadows last month that if Mr. Trump “is trying to
lose the election I can’t think of anything I’d tell him to do differently,”
the lawmaker recalled, noting that the aide only nodded his head in
acknowledgment. “They just think they can’t do anything about it.”
Beyond the
capital, though, some Republicans insist that Mr. Trump can again defy the
odds, and that a devoted base will fuel a traditional G.O.P. surge in Election
Day voters.
Joe
Gruters, the chairman of the Republican Party of Florida who appeared with Mr.
Trump in Tampa last week, described the president as “a lock” in the state.
“You can
take it to the bank and cash the check,” Mr. Gruters said, adding of the
Democrats: “We’re crushing them on the ground. That’s what’s going to make the
difference.”
Seldom far
from Mr. Trump’s thoughts, however, is the possibility of defeat — and the
potential consequences of being ejected from the White House.
In
unguarded moments, Mr. Trump has for weeks told advisers that he expects to
face intensifying scrutiny from prosecutors if he loses. He is concerned not
only about existing investigations in New York, but the potential for new
federal probes as well, according to people who have spoken with him.
While Mr.
Trump has not aired those worries in the open, he has railed against the
democratic process, raising baseless doubts about the integrity of the vote and
suggesting ways of undermining an election that appeared to be going against
him, including interference by the Supreme Court.
He has also
mused about prematurely declaring victory Tuesday night, but if there’s any
organized plan to do so his top lieutenants are not conveying it to their
allies. One congressional strategist said that he spoke to Jared Kushner, Mr.
Trump’s son-in-law, on Sunday and that Mr. Kushner not only didn’t ask for
buy-in from Capitol Hill Republicans for such a plan but also didn’t mention
the prospect at all.
Mr. Trump’s
advisers do continue to believe he has a realistic chance of besting Mr. Biden,
but they concede it would take a last-minute breakthrough in one of the Great
Lakes states where he is currently trailing, as well as a hold-the-line
performance across the South and Southwest. Some Republicans, however, are
already bracing for losses or close calls in a series of Sun Belt states — and
expressing alarm that Mr. Trump may have turned some of them prematurely blue
in the same fashion that Barack Obama’s 2008 landslide made Virginia and
Colorado Democratic bulwarks.
“Arizona
and Georgia are a big deal,” said Nick Everhart, a Republican strategist.
“That’s a shift people thought would come but once they’re gone they’re hard to
reel back.”
Even Mr.
Trump’s advisers allow that if he wins in the Electoral College, it is likely
he will lose the popular vote, potentially by an even wider margin than he did
in 2016.
The
president himself has done little to strengthen his chances in the final days
of the race. On Friday, Mr. Trump used a rally in Michigan to float a baseless
theory that doctors are classifying patients’ deaths as related to the
coronavirus in order to make more money, drawing fierce condemnation from
medical groups, as well as Mr. Biden and Mr. Obama.
And on
Saturday, in Pennsylvania at the site where George Washington mapped out his
Delaware crossing during the revolution, aides wrote out a sober speech for the
president to deliver. Midway through, he seemed to get bored and began to riff
about the size of Mr. Biden’s sunglasses.
He has
frequently used his speeches to deliver long diatribes against Mr. Biden and
his son, Hunter Biden, even though some Trump advisers believe the whole
subject is a sideshow in the midst of a public-health disaster. But Trump
associates say he simply enjoys attacking the Biden family.
Senator
Kevin Cramer, Republican from North Dakota, said that he believed Mr. Trump did
not let the possibility of losing interfere with his approach.
“He
certainly isn’t going to buy into anybody’s argument that’s all over or that
he’s lost,” Mr. Cramer said.
What
confounds some Republicans is how little Mr. Trump is discussing last month’s
confirmation of Justice Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court; some G.O.P.
senators have made that achievement a centerpiece of their campaigns.
Campaigning
in Kentucky this weekend in pursuit of his seventh term, Senator Mitch
McConnell, the majority leader, repeatedly trumpeted Justice Barrett and the
other two Trump-nominated judges on the high court while not mentioning Mr.
Biden’s name once.
Though Mr.
Trump has reconstituted parts of his 2016 inner circle in the waning days of
the race, the operation lacks a figure who is both willing and able to force
the president to stick to a script. Four years ago, Mr. Trump viewed the
campaign’s top official, Stephen K. Bannon, as something of a peer— one who was
able to focus the candidate. These days, Mr. Trump often rages to associates
and aides that he believes they are failing him.
There was a
fleeting effort to bring in a new voice as recently as three weeks before the
election: Some Trump advisers floated the idea of recruiting Karl Rove, the
former George W. Bush adviser, who has been involved in a super PAC supporting
Mr. Trump, or someone like him.
But by the
time that idea was discussed the election was already less than a month away.
And advisers have been consumed by a significant cash crunch, one exacerbated
by tentative plans for virtual fund-raisers that never materialized in part
because of Mr. Trump’s own lack of interest in such events.
Some
Republicans appear to be looking past the end of the Trump era, whether that
comes on Tuesday night or in another few years.
Several
ambitious young Republicans have recently made visits to the early primary
states of Iowa and New Hampshire, including Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas,
Senator Ted Cruz of Texas and Gov. Kristi Noem of South Dakota. Ms. Noem also
quietly visited Mr. Trump at Mar-a-Lago, which may become another stop on the
G.O.P. primary circuit should Mr. Trump lose. Another, Senator Rick Scott of
Florida, is maneuvering to take over the National Republican Senatorial
Committee, an effort seen by other Republicans as a step toward running for
president.
There is
even quiet lobbying underway for the chairmanship of the Republican National
Committee, a body helmed for four years by Ronna McDaniel, who is well-liked
within the committee but has never become one of the people closest to the
president.
Several
Trump loyalists are seen as potential successors in that job, including Mr.
Bossie, who is an R.N.C. member from Maryland, as well as the Ohio Republican
Party chairwoman, Jane Timken, whom the president effectively installed in her
post. Mr. Trump’s son Donald Trump Jr. and his girlfriend, the conservative
pundit Kimberly Guilfoyle, have both been discussed as possible chair, though
their aides said they are not interested in the job.
Mr. Gruters
said he was not aware of any efforts by the president’s son to pursue the
R.N.C. job, and praised Ms. McDaniel. But Mr. Gruters said a Trump scion could
ascend to the job if she were to step down.
“Ronna has
really done well and she certainly deserves the nod if she decides to continue
on,” Mr. Gruters said. “Don Jr. obviously would be credible for anything he
wanted to go after. He has a solid command of the base. He has the ability to
raise a lot of money and would be another superstar for the party.”
Maggie
Haberman is a White House correspondent. She joined The Times in 2015 as a
campaign correspondent and was part of a team that won a Pulitzer Prize in 2018
for reporting on President Trump’s advisers and their connections to Russia.
@maggieNYT
Alexander
Burns is a national political correspondent, covering elections and political
power across the country, including Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign. Before coming
to The Times in 2015, he covered the 2012 presidential election for Politico.
@alexburnsNYT
Jonathan
Martin is a national political correspondent. He has reported on a range of
topics, including the 2016 presidential election and several state and
congressional races, while also writing for Sports, Food and the Book Review. He
is also a CNN political analyst. @jmartnyt
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