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Coronavirus and the U.S. Presidential Election 2020: Pandemic Producing Rally Effect

Date 2020-04-01 View 2,067

Coronavirus and the U.S. Presidential Election 2020: Pandemic Producing Rally Effect

 

 

 

Dr. WOO Jung-Yeop

Vice President of Research Planning Division

woo@sejong.org

 

 

English Abstract

 

If it were not for the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), the U.S. presidential election would have been the issue that attracted the most attention of the world this year. The biggest news on March 3 (also known as Super Tuesday) was the results of the Democratic primaries. The resurgence of Joe Biden, a former vice president, in the race was a boon which provided a strong vitality to the Democrats who had no powerful issue. However, as the COVID-19 started to overshadow prospects of the U.S. economy, President Donald Trump proposed policies to hold the economy from falling apart as much as possible. President Trump apparently looked forward to seeing a “rally effect,” which refers to a political phenomenon of increased short-term support of the President during a crisis, by creating a logic that his strong policies would safely secure Americans. A strong economic stimulus of the Trump administration could activate a positive “rally effect,” which leads to the support of the administration in an unprecedented crisis. But, in the worst-case scenario, this COVID-19 could become a double-edged sword for the President since Trump would have to take full responsibility of the crisis.