Skip to main content
Ray Bogan Political Correspondent
Share
Politics

Trump plans week in battleground states to counter DNC

Share
Ray Bogan Political Correspondent
Share

Former President Donald Trump is planning to counterprogram the Democratic National Convention (DNC) with campaign events in battleground states. Presidential nominees typically get a polling boost after their convention. According to 538, the average is plus two points. It has been as much as 8% for Bill Clinton in 1992 and as little as zero for Joe Biden in 2020. 

Media Landscape

MediaMiss™This story is a Media Miss by the left as only 0% of the coverage is from left leaning media. Learn more about this data
Left 0% Center 57% Right 43%
Bias Distribution Powered by Ground News

Trump is hoping to present his plan to the American people and take some of the spotlight away from Democratic nominee and Vice President Kamala Harris. 

QR code for SAN app download

Download the SAN app today to stay up-to-date with Unbiased. Straight Facts™.

Point phone camera here

The DNC will feature speeches from President Joe Biden, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., a former Trump voter who now supports Democrats and the nominee herself, Vice President Kamala Harris. 

Trump and his running mate Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, will make stops in Arizona, Georgia, Wisconsin, North Carolina and Nevada. They’ll cover some of the most important issues.

  • Monday, Aug. 19, Trump and Vance plan to discuss economy.
  • Tuesday will allegedly focus on crime and safety.
  • Wednesday is supposed to feature the topic national security.
  • Thursday will cover immigration.
  • Friday will supposedly talk more about no taxes on tips.

Trump is also trying to highlight what he sees as policy failures by the Biden administration on the economy and immigration. The former president is also putting out new ads attacking Harris’ tenure as San Francisco district attorney. 

Trump’s main super PAC, MAGA Inc., announced it will be spending $100 million dollars on ads in seven swing states during the last two-and-a-half weeks of August. 

The Harris campaign is also ramping up its air time purchases.

The campaign announced it will spend $370 million on television and online ads between Labor Day and the election. That spending includes $200 million on platforms, including Hulu, YouTube, Spotify and Roku, and $170 million on TV ads that will air during primetime TV shows and sports like NFL, MLB, WNBA and NHL games. 

Tags: , , , , , ,

[RAY BOGAN]

Former President Donald Trump is planning to counter program the DNC this week with campaign events in battleground states. Presidential nominees typically get a polling boost after their convention. According to 538, the average is plus two points. It has been as much as eight percent for Bill Clinton in 1992 and as little as zero for Joe Biden in 2020. 

Trump is hoping to present his plan to the American people and take some of the spotlight away from Harris. 

The Democratic National Convention will feature speeches from President Biden, Senator Bernie Sanders, a former Trump voter who now supports Democrats, and of course, the nominee – Vice President Kamala Harris. 

Trump and his running mate J.D. Vance will make stops in Arizona, Georgia, Wisconsin, North Carolina and Nevada. He’ll also cover some of the most divisive issues – 

Monday he’ll focus on the economy, crime and safety on Tuesday, national security on wednesday, immigration on thursday and on Friday Trump will discuss his proposal to eliminate taxes on tips. 

Trump is also trying to highlight what he sees as policy failures by the Biden administration on the economy and immigration and putting out new ads attacking Harris’ tenure as San Francisco District Attorney. 

Trump’s main Super Pac MAGA Inc. announced it will be spending $100 million dollars on ads in seven swing states during the last 2.5 weeks of August. 

The Harris campaign is also ramping up its air time purchases. The campaign announced it will spend $370 million on television and online ads between Labor Day and the election. That includes $200 million on platforms including Hulu, Youtube, Spotify and Roku, and $170 million on TV ads that will air during primetime TV shows and sports like the NFL, MLB, WNBA and NHL.