Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia's Center for Politics, said he doesn't think former vice president Joe Biden has to worry about enthusiasm as much as other political prognosticators think.
showing the former vice president ahead but not as much as he once was.
That will be a hard sell for the president, said Steve Schale, the director of United The Country, a pro-Biden super PAC targeting voters in upper Midwest states which propelled Trump to victory in 2016.Biden hits back on Trump's attacks: 'Do I look like a radical socialist with a soft spot for rioters?'
GOP strategist Ford O'Connell, however, said he believes an increasing number of key voters, such as seniors and suburbanites, are beginning to view Trump as the candidate best suited to restore normalcy, especially as civil unrest continues to spark violence in places such as Kenosha where he plans to visit Tuesday."But he has to continue driving this home that: 'you have a lot to lose. I’m front and center on . It’s about safety and security.
."They want to silence anyone who exposes the violence and destruction they've been labeling as 'peaceful protests' for months." "Well, we saw the Trump convention. Advocates against gun control. What else did we see? Climate change and the environment ," Madonna said."That raises a serious problem with college-educated suburban women who do want gun control, who are concerned about climate change, and who, on cultural issues, are liberal.”conducted Aug. 12-15 found Biden ahead of Trump among registered suburban voters, 51% to 43%, with an even greater lead among suburban women, 54% to 41%.
"How the vice president is getting out there is something we all need to watch very closely," Audelo said.that 85% Democrats and those who lean toward the party view the coronavirus as a major threat.
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