[ad_1]
Republicans believe they have an advantage. “We can tip the scales again,” Bryan Davies said after a lounge rally with Vice President Mike Pence at the Holliday Inn hotel in Janesville. Davies has been knocking on doors for weeks promoting Trump. “We have an army of helpers and tens of thousands of new registered voters. Looks good.”
Davies is a prototype of the Trump voter in Wisconsin: cool, not a fanatic, but hardly accessible to criticize the official conduct of the right-wing populist. “The president fulfilled almost everything he promised. Tax cuts, less bureaucracy, countless conservative justices up to and including the Supreme Court, revitalization of the manufacturing industry, China finally challenged. I want more “.
In the coronavirus crisis, which left nearly 200,000 dead in the United States, he sees no “real flaws” in Trump. “He reacted calmly and quickly imposed an entry ban on China. I don’t see what else I should have done. “
The fact that polls recently saw Democratic challenger Biden six percentage points (52 to 46 percent) ahead is a “distortion of real conditions.” Many Wisconsinites were left behind when pollsters investigated. Even a “landslide victory” for Trump cannot be ruled out.