The great reality TV presidency isn’t over yet. Credit: Win McNamee/Getty Images
With less than a month to go, Donald Trump is way behind in his campaign to be re-elected. Heâs eight points behind nationally, trailing in almost all the key swing states, and as things stand right now, he is on track to lose. Anyone who tells you otherwise is either a deluded partisan or is overcompensating, still burnt from the 2016 shock.
Our interrogation of the data in late September (Is Donald Trump toast?), left me so convinced, I went off and put some bets on high Electoral College totals for Joe Biden â mostly on 330-360 EC votes but a flutter on the two bands either side, including 360-390 votes (a candidate needs 270 to win). Ten days ago I got 12 to 1 odds, now the odds have been reduced to 8 to 1, meaning that pundits now see the chances of a huge Biden win as significantly less remote.
The polls we do have from the past few days suggest that, if anything, the Presidentâs sojourn at Walter Reed hospital has made things even worse for his electoral chances: Bidenâs lead has widened and other surveys indicate that voters think Trump could have avoided getting infected if he had taken the virus more seriously (including half of registered Republicans), and that since the President became sick, Republicans are more, not less, worried about the pandemic.
This is the context in which we have to interpret the Presidentâs somewhat surreal communications over the past few days. First, there was the uncharacteristic note of hesitancy, that crept in on Friday and Saturday when he was moved to hospital. âGoing well, I think,âwas his first message, with that atypical caveat, and later, in his four minute clip from Walter Reed, he caveated again, âyou donât know, over the next few days, I guess thatâs the real test.â
There was lots of talk of LOVE and the how a âbipartisan consensus was a beautiful thing to see⌠I wonât forget that.â By Saturday evening you could almost be forgiven for thinking he might emerge somehow softened and with a note of humility â how would ânice Trumpâ do with voters?
But by Sunday, the tone had changed again. Instead of âfeel the loveâ, the mood was now âsee the light.â Along with a much-criticised drive-by, he said he had âlearned a lot about Covidâ by âgoing to schoolâ at the hospital. Then, finally, with yesterdayâs messages and his return to the White House, there was a new clarity: âDonât be afraid of Covid. Donât let it dominate your life.â
The slow-mo montage of him flying back, removing the mask and saluting the helicopter from the White House balcony â to stirring soundtrack, naturally â does give a strong indication as to how the President will present himself in the final weeks of the campaign: heâs been there, done battle with the virus, and conquered it. Trumpâs about to turn the rest of this campaign into a referendum on Covid-19. Strange as it may seem, itâs probably his best and only shot at retaining the Presidency.
â Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) October 5, 2020
Already, British commentators have been confirming the consensus view to the New York Times: that Covid-19 was a political disaster for Boris Johnson, and will surely be so too for Donald Trump.
But the contrast between the two could not be starker. The week when Johnson was in hospital was genuinely frightening and changed the national attitude to this crisis permanently â the high point of national fear was during that fortnight â but what was surprising was how little the Prime Minister exploited its symbolic potential. Had he emerged full of life, with talk of not being afraid, the whole story might have been different; he might even have finally become the leader he has always hoped to be.
As it is, he survived, but seemed defeated by the virus â he has cut a faltering, timid, hollowed-out figure ever since, and (despite an attempt to rediscover some vigour in this morningâs party conference speech) has presided over a Government that fittingly matches the same description.
We like to think, in our sophisticated democracies, that we no longer place much store in the symbolic power of our leaders â the idea of lâètat câest moi perished along with Louis XIV â but if anything, the Boris Johnson experience since his illness suggests the opposite. One canât help but think the national loss of confidence is inextricably bound up with the prime ministerâs loss of confidence.Â
Which is why Covid-19 could still just about come to Donald Trumpâs rescue. Provided he doesnât relapse and is actually recovering â the footage of him apparently breathless upon his return to the White House is not encouraging â the idea that he has had the virus and thrown it off will inevitably endow him with a certain authority. If he now downplays the threat, Democrats will accuse him of dangerous âanti-scienceâ, but in truth they are as guilty as the other side of politicising the issue. Doubts about blanket shut-downs in response to the virus are not irresponsible, but are entirely legitimate points of discussion in a free society.
Meanwhile, anxiety about the virus remains high in the States, but it has drifted down from its August peaks. And as every day goes by, with children in and out of school, studentsâ college experience ruined, and thousands of businesses folding, the sense of grievance in America will only grow. So what if the President were to campaign on a promise of moving to a policy of individual responsibility regarding Covid-19? What if he attached it to something like the âfocused protectionâ strategy proposed by the three epidemiologists we interviewed yesterday? After our interview, the three scientists met the Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar on Capitol Hill: could the administration be taking their ideas seriously?
Back in June, I suggested that Covid-19 could help Donald Trump get re-elected:
âAn election campaign in which Democrat voices are endlessly calling for further restrictions⌠while Trump is promising freedom and a return to the âold normalâ, sounds like a fight he is aching to have. Not even Make America Great Again â just Make America Normal Again.â
It is probably too late. Real movement during election campaigns happens less often than people think: the YouGov US election forecast has barely moved throughout this drama. Iâm not selling my bet yet. But if Donald Trump can recast this campaign as a choice between years of facemasks and shuttered town centres with Joe Biden, and a reinstatement of freedom and individual responsibility with him, it could be the best chance he has of a late change in the course of this election.




Join the discussion
Join like minded readers that support our journalism by becoming a paid subscriber
To join the discussion in the comments, become a paid subscriber.
Join like minded readers that support our journalism, read unlimited articles and enjoy other subscriber-only benefits.
Subscribe