Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Politics
Gregory Korte

Trump doesn't see a sympathy bump as Biden's poll lead widens

Marine One, carrying President Donald Trump, to the White House from Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on Oct. 5, 2020 in Washington, D.C. Trump spent three days hospitalized for coronavirus. (Yuri Gripas/Abaca Press/TNS)

WASHINGTON _ Voters appear to be unmoved by President Donald Trump's bout with COVID-19, with early polls showing no "sympathy boost" for the ailing president amid poor reviews for his debate performance last week.

Instead, Democrat Joe Biden is surging in national polls and now has his biggest lead since late July.

It can generally take a week for major developments in the race to be reflected in the polls, but early evidence is that voters are largely unsympathetic to Trump's illness.

Two-thirds of likely voters in a Reuters/Ipsos poll said Trump wouldn't have been infected with the coronavirus if he had taken the disease more seriously _ numbers all the more lopsided considering that 9% are skeptical he ever had the virus at all.

Previous presidents have gotten a short-term boost in the polls following serious medical issues. Dwight Eisenhower's approval rating shot up from an already high 71% to 78% when he had a heart attack in September 1955 _ the highest for any peacetime president in modern history except for John F. Kennedy. Ronald Reagan also got an 11-point bump following the assassination attempt in 1981.

The difference is that those were unforeseen events, said B. Dan Wood, a Texas A&M University professor who has studied presidential approval during crises. Trump's COVID-19 diagnosis comes seven months into a pandemic that the president has acknowledged downplaying. And he has belittled people, like Biden, who wear protective gear.

"Trump's COVID is totally expected, given his behavior. No one should be surprised," Wood said. "Eisenhower's heart attacks and Reagan's assassination attempt injury were shocks because they were not expected."

Only 7% of registered voters in a Yahoo/YouGov poll described Trump's COVID-19 diagnosis as a "wake-up call," but they were mostly Republican.

Among Democrats, 84% said they were already treating the coronavirus more seriously than the president, while 53% of Republicans described the diagnosis as simply bad luck for the president and not indicative of greater risk, according to the Yahoo poll.

Biden now leads by 9.1 percentage points in the RealClearPolitics average of polls _ a lead 3 points larger than Hillary Clinton had at the same point in 2016. Biden also remains above 50%, giving Trump little opportunity to change the race by winning over undecided voters.

A CNN poll released Tuesday suggests last week's debate might have been pivotal. By 57% to 26%, registered voters who watched it said Biden did a better job than Trump.

Those voters were most harsh in their judgment of Trump's continued ambiguity on far-right groups, with 64% saying he hasn't done enough to denounce White supremacists. At the debate, Trump said the Proud Boys, which the FBI has classified as an extremist group, should "stand back and stand by."

CNN started conducting the poll before Trump's COVID-19 diagnosis was made public last Thursday, but most of the responses came after that news. The poll showed Biden leading by 16 points and has a margin of error of 3.3 points.

Trump's quarantine has already changed the tone of the race, as Trump is confined to the White House for the next week or so as Biden continues to campaign.

That represents a role reversal for the two candidates, with Biden having spent much of the past six months confined to his Delaware home _ a stance the Trump campaign derided as "Biden's basement strategy."

Biden holds a considerable fundraising lead and has used the money to buy expensive television ads. Biden has suspended most of his negative ads while Trump recuperates from COVID-19, but continues to run contrast ads critical of Trump's handling of the virus.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.