Bruni: Is Trump Toast?

Photo by Evan Vucci of The Associated Press / President Donald Trump arrives on stage to speak at a campaign rally at the BOK Center on Saturday, June 20, 2020, in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Trump is asking Americans to let him keep his job. His critics are asking how much of that job he's actually doing.
Photo by Evan Vucci of The Associated Press / President Donald Trump arrives on stage to speak at a campaign rally at the BOK Center on Saturday, June 20, 2020, in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Trump is asking Americans to let him keep his job. His critics are asking how much of that job he's actually doing.

Only two of the past six presidents before Donald Trump lost their bids for reelection. That's good news for him.

But their stories are bad news for him, too.

In their final years in office, both of those presidents, Jimmy Carter and George H.W. Bush, experienced a noticeable slide in popularity right around the time - early May through late June - that Trump hit his current ugly patch.

According to Gallup's ongoing tracking of the percentage of Americans who approve of a president's job performance, Carter's and Bush's numbers sank below 40% during this period and pretty much stayed there through Election Day. It's as if they both met their fates on the cusp of summer.

And the cusp of summer has been a mean season for Trump, who has never flailed more pathetically or lashed out more desperately and who just experienced the Carter-Bush dip. According to Gallup, his approval rating fell to 39% in early June from 49 a month earlier. So if Carter and Bush are harbingers, Trump is toast.

He's toast by other measures as well.

According to some abstruse algorithm that The Economist regularly updates, he has only a 1 in 10 chance of winning the Electoral College and thus the presidency. According to a historical averaging of election-year polls by the website FiveThirtyEight, Biden's lead over Trump right now is the biggest at this stage of the contest since Bill Clinton's over Bob Dole in 1996, when Clinton won his second term.

Trump's response? To set himself on fire.

His gratuitously touted instincts are nowhere to be found, supplanted by self-defeating provocations, kamikaze tantrums and an itchy Twitter finger. There's a culture war for him to exploit, but instead of simply pillorying monument destroyers, he created his own living monuments: a white supremacist astride a golf cart in a Florida retirement community and a pistol-toting Karen shouting at peaceful Black protesters from the stoop of her St. Louis manse. As a statement of values, it's grotesque.

"Trump is in a deep hole and his reaction is to keep digging," David Axelrod told me. "What he's doing is shrinking his vote to excite his base." But that base is almost certainly not big enough to carry him to victory.

Of course, November is still plenty distant. "Nobody could have predicted what these last four months would bring," Axelrod said. "We can't predict what the next four months will bring."

His situation appears to be dire - direr than Democrats allow themselves to admit. They remember how they counted their chickens last time around and got totally plucked.

"Every Democrat rightly has 2016 PTSD," Lis Smith, a communications strategist who has advised Pete Buttigieg and Andrew Cuomo, told me. "But right now? You can't imagine normal suburban people voting for Trump anymore. He has really, really alienated everyone but the MAGA true believers."

Additionally, 2016 is a possibly irrelevant point of reference, for reasons that become clearer all the time. I wouldn't be entirely shocked if Biden stages a rout in November and the commentary afterward casts Trump's reign not as some profound wake-up call but as a freak accident made possible by a perfect storm of circumstances.

In fact that commentary has started. In The Washington Post last week, Matt Bai astutely observed that even as Trump won the presidency, most Americans rejected the core tenets of his campaign and viewed him darkly.

"It was mostly about the intense emotions triggered by his opponent," he added, referring to Hillary Clinton.

There are many ways in which the last presidential election doesn't apply to this one, when Trump faces a much tougher challenge. In 2016, an unusually high percentage of voters, especially in such pivotal states as Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin, told pollsters that they'd decided whom to vote for in the final week. And these late deciders favored Trump.

That could mean that many of them didn't have an entirely fixed opinion of him. But just about every American does now. He has dominated the media like none of his recent predecessors, with flamboyant behavior that repels ambivalence.

His luck with late deciders in 2016 could also speak to Clinton aversion. But there's no comparable Biden aversion. If many voters can't bring themselves to adore him, they also can't bring themselves to abhor him.

And Trump and his minions know it. That's why, instead of simply portraying Biden as some lefty nightmare, they're claiming that he's so mentally diminished that he'll be the puppet of progressive extremists.

The party conventions also may have less impact than ever: They're not rival shows but rival coronavirus narratives, with the Democrats planning a largely virtual event. Also, more Americans than usual are certain to vote early, by mail, possibly casting ballots even before the expected Trump-Biden debates.

There have been other surprises that have all cut against Trump. There was the early June surprise of tear gas being used on peaceful protesters so that he could walk across Lafayette Square for a photo op; the mid-June surprise of John Bolton's book; the late June surprise of The Times' scoop that Trump was informed about Russian bounties on American soldiers but didn't pay attention or care.

The surprises will no doubt keep coming for an administration as steeped in incompetence and corruption as Trump's. That's the other thing about chickens: They come home to roost.

The New York Times

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