That is because the '94 crime bill was locking up non-violent offenders for minor drug offenses. Trump lets people know he is tough on REAL criminals, the violent ones.
I'm not saying the 94 bill was good, but people old enough to remember the time (I was a small child) are pretty unanimous in just how much of a crime infested hellhole cities in the early 1990s were. Narratively speaking, the crime bill has been vindicated on its own terms. The question is whether you accept those terms or reject them.
He was for the lockdowns for a few weeks while we ensured that we had the hospital capacity and could get ahead of the virus with therapeutics and such.
Ever since the he has clearly been for opening up.
The GOP never truly held that space, of being totally anti-lockdown after the 15 days BS. They started trying to be about that as time went on, but I think it was too late, and Trump was a part of that.
I'm not even strategically critical of him being too in favor of lockdowns. If he was more in favor of it it might have also helped him. The issue is he just kept trying to split the baby.
Ya, he basically showed America that he was a Constitutionalist - however this gets back to what I was talking about with jmdrake. Technically Trump made the Constitutional decision with regards to the riots. But it also allowed him to stand back while the Democrats failed at containing them and actually helped him get a lot of inner city votes from people who are scared of the rioters and are tired of having Democrats in control of everything.
Constitutionalism is something a vanishingly small number of Americans care about as such. Sure, there's things they won't support that go too far like court packing or abolition of the Electoral College (give it time though), but I don't buy that allowing the riots to continue to be able to stand on legality actually helped Trump. Trump has increased support with Latinos due to his caudillo aesthetic, crushing the riots would have played into that and perhaps netted him more support.
Trump likes the trappings and aesthetics of power, but he doesn't like actually wielding it. I know that's probably appealing to libertarian leaning conservatives, but that's largely a philosophy of the past.
The one I missed, and perhaps the biggest blunder was trying to paint Joe Biden as a Marxist, or at least a pawn of Marxists, which is just absurd. Kamala Harris is pragmatic neoliberal centrist who will support whatever she has to in order to accrue power. Even AOC and the intersectional woke squad in the universities aren't really Marxists. It just fell so flat, and was also confused with the whole "did nothing in 47 years" thing. He did nothing in five decades, but he's also a puppet of Marxists? Please.