Donald Trump is in a pickle. It doesn’t seem to matter what he does or doesn’t do. According to 538’s national polling average tracker, the former president’s share of the electorate was at 43.

5 percent on the day Joe Biden dropped out of the running. Today, in his race against Kamala Harris , his share of the vote is 43.5 percent.

All the new movement, as the pollsters say, has been on the Democratic side. To put this another way, the vice president is the fluid candidate. She can move voters, with good performances and bad.

Trump , however, is the static candidate. He can’t move voters at all (perhaps because most Americans have made up their minds). There was no bump after the Republican National Convention.

There was no bump after his attempted assassination. There was no bump after Biden became the first incumbent in half a century to decline his party’s nomination. What can Trump do? According to Republican strategists and MAGA fans like “ Charles in Charge ” sitcom actor Scott Baio, the solution is “policy, policy, policy.

” “That’s it,” Baio told Fox host Jesse Watters last week. “There’s no name-calling. There’s no making fun of anything.

When he gives a speech at these rallies, policy. Period. Once he goes off the rails, it becomes confusing.

I wish I could talk to him and say stick to policy.” Baio is in good company. Former presidential candidate Nikki Haley said the same thing.

If Trump has any chance of winning over independent v.