In USBefore New Hampshire primary, Trump campaign shows mellower side
It was a day after he told a Republican debate audience that he did not
want to leave poor people “dying in the streets,” and won praise by some
pundits for delivering a restrained performance in which he largely
avoided skewering his rivals.
U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump came to the small town of Plymouth in the New Hampshire mountains on Sunday and promised to lower prescription drug prices, improve education and help heroin addicts get treatment.
It was a day after he told a Republican debate audience that he did not want to leave poor people “dying in the streets,” and won praise by some pundits for delivering a restrained performance in which he largely avoided skewering his rivals.
It
is not as if Trump, notorious for his inflammatory, demolition-derby
style, has suddenly gone soft. At the same event in Plymouth, he
reaffirmed his support for reviving the waterboarding of terrorism
suspects and, if necessary, doing “much worse.” He mocked “poor Jeb Bush” and talked about the “stupid people” running the government.
But
the past week has revealed a mellower Trump who seems less interested
in slashing and burning his way to his party's nomination for the Nov. 8
election and more willing to view his competitors with equanimity.
His
campaign has been working to moderate his image, showing another side
of the boastful billionaire businessman whose candidacy has alarmed the
Republican establishment and been marked by calls for the deportation of
illegal immigrants and temporarily banning Muslims from entering the
United States.
The effort began in earnest in
Iowa, when Trump brought in an evangelical leader as a character
witness, used his children as surrogates and stood on stage with his
wife, Melania, who has been rarely seen on the campaign trail.
He
told Reuters in Iowa he was nervous about the result of the caucuses,
where he ended up second to Ted Cruz, the U.S. senator from Texas, in
the first of the state-by-state nominating contests.
Ahead
of New Hampshire's pivotal primary on Tuesday in which Trump leads in
opinion polls, he has shared painful personal stories, stopped at diners
to shake hands with patrons, and tried sending the message that despite
his massive wealth and brash manner, he is a regular Joe.
Trump even admitted on CNN on Sunday that Saturday’s debate was “a lot of pressure.”
“He’s much more of an ordinary guy than (voters) would ever expect,” Trump’s son, Donald Trump Jr., said at a campaign stop in Tipton, New Hampshire. “He’s a down-to-earth guy.”
EMOTIONAL CONNECTION
New
Hampshire voters have rewarded candidates for emotional directness
before. In 1992, they gave Democrat Bill Clinton’s flagging campaign new
life when he went on television with his wife, Hillary, amid denied
having an extramarital affair.
Sixteen years
later, they handed Hillary Clinton a much-needed win after she broke
down at an event and cried. The blunt-spoken Republican John McCain won
the state's primary twice, in 2000 and 2008.
Despite
leading in polls in several early voting states, Trump could use some
image enhancement. National polls almost uniformly show that more than
50 percent of Americans view him unfavorably.
During
his last weekend in Iowa, Trump abandoned his usual campaign format in
which he stands a podium and addresses the crowd in favor of a sit-down
with Jerry Falwell Jr., son of the late evangelical activist, in which
Trump answered his questions with little bombast.
Falwell
vouched for Trump’s generosity, telling of a couple who helped Trump
after his limousine broke down in rural New York and how he in turn paid
off their mortgage.
At those events, Trump made a show of presenting a giant fake check, sweepstakes-style, to groups that aid disabled veterans.
“I watch all these candidates,” he said of his rivals. “I’m nicer than all of them.”
In New Hampshire, Trump has opened up about the loss of his older brother to alcoholism in 1981.
“My brother Fred was a great guy. I mean, he had everything,” Trump said. “The most handsome guy. And then he got hooked — and there was nothing, there was nothing we could do about it.”
Trump picked up that thread on Sunday in Plymouth, saying: “We’re going to take the people who are badly addicted. We’re going to work to make them better.”
Trump’s
motorcade stopped earlier at a diner in Manchester, where he greeted
star-struck patrons, drank hot chocolate and ordered eggs and bacon.
During
his appearance in Plymouth, he barely mentioned his competitors and did
not mention building a wall along the border with Mexico until someone
in the crowd shouted it out.
He also resisted
taking aim at Marco Rubio, the U.S. senator from Florida, whose
faltering performance at Saturday's debate seemed tailor-made for the
back of Trump’s hand.
Instead, Trump told the audience: “I love you folks. You’re amazing people.
"On Tuesday, go out and vote,” he said, adding with a grin: “If you’re not going to vote for me, do not vote.”
Comments
Post a Comment