Donald Trump HAS been all over twitter and the media….
As a result?
His approval numbers are about the same…
And?
Joe Biden keeps his lead over the Republican President as he runs his campaign for his basement…
Few if any projections are for a Trump win come November as polls in most swing states show Biden with leads…
Not big ones…
But leads in the places that Obama voters defected to Trump in 2016….
Joe Biden is NOT Hillary Clinton….
Trump’s growing efforts to try his Clinton campaign throw downs do NOT seem to be working…(Biden is ignoring them…Trump is also turning knocking a very popular Barack Obama whose throwbacks get more positive attention then Trumps…)
A year and half ago Republicans got rolled over in a Democratic wave…
Could that type of wave come back in November against Republicans across the country?
Donald Trump HAS a history this time…
And it’s like a lead weight around his mouth and ankles…
Donald Trump has made clear he will attack Joe Biden unmercifully in order to ensure the election is a choice between him and Joe Biden — rather than an up-or-down vote on the president’s handling of the coronavirus.
Scott Walker has a different view, at least when it comes to Trump’s chances in the all-important battleground of Wisconsin.
“I think it still boils down to a referendum on the president. They’ll beat up on Biden and they’ll raise some concerns,” said the former two-term Republican governor of Wisconsin, who lost his seat in 2018. But in the end, if people felt good about their health and the state of the economy, Trump will probably carry Wisconsin. If not, Walker said, “it’s much more difficult” for the president.
Walker is not alone among swing-state Republicans in his assessment of the president’s political prospects. Interviews with nearly a dozen former governors, members of Congress, and other current and former party leaders revealed widespread apprehension about Trump’s standing six months out from the election.
Many fret that Trump’s hopes are now hitched to the pandemic; others point to demographic changes in once-reliably red states and to the challenge of running against a hard-to-define Democratic opponent who appeals to a wide swath of voters. The concerns give voice to an assortment of recent battleground state polling showing Trump struggling against Biden.