NYT: Trump’s Campaign Saw an Opportunity. He Undermined It.

I spoke to Maggie Haberman of the New York Times about the political opportunity the Trump campaign sees in the President’s COVID diagnosis–and how their strategy has been complicated by his approach.

“With four weeks remaining and nearly four million Americans already casting their votes, it’s awfully late to change perceptions about President Trump or his performance,” said Liam Donovan, a Republican strategist.

“And to the extent voters are open to reassessing their views, the president’s video dispatch from Walter Reed reflected the challenge of what his campaign seeks to do: The initial glimpse of humanity and humility quickly gives way to a rambling monologue that undermines the whole endeavor.”

Read the full piece here.

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TIME: How Donald Trump’s COVID-19 Diagnosis Could Change The Presidential Race

I spoke to TIME‘s Molly Ball about what President Trump’s COVID diagnosis might mean for the Presidential race.

But the President’s diagnosis with a deadly virus and subsequent hospitalization now puts the pandemic—and his reckless handling of it—squarely in the spotlight in the closing phase of the campaign. “This race has been wildly stable, but this does really add to the sense things are getting out of control,” says GOP lobbyist Liam Donovan. “Even when the polls were ugly, he felt invincible to a lot of people. Now they’re starting to come to grips with the fact that there’s no more time to turn things around. Reality is cracking the force field.”

Read the full piece here.

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NY Mag: How the Flood of Democratic Fundraising Since Ginsburg’s Death Is Changing the Senate Landscape

I spoke to Ben Jacobs for his New York Magazine piece on the Democratic fundraising explosion in the wake of RBG’s passing, and what–if anything–it means for November.

However, with voting already started in a number of states and with just over six weeks left, there are limits to what can be done. Liam Donovan, a veteran Republican strategist, told Intelligencerthat the impact was limited in most competitive races where campaigns were already amply funded. Instead, Donovan argued that this served as “a quantifiable metric of intensity” as well as a coping mechanism for liberal donors. As he put it: “What it says to me is they feel profoundly out of control, and what better way to get a sense of control by investing in these races; that’s what Democrats are harnessing. These guys are desperate for a way to assert some kind of control on a completely chaotic 2020 — to the tune of a cool $100 million.”

Read the full piece here.

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