US Elections: It’s Still the Early Days

Published in El Heraldo de Mexico
(Mexico) on 19 March 2024
by José Carreño Figueras (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Stephen Routledge. Edited by Patricia Simoni.
Biden is the incumbent, so it's easier to remember why you are upset with him than why you were upset with Trump.

To some extent, you could say that Democrats are confident that former President Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee in the 2024 election, will campaign to reelect Democratic President Joe Biden.

Sound like a joke? A little, but the fact is that one of Biden's great advantages is Trump's penchant for hyperbole, for exaggeration, for self-praise.

Not even Biden in his wildest dreams can imagine Trump is going to lash out against Social Security or announce cuts. Certainly, they might be necessary, but who's going to tell that to the millions of retirees who depend on those pensions? It's the third rail of American politics.

Yet the business tycoon, to take one example, has already discussed the possibility of making cuts to social services, including Social Security. And of course, the Democrats have already started launching ads and memes about it.

No one is surprised. In fact, that style of campaigning is a traditional part of U.S. election politics, and don't think that Trump and his Republican allies are helpless participants. They and their supporters are doing whatever is necessary to cement a negative image of Biden and the Democrats. And if they're not doing that, their promotion of the idea that Democrats protect immigrants, who, in Trump's words, "poison the blood" of Americans, says so.

That may help Trump in the eyes of his supporters, who appear to make up 30% of the electorate and, for now, seem to give him a base that allows him to believe he can win in November.

But his melodramatic remarks, saying he intends to set himself up as a "dictator for a day" to address problems he believes need a forceful solution, may turn into his main problem.

With a long eight months to go before the election on Nov. 5, there is plenty of room for error.

Biden's handicap is both the idea that he is too old and too weak to govern a country like the U.S., with big problems in so many arenas. The election will present his every act during the last three years, his deals and his mistakes, in the most catastrophic and negative way possible.

The country's economy, with good numbers in "macro" terms, but not on an individual level thanks to inflation, do not help him.

And indeed, he is the incumbent; it is easier to remember why you dislike him than to remember why you disliked Trump when he was in office.

But as he makes ambiguous promises, such as possible cuts to Social Security, or asserting there will be physical violence if he is not elected, Trump and his ilk are merely confirming suspicions and fears: that he will forcefully introduce anti-abortion and anti-sexual minority measures, religious education and make racist formulations. Thus, for the moment, it would be a mistake to be guided by today's polls. There is still a choice.


Biden es el Presidente en ejercicio, por lo que es más fácil recordar por qué se está a disgusto con él que porqué se estuvo molesto con Trump

En alguna medida pudiera decirse que los demócratas confían en que el expresidente Donald Trump, el virtual candidato republicano a la Presidencia en las elecciones de 2024, hará campaña en favor de la reelección del presidente Joe Biden, del Partido Demócrata.

¿Parece una broma? Un poco, pero el hecho es que una de las grandes ventajas de Biden es la afición de Trump a la hipérbole, a la exageración, al auto-elogio.

Ni siquiera Biden en sus mejores sueños puede pensar que Trump va a lanzarse contra la Seguridad Social, o a anunciar recortes. Tal vez sean necesarios ciertamente, pero a ver quién se lo dice a los millones de jubilados que dependen de esas pensiones. Es el "tercer riel" de la política estadounidense

Y el magnate, para poner un ejemplo, ya habló de la posibilidad de hacer recortes a los servicios sociales, incluso la Seguridad Social. Y por supuesto, los demócratas ya comenzaron a lanzar anuncios y memes al respecto.

No es para sorprender a nadie. De hecho, ese estilo de campaña es parte tradicional de la política electoral estadounidense y no se piense que Trump y sus aliados republicanos son inermes participantes: ellos y los suyos hacen lo necesario para consolidar una negativa imagen de Biden y los demócratas. Y si no, que lo diga la idea de que los demócratas protegen a los inmigrantes que en palabras de Trump "envenenan la sangre" de los estadounidenses.

Eso puede ayudar a Trump ante sus seguidores, que parecen ser 30% del electorado y, por ahora, parecen darle una base que le permite creer que su victoria en noviembre es posible.


Pero sus hiperbólicas declaraciones, como su intención declarada de constituirse en "tirano por un día" para abordar problemas que él cree necesitan una solución de fuerza, pueden llegar a ser su principal problema.

A largos ocho meses de la elección, el 5 de noviembre, hay demasiado espacio para errores.

La desventaja de Biden es tanto la idea de que está demasiado viejo y es muy débil para gobernar un país como EU, con grandes problemas en tantos órdenes. Cada uno de sus actos durante los últimos tres años, sus acuerdos y sus errores serán presentados de la manera más catastrófica y negativa.

Los problemas económicos del país, con buenos números en términos "macro", pero conflictivos a niveles individuales por la inflación, no lo ayudan.

Y de hecho, es el Presidente en ejercicio; es más fácil recordar por qué se está a disgusto con él que recordar porqué se estuvo a disgusto con Trump cuando fue mandatario.

Pero con declaraciones ambiguas, como la posibilidad de recortes al Seguro Social, o de violencia física si no es electo, Trump y los suyos no hacen más que confirmar sospechas y temores: de la instauración forzosa de medidas contra la libertad de aborto y minorías sexuales a educación religiosa y formulaciones racistas. Así que de momento, dejarse guiar por las encuestas del día sería un error. La elección está abierta.
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