2020
ELECTIONS
Trump makes final battleground blitz
The president will hold at least 14 rallies between
now and Nov. 3, hoping to convince his supporters a red wave is attainable.
By GABBY
ORR
10/31/2020
07:27 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/10/31/trump-final-battleground-visits-433772
UPPER
MAKEFIELD, Pa. — In the final 72 hours of the 2016 election, President Donald
Trump visited every quadrant of the United States — traveling from New
Hampshire to Florida, Nevada to Virginia, Colorado to North Carolina. There are
fewer miles between his campaign stops this time, but the frenetic pace
remains.
With just
three days left before the Nov. 3 election, the president is betting it all on
the Rust Belt states that won him the White House four years ago, where polls
have tightened and his campaign aides are holding out hope for an Election Day
surge in GOP turnout. Between now and Tuesday, the president will hold 14
rallies — possibly more — with a curated selection of arguments tailor-made for
his supporters.
Trump previewed
his closing pitch to voters during a campaign swing through Pennsylvania on
Saturday, presenting them with a series of binary choices: socialism or a free
market; Covid-19 lockdowns or reopened communities; tax cuts or expensive
government programs like the "Green New Deal"; thriving industries or
outsourced jobs. It was a sensationalized version of the theme his campaign has
pushed all summer — that Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden is a puppet
of his party’s most liberal forces and can’t be trusted to lead the
post-coronavirus economic recovery.
“This
election is a choice between a Biden depression or a Trump super-recovery. It’s
a choice between a Biden lockdown or a safe vaccine that ends the pandemic,”
Trump told the crowd at his first of four rallies here on Saturday, held at the
site of George Washington’s headquarters during the Revolutionary War.
He
continued: “Under Biden, there will be no school, no weddings, no graduations.
No Thanksgiving, no Christmas, no 4th of July. Biden will trap you in an
endless nightmare of deadly lockdowns.”
With
limited time to pull in new voters, the president will spend his final days on
the campaign trail focused on one goal: Convincing his rural and working-class
supporters a red wave is attainable, but only if they show up at the polls. The
base-centered play is meant to rev enthusiasm at the eleventh hour as Democrats
shatter early turnout records in several battleground states and Republicans
aggressively push for similar levels of engagement.
On Sunday,
Trump will visit Michigan, Iowa, North Carolina, Georgia and Florida,
concentrating his efforts in the industrial Midwest and a trio of Southern
states where he and Biden are within striking distance of each other. He will
then spend the majority of Monday back in the Rust Belt, with stops in
Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, and two rallies in Michigan. New polling from CNN
on Saturday shows the president trailing Biden in Michigan, Wisconsin, North
Carolina and Arizona, though the Arizona results are within the polling margin
of error.
“Three days
from now, this is the state that will save the American dream,” Trump said at a
Saturday afternoon stop in Berks County, Pa., which he carried by 18,000 votes
in 2016. “There is only one way to preserve and protect the American way of
life. You must show up on November 3.”
“The wave
is forming,” he claimed, suggesting his political opponents are fearful of
widespread Republican victories on Election Day, including the GOP retaking the
House, that few GOP operatives or election forecasters agree are coming. “They
see it on all sides and there’s nothing they can do about it.”
A Trump
victory on election night would confirm that his fear-based strategy worked in
regions where voters have expressed deep concern about the coronavirus pandemic
but were ultimately persuaded to support Trump out of fear of something worse —
from higher taxes or socialized health care to a new wave of lockdowns or
establishment rule. Still, there is little evidence that Trump, who is trailing
Biden in states his campaign once saw as easy wins and is facing mounting cash
woes, has a late-breaking wave of support barreling toward him.
“We’ve been
building the biggest, strongest middle class in history,” the president said
here on Saturday, encouraging his supporters to “not be intimidated” by
Democrats’ “angry and menacing” tone.
“In truth,
they are actually terrified of you,” he said.
As part of
the president’s final campaign blitz, his family and top surrogates have been
barnstorming battleground states to supplement his efforts. On Saturday, first
lady Melania Trump held a solo event in Wisconsin, while Vice President Mike
Pence campaigned across North Carolina. Meanwhile, the president was surrounded
by an entourage of top aides that grew larger with every stop. By his third
rally of the day, senior White House advisers Jared Kushner and Hope Hicks,
Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien, Republican National Committee Chair Ronna
McDaniel and senior campaign adviser Jason Miller were all aboard Air Force
One.
The
president was also joined by former Notre Dame head football coach Lou Holtz at
his third rally on Saturday, as part of a rotating cast of surrogates he’s
rolled out at his most recent rallies.
“Just show
up on November 3rd or before then to make sure this country has a chance,”
Holtz told the sea of red MAGA hats. “This isn’t about Democrat or Republican,
this is about right and wrong, good versus evil.”
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