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ICYMI: Bloomberg: Trump Confronts a Blue Wall of Governors

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In at least three crucial swing states, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, the Democratic governor is significantly more popular than President Trump.


In a Bloomberg opinion piece yesterday, Francis Wilkinson argues this “blue wall” is a sign the Trump campaign is in trouble – the policies, management styles, and values of Democratic governors are more aligned with Joe Biden, not Donald Trump.


We’ve said it before, and we’ll keep saying it: the path to 270 runs through Democratic governors. Democratic governors currently represent 288 electoral college votes – and since 2016, the DGA has won in nine states that went for Trump in the 2016 election. The kitchen table issues that ushered Democratic gubernatorial candidates to victory in 2018 and 2019 continue to resonate in 2020, with a sharper focus in the wake of uncertainty caused by the failed federal COVID-19 response.


Americans looked to Democratic governors when the Trump administration failed to enact a national strategy on COVID-19. One pollster said in Michigan, voters favor Gov. Gretchen Whitmer over Trump because, “she took corona seriously, listened to medical experts and implemented a plan — all things voters don’t think Trump did.”


It’s clear the key to winning over voters in swing states is emulating the success of Democratic governors like Gretchen Whitmer, Tom Wolf, and Tony Evers.


Read more about the “Blue Wall” below:


Bloomberg: Trump Confronts a Blue Wall of Governors


Three crucial states that swung the 2016 election to Donald Trump could also be the hinge that dislodges him in 2020. Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin share many characteristics, from Big Ten football programs to post-industrial small-town desolation. But in this year’s election they share another attribute: Democratic governors who have worked to mitigate the coronavirus contagion in the face of opposition from Trump and sometimes hysterical attacks from Republican state legislators.


It seems significant, then, that in this era of extreme polarization, each of those governors remains consistently more popular in their respective states than the president.


The most popular among the three is Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, whose approval/disapproval rating among likely voters is 59% to 38% in a September poll. Whitmer has faced pointed attacks from Trump, right-wing militants storming the state capitol and a Republican-dominated legislature that has aggressively sought to undermine her authority, policies and political standing. She has emerged from such battles more popular than she was at the beginning of this year — and far more popular than Trump, whose approval/disapproval numbers in the same poll were 44%/53%.


“There is a general feel among voters that Michigan has done better than other states,” Whitmer pollster John Anzalone said in an email. “She took corona seriously, listened to medical experts and implemented a plan — all things voters don’t think Trump did.”


In Pennsylvania, Governor Tom Wolf has a 55% approval rating and a 38% disapproval rating, according to a poll taken in late August and early September. Trump is at 43%/54%. The overall approval rating of each man matches that of his approval rating on his response to coronavirus.


[…]


Democratic consultant Doc Sweitzer, who has a long history in Pennsylvania politics, echoes Whitmer pollster Anzalone. “In many ways this about adult leadership,” he said by email. “Voters believe that Trump is childish. (They say that in focus groups.)”


[…]


Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers is the least popular of the three governors. That might say something about Evers’ soft style of politics in a hard, ugly era. Or it could be a signal that Wisconsin, which has the highest share of non-Hispanic Whites, 81%, of the three states, remains more committed to Trumpism than its swingy neighbors. According to a poll taken in late August and early September, Evers has a 51% job approval rating, with 43% disapproving. Trump’s numbers are 44% and 54%.


Wisconsin has been roiled by protests in Kenosha, following a police shooting, and the subsequent killing of two protesters and wounding of another by a 17-year-old Trump supporter from Illinois. The University of Wisconsin flagship campus in Madison is struggling to contain the spread of Covid-19. And the state has been a partisan powder keg since former Governor Scott Walker preceded Trump in dividing the electorate into supporters who deserve all the benefits of the state and opponents who must be destroyed.


In Wisconsin, Trump maintains a relatively robust 52%/44% approval/disapproval rating on his handling of the economy. Wisconsin, like Michigan and Pennsylvania, is not an economic Valhalla.  But voters who mistrust the president on the coronavirus nevertheless trust his handling of the economy, however erratic and corrupt.


The contrasting approval/disapproval ratings of the Democratic governors who lead these battleground states, and of the president who likely must win at least one of them to remain in office, is yet another sign that Trump’s campaign is in trouble. Those governors pursue policies, have management styles and exhibit values that contrast directly with Trump’s, while reinforcing Joe Biden’s. As the ticket-splitting voter becomes a figure of nostalgia, the Whitmer-Trump voter, or Wolf-Trump supporter, takes on an increasingly spectral air.


Still, in an era in which truth is under siege and reality is malleable, Trump cannot be counted out. He still succeeds at fooling some of the people some of the time. And as the fans at his Corona superspreader event in Nevada this week attest, some would rather court death in Trump’s make-believe than live in Biden’s reality.