How bad could it get? America’s ugly election


EXCLUSIVE LIVE DIGITAL EVENT



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The Economist - UK 2020-09-05

EXCLUSIVE LIVE DIGITAL EVENT

Thursday September 10th, 12pm edt / 9am pdt / 5pm bst 



John Prideaux 

US editor

Reserve your space:  

Economist.com/usevent



Charlotte Howard

 

New York bureau chief & 



Energy and commodities editor

Jon Fasman

 

Washington correspondent



Elliott Morris

 

Data journalist




34

United States

The Economist

September 5th 2020

S

hortly after



George Floyd was killed by a Minnesotan police-

man last May, Joe Biden condemned the riots that his killing

had sparked. “Protesting such brutality is right and necessary,” he

said. “Burning down communities and needless destruction is

not. Violence that endangers lives is not.” He repeated his denun-

ciation several times over the next few days. President Donald

Trump meanwhile accused him of ignoring the issue.

So it has continued. Though Mr Biden has more often expressed

support for the ongoing racial-justice protests against police bru-

tality, he has not failed to condemn the violent fringe that, in Ore-

gon, Illinois and now Wisconsin, continues to haunt them. “There

is no justification whatsoever for violence, looting,” he said last

week, after the shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha sparked yet

more rioting. The following day—at the Republican conven-

tion—Mr Trump for the umpteenth time accused him of failing to

condemn what Mr Biden had just condemned.

The hammering the former vice-president has taken on this is-

sue—every evening on Fox News as well as from Mr Trump—has

unnerved some of his supporters. Some suggest a 1968-style silent

majority, sickened by the violence, is building against the Demo-

crats. It sounds plausible. But there is no strong evidence for it yet.

That means the Democrats anxiously demanding that Mr Biden is-

sue ever more and louder denunciations of the street violence are

essentially taking their cues from Mr Trump and Tucker Carlson,

who do not have their interests at heart.

The evidence of the past three months is that Republicans do

not want to set Mr Biden straight on law-and-order. They want to

see him hopelessly entangled in the issue—bullied into express-

ing ever more forceful denunciations of the riots (as he did again

this week, in a speech in Pittsburgh), which they will duly dismiss

as “too little too late”. A better course for Mr Biden’s advisers would

be to consider what the canny Mr Trump does not want his Demo-

cratic opponent to talk about. Could it be a public-health catastro-

phe, for which a majority of voters blame the president, which is

predicted to take a quarter of a million lives by election-day? That

is a likelier conjecture.

Especially when you consider the promise of Mr Biden’s recent

efforts to recast the politics of the coronavirus catastrophe: by

treating it as not merely a public-health crisis, but also an inextri-

cably connected economic one. “We will never get our economy

back on track…until we deal with this virus,” the former vice-presi-

dent told the Democratic convention last month.

That was shrewd on two counts. First, because it linked the two

issues that voters care about most—notwithstanding Mr Trump’s

fiery rhetoric, even Republicans are more worried about the pan-

demic and the economy than they are about violent crime. Second,

because Mr Biden is in effect trying to use Mr Trump’s biggest

weakness, his acknowledged failures on the coronavirus, to un-

dercut his biggest remaining strength: a diminished, but some-

how enduring, reputation for effective economic management. 

The economy is the only issue on which Mr Trump outpolls Mr

Biden. For that matter, it is the only issue on which he has consis-

tently out-performed his low approval ratings ever since his in-

auguration. Founded upon his years as a 

tv

boardroom titan, as



well as his more recent success in spinning the strong economy he

inherited as his creation, Mr Trump’s reputation for economic

wizardry was the single main reason he had looked highly compet-

itive before the coronavirus struck, despite his unpopularity.

With the unemployment rate now at 10%, the gap between how

Americans rate the president on the economy and overall has

shrunk significantly. According to Gallup, 48% of Americans ap-

prove of him on the economy, while 42% approve of him overall.

That is the main reason he now looks much less competitive. Yet in

a closer election than the polls currently predict, this residual

strength could still save him. At the least, it appears to be Mr

Trump’s best hope.

A survey of suburban voters in the swing states of Arizona,

Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin—pub-

lished last month by Third Way, a think-tank—underlines that.

Though only 39% approved of Mr Trump, 48% said he was still

making a decent fist of the economy. That might look like a losing

hand. But the survey suggested that even a fairly modest uptick in

the economy could move opinion in Mr Trump’s favour pretty dra-

matically. The respondents chose Mr Biden over Mr Trump by a

nine-point margin. But asked how they would feel if the unem-

ployment rate were to drop to 8%, they split their vote between the

two candidates. Given how likely that order of economic improve-

ment is over the next two months, this should worry Biden strat-

egists rather more than the spectre of a 1968-re-run.


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