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Trump back on campaign trail 11 days after Covid-19 diagnosis

US President Donald Trump has returned to the campaign trail less than two weeks after testing positive for coronavirus.

US President Donald Trump holds a Make America Great Again rally on 12 October

US President Donald Trump holds a Make America Great Again rally on 12 October Photo: GETTY via AFP

Thousands gathered at an outdoor rally in Sanford, Florida, where a defiant Trump made the first of four planned campaign stops over the next four days in battleground states.

The president and rival Joe Biden are scrambling to secure votes with three weeks until the 3 November election.

On Monday Biden spoke in Ohio, another swing state.

Polling suggests Biden has a 10-point lead over Trump nationally. However his lead in some key states is narrower – as is the case in Florida, where he is 3.7 points ahead, according to an average of polls collated by Real Clear Politics.

Battlegrounds like the ‘Sunshine State’ are crucial for gathering the 270 electoral college votes needed to win the White House, which is not determined by a simple popular ballot count.

Trump tested positive for Covid-19 some 11 days ago, and was admitted to Walter Reed Medical Center a day later.

But on Sunday his personal doctor said he was no longer a Covid transmission risk to others and disclosed on Monday that his most recent tests were negative over consecutive days, although he did not give the dates.

What did the president say in Florida?

In his first stump appearance following his Covid-19 diagnosis and recovery, a re-invigorated Trump returned to his campaign’s familiar themes and lines of attack against Biden. He touted stock market growth, the establishment of the US Space Force and his successful confirmation of two conservative Supreme Court justices to the bench – with a third nominee, Judge Amy Coney Barrett, before the Senate this week – as major achievements.

Before a crowd of several thousand – many of whom were not wearing masks – he denounced plans to prolong shutdowns supported by Democrats and sought to question Biden’s mental acuity.

Referring to his own recovery from Covid-19, he said at one point: “They say I’m immune – I feel so powerful. I’ll walk in there and kiss everyone. I’ll kiss the guys and the beautiful women, I’ll give you a big, fat kiss.”

US President Donald Trump holds a Make America Great Again rally as he campaigns in Orlando on 12 October

US President Donald Trump holds a Make America Great Again rally as he campaigns in Orlando on 12 October Photo: AFP

It was no surprise that the Sunshine State is the place where Trump made his big rally return.

He wants and needs to win Florida, a state he narrowly carried in 2016. It is also his adopted home. A lifelong New Yorker, he made himself a Florida resident last year in September.

Though he is behind in the polls nationally, close races in crucial states mean he may yet win re-election by capturing key electoral college-rich territories.

The president’s rally showed little sign that Trump has been chastened by his past weeks’ illness, and events later in the week in Pennsylvania, Iowa and North Carolina are unlikely to exhibit changes in his approach to coronavirus precautions.

Critics have disparaged him for not encouraging people to wear protective masks or abide by social distancing guidelines.

Biden meanwhile attacked the president’s approach, saying that “President Trump comes to Sanford today bringing nothing but reckless behaviour, divisive rhetoric, and fear mongering”.

He has taken a more cautious approach to campaigning, making two stops in Ohio on Monday. The Democrat is due to appear in Florida on Tuesday.

BBC

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