OCALA: President Donald Trump fought on Friday to recover from sinking election polls by campaigning in Florida with a hardline pitch to Americaâs right wing, claiming that his Democratic opponent Joe Biden would deliver communism and a âfloodâ of criminal immigrants.
While Trump put on a brave face, the fact he was fighting at all for Florida and stumping later Friday in Georgia â two states he won four years ago â illustrated how much ground he has to make up against Biden in the 18 days left to the election.
With his polls sliding and US Covid-19 infections spiking, Trump is focusing entirely on his core Republican base, in hopes that highly energized supporters will turn out in huge numbers.
In Ocala, Florida, the coronavirus was an afterthought.
Instead, Trump tossed the large, loudly cheering crowd red meat on immigration, race, and his conspiracy theory that Biden is steeped in corruption.
Spicing his stump speech with lurid exaggerations, Trump claimed that the âBiden family is a criminal enterprise.â
He said Democrats âhave nothing but disdain for your valuesâ and âwant to turn America into a communist countryâ â a reprise of his successful 2016 message tapping into white, working-class resentment.
Trump then dived into racially charged comments on Latin American migrants, saying Democrats will âflood your communities with illegal aliens, drugs, crime.â
And he lashed out at one of his most outspoken critics, the Somali-American Democratic congresswoman Ilhan Omar, saying âshe hates our countryâ and âcomes from a place that doesnât even have a government.â
Trump had still more venom for journalists, whom he called âthe enemy of the people.â
Biden highlights pandemic
Biden, meanwhile, stopped in Southfield, Michigan, ripping into Trumpâs handling of the coronavirus â the strongest issue of his campaign.
âHe keeps telling us that this virus is going to disappear like a miracle,â Biden said.
âMy lord! Itâs not disappearing, in fact itâs on the rise again, itâs getting worse, as predicted,â Biden said.
He also homed in on another area where Trump has run into regular controversy â his often lackluster responses when asked to condemn extreme right-wing groups and white supremacists.
He said Trumpâs comments were a âdog whistleâ to such groups.
Caution
However, Biden campaign manager Jen OâMalley Dillon sounded a note of caution for Democrats, saying national polls especially were misleading.
âWe are not ahead by double digits,â she said. âThose are inflated national public polling numbers.â
Biden will be getting help from Democratic superstar Barack Obama on Wednesday next week when the former president, who had Biden as his vice president, campaigns in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
As the polling clouds darken for Trump, prominent members of his own Republican party â including Senator Ben Sasse of Nebraska and Senator Ted Cruz of Texas â are sounding the alarm.
Sasse, in a telephone call with constituents this week obtained by The Washington Examiner, said a defeat for Trump looks âlikelyâ and Republicans may also lose the Senate.
Sasse also had harsh words for Trump, saying he is âTV-obsessed,â ânarcissisticâ and allowed his family to treat âthe presidency like a business opportunity.â
But Senator Lindsey Graham, a key Republican ally for Trump, told AFP that voters were starting to weigh up the pros and cons of the two parties, rather than focusing on Trumpâs bruising personality.
âI think itâs getting better for us by the day,â he said.
Trump and Biden are to hold a final debate next Thursday.
They had been scheduled to hold one this Thursday but Trump backed out after it was changed to a virtual debate following his Covid-19 diagnosis. The candidates held rival town hall events instead.
Trump, a former reality television star, wonât be happy about the ratings: 14.1 million tuned in to Bidenâs event, while 13.5 million watched Trump, according to Nielsen ratings data. â AFP









