Donald Trump is doing everything he can to lose the presidential campaign and Joe Biden is letting him do it. The challenger’s campaign is giving the incumbent enough room to let Trump be Trump, which spells big trouble for the president and the Republican Party.
The Real Clear Politics average of national polls still shows the president’s numbers more or less in the tank, and Joe Biden with a healthy lead nationally and a slight edge in battleground states. A new ABC News national survey indicates that two of every three Americans disapprove of the president’s performance fighting the deadly coronavirus pandemic that has ravaged the nation and killed more than 130,000 Americans.
Election Day is still four months away, but Donald Trump is in a deeper hole than he was when he came from behind to beat Hillary Clinton in 2016. The worst part for the GOP is that Trump keeps digging. The president’s pardon of Roger Stone last week makes a bad political situation even worse for the incumbent.
Meanwhile Biden is running a restrained and effective campaign for president that reflects the strange nature of the times. The former vice president has made good use of his time on the sideline. Campaign 2020 is a referendum on Donald Trump’s mishandling of the coronavirus crisis and Biden’s low-profile campaign has given Donald Trump just enough rope to hang himself.
While the president continues to push for large scale rallies that throw caution to the wind, the Democratic nominee has limited his campaign appearances and maximized the media exposure he has received from them and minimized the exposure that his supporters get from the virus. Consequently, Tulsa, Okla., saw an upsurge in COVID-19 cases after the president’s recent campaign rally there.
Biden’s approach has left the spotlight where it should be; on the commander in chief’s negligent mishandling of the war against the pandemic and the economic carnage that has trailed in its wake.
Less is more for Biden right now, but it won’t be enough for his presidency or the stretch run of his campaign. Biden’s laid-back approach to the campaign has worked well but will need to govern aggressively if he wins.
Running for president may be the easiest part of the process for Biden. If he is elected, he’ll inherit massive problems. Moderate and progressive Democrats are now united in a crusade to get rid of Trump. But once Trump departs, the truce between the progressives and pragmatics will disappear unless Biden works hard to keep the peace. Battles between progressive House members and pragmatic Democratic senators will ignite with Biden in the firing line. Demands for increased government spending will skyrocket, along with the budget deficit.
Biden’s campaign thus far has been low key, but he will need to build up to a crescendo as the gap between him and Trump tightens as it inevitably will. The challenger has two high profile events that will provide momentum for the dog days of summer leading up to Labor Day and the presidential debates. The first will be his choice of a running mate. The second will be the virtual Democratic convention that will compete with the GOP convention in Florida — where the pandemic rages unabated.
The Democratic nominee began to set the stage for a more intense campaign and for an aggressive progressive presidency last week. His supporters and followers of his primary foe, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), agreed on bold party platform recommendations. The former vice president proposed 700 billion dollars in new spending over four years for the Biden “Build Back Better” plan.
These proposals plus the pent-up demand for pandemic relief are likely to provoke a budget battle next year. Even if the pandemic abates, the economy will be slow to recover. Millions of Americans left jobless by the pandemic will continue to need financial assistance, while state and local governments facing a steep decline in tax revenues will need a lot of federal help to prop up their economies.
Where will all the money come from after the federal budget deficit has skyrocketed under Trump and defense spending sucks up more than half of the discretionary budget? Energized House progressives will push for big cuts in defense spending while pragmatic Democratic senators must reckon with their Republican colleagues to prevent filibusters of Biden budget bills.
Tough times bring out the best and worst in political leaders. Donald Trump joins the ranks of Presidents James Buchanan and Herbert Hoover, who froze in the face of crisis, while Joe Biden hopes to join the elite group of chief executives like Lincoln and FDR, who faced chaos head on and won. If Biden wins, the country loses if he snoozes.
Brad Bannon is a Democratic pollster and CEO of Bannon Communications Research. He is also the host of a radio podcast “Dateline D.C. With Brad Bannon” that airs on the Progressive Voices Network. Follow him on Twitter @BradBannon.