Washington: US President Donald Trump has a key advantage in the battleground states that could re-elect him in November, his eldest son Donald Trump Jr has said, citing an op-ed which claims that 50 per cent of Indian-American voters in these states are moving away from the opposition Democratic Party towards his father.
Seeking re-election for his second consecutive term, Trump, 74, is pitted against Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, 77, in the November 3 presidential elections. Most of the opinion polls show that Biden is several points ahead of Trump.
Trump Jr, who is leading his father's 2020 re-election campaign, played a key role in the outreach to the Indian-American community in 2016, which he has continued during the last three-and-a-half years.
"A Key Advantage in the Battleground States Could Secure 2020 for Trump," he tweeted on Sunday, along with an op-ed written by an ardent Trump supporter Al Mason in the latest issue of American Greatness news website.
According to the article, Trump, a Republican, could find himself the recipient of tens of thousands of Indian-American voters across the United States.
"I have stirred the pot with my findings and the air bubbles of appreciation by the Trump supporters and fear of the Democrats are floating around," Mason, one of the honorary co-chairs of the Trump Victory Finance Committee said.
As the co-chairman of the Trump Victory Indian American Finance Committee, I have seen firsthand the results of grassroots polling efforts of Indian-American communities in each of these states, Mason wrote in his op-ed.
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Come November 3, 2020, Trump could find himself the recipient of tens of thousands of votes from Indian-American communities across the US, and in particular, in the battleground states, including Florida, Virginia, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, that Trump needs most to secure his reelection, Mason said.
Quite simply, the results show that as many as 50 per cents of potential Indian-American voters, the vast majority of whom traditionally have voted Democrats in presidential elections, will defect from the Democratic Party and vote for President Trump, he said.
This mass defection could add tens of thousands of new Trump voters in key battleground states and could very well end up helping to secure the president's reelection, Mason said.