pxmcc you have come out of your self-imposed "sabbatical" in a triggered way only those on the left can master...about a half dozen posted in almost a back-to-back diatribe with very questionable sources that are nothing more the mouth pieces for the democraps. I got a kick out of the max butt quote...this fucker is a never Trumper. I provided you  actual TRUE information on Trumps positive approval on his handling of the unprecedented situation...and it left you speechless.
  In regard to bitten he can't string two sentences together...get ready for for more year of your blood pressure at stroke levels!! You need to except the fact that the left has thrown everything they can at the President and come up with NOTHING!! I see it in your earlier rambling nonsensical post that had you beet red on the face...ain't going to do you no good. Time for you to take a chill pill.
 If you thought the left had any other motives on the effect of the virus on Trump then think again.
All the sources you quoted are political operatives and are in no way unbiased sources...you loss again!!    
                                                                                    
   This is from politico not a rightwing site or Trump supporter.
This is just a small piece from the article...what self-loathing BULLSHIT!!
         “If life were fair,” he said, Trump  would already be paying a   price for his chaotic handling of the  pandemic. Instead, the   president’s approval rating has not taken a hit,  and the dominant   images are of him “at the podium in the White House,  quote, in charge,”   Francis said. “If those stick and they’re not  countered effectively,   he could get reelected."
  
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/0...mp-2020-154976
 How coronavirus blew up the plan to take down Trump
 Donald Trump’s reelection is likely to rise or fall on  his handling of  the pandemic. And there isn’t much Democrats can do  about it.
 
            

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For many Democrats, it’s the election  of a lifetime. Yet the question  preoccupying the party for several days  this month was whether their  presumptive presidential nominee, Joe  Biden, could get the webcast  working in his rec room. 
It was a telling obsession, one that  revealed the extent of the party’s  anxiety as it comes to a nail-biting  conclusion: Despite all the  arguments Democrats have crafted and all the  evidence they have amassed  against Donald Trump, his reelection is  likely to rise or fall on his  handling of the coronavirus crisis and its  fallout alone.
  “It’s the most dramatic example I can  think of in my lifetime about  how you cannot control the agenda,” said  Les Francis, a Democratic  strategist and former deputy White House chief  of staff in the Carter  administration.
 
         “If life were fair,” he said, Trump  would already be paying a  price for his chaotic handling of the  pandemic. Instead, the  president’s approval rating has not taken a hit,  and the dominant  images are of him “at the podium in the White House,  quote, in charge,”  Francis said. “If those stick and they’re not  countered effectively,  he could get reelected."
           Campaigning during coronavirus
         The effect of the coronavirus on  Trump’s popularity will not  become clear for weeks or months. But the  pandemic’s impact on the  Democratic Party has already been severe.  Primary elections are being  postponed, allowing Bernie Sanders to linger  in the race and delay  until June the ability of Biden to mathematically  clinch the nomination  and fully turn his focus to Trump.
 The public’s unbreakable focus on the  virus is narrowing the range of  issues on which Democrats can  effectively draw contrasts with Trump —  temporarily sidelining a broader  agenda involving once-pressing issues  such as climate change and gun  control.
 “It was always going to be a  referendum on Trump,” said Howard Dean,  the former Vermont governor who  ran unsuccessfully for president in  2004. “But the referendum was going  to be about things like climate  change and how you want to reform health  care and all these other  things. Now it’s only going to be about this  one thing — whether Trump  is competent and sane.”
 Trump, he said, is “a deeply disturbed  narcissist who is incapable of  being a leader, and that’s what the  referendum is going to be on.”
 Most Democratic strategists believe,  like Dean, that Trump’s  reelection prospects will be diminished by the  pandemic, with its  rising death toll and ruinous effect on the economy.  But the general  election is more than seven months away and Trump’s  public approval  rating has ticked up as the coronavirus has spread —  though not nearly  as high as the last Republican president, George W.  Bush, following the  9/11 terrorist attacks, 
         Scott Brennan, an Iowa Democratic  National Committee member  and a former state party chairman, said, “If  the economy pops back …  it’s hard to know what people are going to  think.”
 In an effort to influence those  voters, Biden has resolved the  technological difficulties that marred  his earliest appearances from  his home in Wilmington, Del. He is now  making regular appearances, via  webcast, to speak about the coronavirus  pandemic, including town hall  meetings and a rush of TV interviews.
 But the effectiveness of his  counterprogramming is unclear, as Biden  competes for attention not only  with Trump, but with high-profile  Democratic governors such as  California’s Gavin Newsom, New York’s  Andrew Cuomo and Michigan's  Gretchen Whitmer, who — unlike Biden — are  sitting executives involved  in the coronavirus response.
 Biden, said Darry Sragow, a longtime CaliforniaDemocratic strategist, “has no control over this at all.”
 “To me, it’s like you’re in a bar and a  brawl breaks out,” Sragow  said. “You’ve got to park your immediate  instinct. You have no control  over the immediate outcome of the brawl.”
  One problem for Democrats is that the nation’s battlewith  coronavirus  — and Trump’s position at the center of it — may go on for  months. The  party’s marquee political event, the Democratic National  Convention,  scheduled for July, is the subject of contingency planning  in case the  coronavirus still precludes large crowds from gathering. DNC  officials  said last week that planning is moving forward for the  Milwaukee event.  But many Democrats are doubtful — and fearful of a  worst-case scenario  in which the pandemic upends the Democratic  convention, but not the  Republican gathering the following month.
 “It matters for this reason,” said Bob  Mulholland, a DNC member from  California. “That Thursday night speech  by our nominee could be seen by  50 to 60 million Americans, most of them  who haven’t paid a minute of  attention to the primary. That’s the  conversation that takes us to  winning.”
 He said, “If we have to cancel and  Trump has a convention with 40,000  people screaming and yelling … that’s  an advantage to Trump, because  nobody saw us except some text they got,  and then they watched Trump.”
 Jay Jacobs, chairman of the New York  Democratic Party, suggested last  week that Democrats should at least  consider putting their convention  off until late August. Even if the  coronavirus pandemic has eased by  late spring, he said, “everybody’s  going to be absolutely exhausted.”
 At a minimum, the pandemic is  shortening the time frame with which  Democrats will run their fall  campaign. And it is changing expectations  about the resonance of any  issue other than the coronavirus.
   Advocates of “Medicare for All” have  seized on the pandemic as a way  to highlight their concerns about health  care. Gun control activists  have drawn connections to the crisis,  raising alarms about domestic  violence and unsafe gun storage with  Americans spending far more hours  at home. Climate change activists have  advanced the “Green New Deal” as  a tool for economic recovery, while  also pointing to the world’s  massive response to the coronavirus as a  template for climate  mobilization. Peter Ambler, executive director of  the gun control group  Giffords, said gun control — which was once a  major focus of the  Democratic primary — is “baked into our politics and  our culture in a  way that’s not going to evaporate.”