Two ways to look at this number, from Team Trump' s perspective: Glass half full, and glass half empty. Let's take the optimistic view first. Just before the last Republican incumbent president won re-election in 2004, only 47 percent of Americans said they were feeling better of than they'd been four years prior. And just after the last Democratic president won re-election, that stat was 45 percent. Now, with weeks to go until voters render a verdict on whether the sitting president deserves a second term, a clear majority -- 56 percent -- of Americans say they're personally better off today than they were at the end of the previous administration:
% of Americans who say they are better off now than they were 4 years ago
— Rob Henderson (@robkhenderson) October 8, 2020
Sept 2020: 56 percent
Dec 2012: 45 percent
Oct 2004: 47 percent
Oct 1992: 38 percent
July 1984: 44 percenthttps://t.co/CmUJ6rOG3E pic.twitter.com/LadV3G1GdI
In
spite of everything going on -- including an ongoing pandemic and all
the dreadful ripple affects associated with it -- most Americans say
they're better off now than when President Obama was on the brink of
being replaced by President Trump. That's a significant number, and it
likely relates to how incredibly well the economy was doing before COVID began wreaking its havoc. Most people were, objectively, more prosperous,
thanks in part to President Trump's economic policies. Wages grew,
incomes increased, unemployment and poverty plunged. Pre-Coronavirus,
the 'better off' number stood at a whopping 61 percent.
Pre-Coronavirus, I said that Trump was likely a favorite to secure a
second term, despite his chronically underwhelming approval ratings. If
the president can spend the next few weeks harnessing and winning over a
sizable contingent of those who say they're in better shape now than
when he took over, he has a shot at closing the gap. I mentioned this
on Fox last night, while also reiterating this point, which cuts against the theory that a 2016-style comeback is in the offing:
On 2016 vs 2020 pic.twitter.com/HCSAmniAXw
— Guy Benson (@guypbenson) October 9, 2020
The American people elected an historically personally-unpopular
Republican president after eight years of Barack Obama. Their
satisfaction has since measurably increased. They have consistently
given Trump high marks on his handling of the economy, and clearly
aren't rejecting his agenda and accomplishments (Trump leads Biden by three points
on the question of agreement on issues). So why is he trailing Obama's
former Vice President, apparently handily? That question brings us to
the glass half empty side of the equation: The answer is, him.
In the same Gallup survey, Trump tumbles eight net points on the metric
of "presidential qualities." That gap is telling, as is the canyon
between the "better off" contingent and the incumbent's average projected vote share:
Trump’s vote share in the current RCP avg is *14 pts lower* than the clear majority of Americans who say they’re better off today (mid-pandemic!) than at the end of the Obama administration. Astounding. Referendum on the incumbent, as a person, the obvious strategy for Dems. https://t.co/2F9obyxRlQ
— Guy Benson (@guypbenson) October 8, 2020
Another way of looking at this: In the RealClearPolitics average, Trump's economic approval rating is roughly 51 percent. His personal favorability rating is 43 percent,
almost exactly equivalent to his vote share number. There are clearly
quite a lot of voters who should be open to re-electing Trump based on
his policies and results, yet who've grown so tired of his conduct that
they are planning to throw him out of office. The devoted faithful
don't want to hear this, even though I've been saying it for years.
And unless the polls are again very wrong in decisive battleground
states, the factors of comportment and fitness appear poised to sink
Trump this cycle. In the interest of self-preservation, the president
should muster whatever capacity for discipline he has and spend the next
three-and-a-half weeks appealing directly to the voters who represent
the 56 percent vs. 42 percent disconnect mentioned above.
His base loves him and will turn out. The Resistance loathes him and will turn out. Polling suggests that those in the middle are breaking pretty heavily toward Biden, so Trump's number one priority should be doing everything he can to peel some of them back into his camp, or at least the undecided column. I'll leave you with one way in which Biden -- the self-proclaimed candidate of norms and bipartisanship -- might scare some reluctant right-leaners and independents into voting Republican. Totally unacceptable:
Joe Biden:
— Daily Caller (@DailyCaller) October 8, 2020
"You'll know my opinion on court packing when the election is over." pic.twitter.com/uYEXZHHAp1
And
to balance some of my commentary above, here's some data that cuts
against the grain in terms of the conventional wisdom, partially drawing
on a data point we wrote about back in August. Given the surprises of 2016, people shouldn't dismiss this analysis out of hand:
Four years ago, @SeanTrende was warning us to look past 'unthinkability bias' & consider that Trump could actually win. His current take on why, unlikely as it is right now, there remains a possible case for a Trump victory we should not overlook. https://t.co/fRIlILkb4x
— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) October 9, 2020
Holy shit. I hardly recognize this country. Its becoming more anti-Christian and more Marxist or Leninist or Soviet America'ish. America has a Vladimir Lenin statue in Seattle. America celebrates Earth Day. Most 3rd parties are communist parties. The Black Lives Matter or Antifa have Leninist origins. Communism is very ugly.
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