BFF-04 Trump could campaign Saturday as Pelosi questions his fitness for office

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ZCZC

BFF-04

HEALTH-VIRUS-US-VOTE

Trump could campaign Saturday as Pelosi questions his fitness for office

WASHINGTON, Oct 9, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Donald Trump said he hopes to resume
campaigning Saturday after receiving a green light from his doctor, even as
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi prepares to unveil plans to probe the president’s
capacity to govern after contracting Covid-19.

With just 26 days until the November 3 election, Washington’s top Democrat
took the extraordinary step of proposing a commission to investigate Trump’s
fitness for the job — and whether he needs removal under the Constitution’s
25th Amendment — which she will unveil in a bill Friday.

The move came after Trump spent the day ranting against critics and threw
the debate schedule with Democrat Joe Biden into turmoil.

With tensions building over the president’s diagnosis and questions about
his judgment, Trump said in a Fox News interview late Thursday that he wants
to hold a campaign rally as early as Saturday.

“I think I’m going to try doing a rally on Saturday night if we have enough
time to put it together,” he said during an interview with Sean Hannity,
adding that it would be “probably in Florida.”

Trump said that he might hold another rally the following day in
Pennsylvania.

Earlier in the day Trump’s doctor gave him the green light to resume public
activities this weekend.

“Saturday will be day 10 since Thursday’s diagnosis, and based on the
trajectory of advanced diagnostics the team has been conducting, I fully
anticipate the president’s safe return to public engagement at that time,”
Conley said in a statement.

Having been held back from campaigning, Trump earlier Thursday raged on Fox
Business television, insulting Biden’s running mate Kamala Harris as a
“monster,” branding illegal immigrants “rapists,” and urging indictments of
Biden and former president Barack Obama.

And in remarks that caught Pelosi’s attention, the 74-year-old Trump
quipped that he beat Covid because “I am a perfect physical specimen and I’m
extremely young.”

Pelosi warned that Trump is suffering from a “disassociation from reality
(that) would be funny if it weren’t so deadly.”

Senior House Democrat James Clyburn cautioned on CNN that Trump was
exhibiting “very erratic behavior” that has drawn public concern. As they
questioned the president’s claim to be rapidly recovering from Covid-19 and
Pelosi announced her upcoming probe, Trump fired back on Twitter.

“Crazy Nancy is the one who should be under observation,” he wrote. “They
don’t call her Crazy for nothing!”

– Anxious times –

Trump’s rejection of next week’s debate because organizers decided to go
virtual due to his bout with Covid-19 upended the calendar of debates —
usually a set series of three that candidates arrange well in advance.

After back and forth between Trump and Biden’s campaign, it appeared likely
that only two debates will take place in total, with the next being October
22 and the one scheduled for Miami on October 15 now scrapped.

With Biden surging in opinion polls and able to travel — the veteran
Democrat visited Arizona Thursday where he and Harris launched a campaign bus
tour — these are anxious times for Trump.

He is still recovering from his three-night hospital stint, while the White
House itself has become a viral hotspot, with dozens of people close to Trump
testing positive.

Trump’s decision to boycott next week’s debate, which would have been in
town hall format with audience members asking questions, will mean missing a
rare opportunity to try and best Biden in a direct televised confrontation.

He accused organizers of trying to “protect” Biden after their angry first
debate in Cleveland on September 29. Campaign manager Bill Stepien called
organizers “pathetic” and announced that a rally would be held instead.

At the Biden campaign, spokeswoman Kate Bedingfield accused Trump of not
wanting “to face questions from the voters about his failures on Covid and
the economy.”

Both camps agreed the next and probably final debate, on October 22 in
Nashville, should be done in the town hall style.

Trump’s campaign called for a third debate taking place five days before
the election but Biden’s side rejected this, saying “Trump’s erratic behavior
does not allow him to rewrite the calendar.”

– Bad polls, difficult message –

While Trump said he beat Biden “easily” in their first debate, opinion
polls showed the president in a lopsided loss.

Biden is currently forecast to beat Trump in several vital swing states,
even threatening him in Republican strongholds like Texas.

And Trump’s personal fight with Covid-19 has thrown the spotlight back on
an issue where polls find most voters see him as having failed.

The pandemic, which has claimed 212,000 American lives, has made it almost
impossible for Trump to shift the campaign narrative back onto what he sees
as more favorable territory: the economy, which was doing strongly before
coronavirus hit early this year.

On Wednesday Harris debated with Vice President Mike Pence and spent much
of her time hammering Trump for his pandemic response, calling it “the
greatest failure of any presidential administration in the history of our
country.”

BSS/AFP/GMR/0913 hrs