Washington, Jun 27 (IANS): Democratic presumptive presidential nominee Joe Biden was ahead of President Donald Trump in some polls, but experts have said the winner of the 2020 race to the White House was still far from a done deal.
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic and recent civil unrest, Trump has come under severe criticism on a number of fronts, reports Xinhua news agency.
A New York Times/Siena College poll released this week shows Biden with a strong, 14-point advantage, at a time when Trump is still fighting the pandemic, as well as dealing with the economy, badly hit by the nationwide lockdown.
The lockdown triggered by the pandemic has put millions of Americans out of work, and the jobless rate now stands at levels not seen since the Great Depression nearly 90 years ago.
Many Americans still support Trump, as his administration rolled back years of red tape and regulations that slowed economic growth.
But now, the thriving economy with a constant growth and a low level unemployment rate in the past recent years has been erased, and the president is racing against the clock to get the economy moving forward again in the next crucial months before November's elections.
While Trump has maintained the economy will bounce back in a so-called "V shape", many economists were sceptical.
Moreover, Trump's personal style may be a turn-off to many voters, although his supporters love his outspoken and sometimes outlandish persona.
"The emotional basis for Trump's campaign is: things are bad, this is the fault of bad people... Such people are trying to stop me from fixing what's wrong. Join me and I'll crush them and then I'll make things better," Clay Ramsay, a senior research associate at the Center for International and Security Studies at University of Maryland, told Xinhua.
However, there are several X factors, one of which is that polls showing Biden ahead might not predict the general election, as there is evidence that while many Americans may not openly admit they support Trump, they support him in private.
At the same time, polling guru Nate Silver, of the website FiveThirtyEight, told ABC News that it's still possible for Trump to clinch the White House by winning the electoral college vote, as he did in 2016.
There is also the issue of the protests that swept the nation in recent weeks, amid calls to defund the police.
Republican Strategist and TV news personality Ford O'Connell told Xinhua that Democrats now realize they are "playing with fire" ,as calls to defund the cops are echoing in the Democratic Party's left wing.
If that continues, "that is certainly winning more and more voters over to Donald Trump's law and order side", O'Connell said.