Doyle McManus, Tribune News Service
Most political conventions fade quickly from voters’ minds. In an era with few undecided voters, they don’t produce big bounces in the polls the way they once did.
But the back-to-back conventions Americans just watched did perform one useful service: They set the terms of the debate that will dominate the final 65 days of the presidential campaign.
They clarified what political strategists and scholars call the “framing” of the election — the principle that if a candidate can determine the main question voters focus on, he or she has a better chance of controlling the outcome.
Joe Biden is running for president based on the argument that President Donald Trump has done a disastrous job on the most important problems facing the country: the COVID-19 pandemic, the struggling economy, racial injustice and our division into hostile camps.
Trump is trying to duck those issues, because Biden is right — they don’t make the president look good.
It’s almost impossible to argue with a straight face that Trump’s response to the pandemic has been a triumph, although that hasn’t stopped him from trying. The president’s campaign slogan might as well be “Let’s change the subject.”
His campaign, like his convention, focuses on the culture war themes he wielded against Hillary Clinton in 2016. He wants to frame the election around “law and order,” specifically his absurd and racially charged claim that Biden and the Democrats want to unleash “anarchists” on mostly white suburbs.
Which problem will voters focus on?
So far Biden appears to have the upper hand. Most voters say their top concerns are the deadly virus, the recession or the quality of national leadership, not urban unrest. In a Gallup poll this month, only 4% of voters cited “crime and violence” as the most important problem facing the country.
That helps explain why Biden’s advantage in national polls has remained relatively steady. Most voters don’t seem to think protesters are about to invade their neighborhoods, no matter what Trump says. Still, the president clearly believes law and order is his best issue.
“No one will be safe in Biden’s America,” he warned in his acceptance speech Thursday. (“This happens to be Donald Trump’s America,” Biden pointed out.) The president is stoking fear both to energise his ardent supporters and to try to win back moderate voters who have drifted away since 2016.
“He needs to get college-educated white women back,” Lynn Vavreck, a political science professor at UCLA, told me. “If he can keep them from leaving, he can make the race close again.”
There’s no clear evidence that Trump’s strategy is working yet. His standing in national polls has been even more stable than Biden’s; in most surveys, he’s mired below 45%.
The immediate challenge for Trump is to persuade more voters to worry about unrest in places like Kenosha, where protests erupted after a police officer shot a Black man seven times in the back. White House strategist Kellyanne Conway uttered an unpleasant truth last week: Street violence is good for the Trump campaign’s effort to frame the voters’ choice.
By the same token, the immediate challenge for Biden is to rebut Trump’s charge that Democrats want to “give free rein to violent anarchists, agitators and criminals.”
Still, street violence isn’t the question Biden wants to focus on. He needs to frame the election around Trump’s record on managing the pandemic and double-digit unemployment, personal and pocketbook issues that affect every American.
“He should be asking: ‘Are you better off today than you were four years ago?’” Vavreck said, quoting Ronald Reagan’s successful slogan against incumbent President Jimmy Carter in 1980. Even questioning Trump’s fitness for office, she added, is a potential distraction for Biden’s campaign. “That didn’t work very well for Hillary Clinton,” she noted.
In any case, the key to the election lies only partly in the arguments the two candidates make between now and Nov. 3. Voters already know who Biden and Trump are and what they stand for.