American experts say Trump will be hard to beat in the race to the White House this year, despite being surrounded by crisis.

"If it was another president at a different time, Donald Trump's re-election hopes would have been dashed," commentator Stephen Collinson opened the analysis on CNN.

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President Donald Trump at a campaign event in Tulsa, Oklahoma, June 20 Photo: AFP.

Trump is facing one of the most severe political crisis periods the US president has experienced.

A wave of anti-racist protests and police violence after the death of George Floyd, the 46-year-old black man was nearly cruel for nearly nine minutes by the Minneapolis police, causing Trump to sink deep into crisis.

The US Supreme Court last week issued two rulings protecting the LGBT community from workplace discrimination and continuing the Suspension of Expulsion of Children to Illegal Education (DACA) program.

Trump hated to be a "loser" in the race to the White House with former Vice President Joe Biden.

Excerpts from "The Room Where It Happened: A White House Memoir" memoirs by John Bolton, former national security adviser, are scheduled for release on the 23rd.

Trump's crisis week ended with the campaign in Tulsa, Oklahoma on June 20, an event that many epidemiologists and local health officials fear once again detonated "the Covid-

The crisis continued to besieged Donald Trump when less than 5 months later the US presidential election and all indicators were "red alert" to Trump.

Many Democrats and non-Trump fears Trump is likely to be re-elected as president in the November election.

In 2016, almost all poll results about the race between Trump and Hillary Clinton indicated that the Democratic candidate would become president.

In a Hill analysis, Joshua H. Sandman said that Trump is still highly competitive in the race to the White House, even winning, though many moves are considered threatening the prospect of re-election.

In addition, Sandman believes that the electoral college is still on the Republican side.

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Trump supporters gathered outside the campaign event venue in Tulsa, Oklahoma, June 20 Photo: NYTimes.

Therefore, Sandman said that the election results will depend heavily on "battleground" states like Arizona, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.

"However, until the election day, the majority of conservative sectors and the economy gradually recovered were two factors that brought these competing states to the Republic," Sandman said.

In Politico interviews in 50 states, many Republican local leaders thought Trump's election prospects were not worse than 6 months ago and said that the opinion poll results were not reliable.

Jane Timken, a Republican member in Ohio, said she did not see any evidence that support for Trump dropped.

Sandman also added that, compared to Biden, Trump is considered a "master" of campaigning.

Trump said Biden, when he was vice president of the US in 2016, pressured Ukraine not to investigate the corruption scandal in Burisma, the energy company that Hunter, the son of the former vice president, was involved in.

Trump has also described Democrats as supporters of socialism, disregarding family values, faith, and patriotism.

The US president proudly proclaimed that before the pandemic, the US had "the most advanced economy ever" and said he would restore this success in his second term.

"Trump's aggressive Twitter posts or conspiracy theories are likely to work and put his opponents on the defensive, when they have to find a way to justify," Sandman said.

Many Republican strategists think it's too early to talk about the November election results, but are optimistic about a good position for Trump.

"The more bad things happen in this country, the stronger the support for Trump will be," said Phillip Stephens, a Republican member in Robeson County, North Carolina.