Can a 2000 Honda Accord be able to pull a little pop up camper?

My dads friend has a camper up north and is willing to pay him and i to go get it, the only vehicle we have to use is my car which is a 2000 Honda accord sedan 2.3 engine. Its about 25-30 hwy mpg.
I do have a hitch i can put on it, i took it off due to lowered problems.
I do have a fully adjustable suspension kit that i can high adjust along with the damping of it. I was going to raise the back to compensate for the weight of the trailer. My only question is can that car hand a drive from Minnesota back to Florida with a little pop up trailer?

The towing capacity is indicated on a sticker inside the driver's door jamb or on the door itself. The trailer has it's weight listed on a plate as well. As long as the weight of the trailer and contents of the vehicle and trailer don;t exceed the towing capacity, it will work.

With a light weight pop up camper? Sure.

Just take it easy and remember you have a bit of weight on the back. You will use a bit more gas because of the extra weight and drag,

If you go racing over mountains dragging a trailer behind you, you risk overheating your engine or transmission. But if you can get out on the highway and just cruise along at ~60mph, it's not putting any great stress on the vehicle, and it should handle it just fine.

I would not even think about it,
coil over are not meant for towing since the weight is different it will start either bouncing or swaying from side to side. Even on the weight of the car some of those lowering kits make the car bounce like nobodys business, but best way to find out is to call the lowering kit manuf and ask, the car on its own will pull it, next thing to consider is the weight of the car + trailer. Those will make a number on the braking system and not in a good way.

The maximum towing capacity of a 2000 Honda Accord is 1,000 pounds. If the trailer and contents do not weight over 1,000 pounds then you can tow it, but be aware that the trailer will add many feet to your stopping distance.