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The debate between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump was watched by more people than the Super Bowl. As the US presidential race intensifies, what do political strategists think?
In the second of our three-part webinar series on the US presidential election, Invesco’s Andy Blocker and Jennifer Flitton talk to political strategists Bruce Mehlman and David Thomas on their opinions following the debate. As part of their careers in politics, Bruce served in the administration of Republican President George W. Bush, and David worked for the team of Democratic Vice President Al Gore.
Covering views from both sides of the political aisle, our two guests debated the state of the race and what they think a Harris or Trump victory could mean for the US economy and investors.
Read our key takeaways from our politics webinar. Watch the webinar replay to see the full conversation. (Passages below have been edited for length and clarity.)
Bruce Mehlman: When we think about America's politics right now, we also look at the EU, UK and France. In so many nations around the world, you're seeing a populist, anti-elitist movement as the world has failed to adjust to three broad changes.
David Thomas: If you look at the most recent polls, 75% of Americans think that our country is moving in the wrong direction. That's a problem if you happen to be the people in power here, because that’s as wide as that number has ever been.
Bruce Mehlman: Ultimately a lot of the institutions and systems that govern our lives aren't delivering for most people.
So, we and you guys as an institution see a lot of macro benefits in, say trade. But for your average American, trade is why has the factory been sent to China? The assembly work was moved to Mexico and the IT jobs were sent to Bangalore?
David Thomas: Joe Biden dropped out of the presidential race because he had a very bad debate performance. That sort of crystallised the Democratic Party realising if we stick with this guy, we are going to lose and lose big. Donald Trump will be back in the White House.
Kamala Harris very quickly became the standard bearer for the Democratic Party. What she has been able to do is remarkable.
Harris has basically brought it back to an even race again. But, because of the way our system is set up with the Electoral College, certain states are the ones that are going to determine this election. There are seven states that could go one way or the other.
David Thomas: The Nielsen numbers coming back from the debate show somewhere between 70 and 80 million Americans watched that debate. That is extraordinary. That is more than a Super Bowl here in the United States.
So, that was a great opportunity for her to shine. But she's going to have to keep that up. Everybody knows who Donald Trump is. Her challenge is she’s got to get people comfortable with her.
Bruce Mehlman: Her game plan was to win on looking presidential, on seeming positive, on being prepared and to put all of the onus on Trump. She executed her plan.
But there's still a whole lot of questions that I believe she's going to have to answer. How much of the Biden record does she embrace? What does she distance herself from? How much of her way-out-of-the-mainstream positions in 2020 does she still embrace, and how many has she flipped on?
David Thomas: Yes. She had a plan. She goaded him, and he took the bait, hook, line and sinker. There's a reason why he said no more debates.
Bruce Mehlman: He had one job going into this debate, to force her to explain the Biden-Harris record and her positions from 2020 and if she's changed and why. He just didn't do it.
David Thomas: In an election which is going to be very close, things like debates matter. Does it make people turn out? Does it get people more comfortable with Harris serving as president? It probably did.
Bruce Mehlman: We do have a debate on October 1st among the Vice-Presidential nominees, and I'm looking forward to that one, because that that should be a knock-down, drag out — from a political, professional perspective — really interesting, fun debate.
David Thomas: The challenge for Democrats is they turn out in California and New York, and that's not going to get a President Harris into the White House. They need to turn out the voters in the swing states.
Bruce Mehlman: Harris has raised an insane amount of money. So, what that means is the Democrats can transfer dollars to the Senate and House campaigns. The Democrats now have a more mature operation to get out the early vote, that's better funded.
Trump, by attacking early voting, even though he probably will early vote this time and by attacking voting by mail, even though he's always voted by mail, has undermined decades of what the Republicans have built up. That hurts the party.
David Thomas: About a third of the Senate is up for election this year. It overwhelmingly favours Republicans here. It’s not just that the Democrats are defending more seats, it’s the states that they’re defending. The divide right now in the Senate is 51-49 for Democrats. It’s razor close right now. At the end of the day, I think the Senate flips. It’ll still be close, but Republicans will be in charge.
Bruce Mehlman: Tell me who wins the White House, and that's the same party that picks up the House, but it'll be razor thin.
You can watch the replay of our webinar on-demand and sign up to our next webinar on the results of the 2024 US presidential race.
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The value of investments and any income will fluctuate (this may partly be the result of exchange rate fluctuations) and investors may not get back the full amount invested.
Data as at 16th September 2024.
This is marketing material and not financial advice. It is not intended as a recommendation to buy or sell any particular asset class, security or strategy. Regulatory requirements that require impartiality of investment/investment strategy recommendations are therefore not applicable nor are any prohibitions to trade before publication.
Views and opinions are based on current market conditions and are subject to change.
The views and opinions shared by guest speakers in the webinar are their own and do not represent Invesco.
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