Posted on 10/01/2016 3:22:11 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
HARRISBURG Jerry Calvert, 72, said Americans took a chance on a first-term U.S. senator from Illinois when they elected Barack Obama as the countrys 44th president.
That backfired, he said.
Now, Calvert, of Sharon, said Americans should take another chance, electing an outsider to succeed Obama.
GOP nominee Donald Trumps negotiation experience as a real estate developer will pay off for everyone, he said. Trump definitely knows how to deal with people. He knows that we need to be firm and not let other countries push us around."
Besides, he said, voters have "nothing to lose."
"Our country is in dire straits," he said.
Calvert is so convinced, he gave $450 to Trump's campaign. Among seniors, he's far from alone.
Even though Pennsylvania donors have given close to $8 million to Democrat Hillary Clinton's campaign more than four times what they've given to Trump his political and financial support is stronger among older donors.
About one-quarter of Clinton's donations in Pennsylvania have come from those who describe themselves as retired in Federal Election Commission documents. More than 2 in 5 donations to the Trump campaign have come from retirees.
The difference may not be surprising because Trump is more popular among senior citizens than he is among all other age groups, polls show.
He leads Clinton among seniors, 47 percent to 41 percent, according to polling data from Muhlenberg College. Its the only age group that he's winning in Pennsylvania, according to the survey.
Among all voters, Clinton led 44 percent to 41 percent in a two-way race and 40 percent to 38 percent when third-party candidates are counted.
A CNN/ORC poll released Monday had similar results. It found Trump leading among Pennsylvania seniors, 49 percent to 44 percent, even as Clinton holds a 45 percent to 43 percent edge overall.
Donald Trumps bleak description of the state of the American economy may resonate with seniors," said Douglas Schoen, a former pollster for President Bill Clinton, in an August opinion piece for FoxNews.
He noted a poll by Bring the Vote Home that found 2 in 3 seniors disapproving of Obama, and more than 3 in 4 seniors feeling like the countrys on the wrong track.
Manufacturing generation
Chris Borick, a political science professor at Muhlenberg College, said Republicans tend to do well with older voters, but Trump seems to outperform recent GOP nominees.
Its a key group to have, he said.
His core message Make America great again speaks directly to the misgivings that many older Pennsylvanians have about the state of their communities and country, he said.
Their generation, over age 65, probably had more experience in manufacturing than others.
"They had the jobs that are gone now, Borick said. So when Trump stumps on the promise of bringing back those jobs, he said, "It clicks for them because they think, 'Thats the workforce I remember.'"
Not all seniors are buying what Trumps selling.
Emmajane Adams, a retired medical technologist, and her husband, Dennis, a retired teacher and football coach in Danville, gave $107 to Clinton's campaign.
In the times we are living, you need a politician in the office of president, she said.
Clintons political skill will help the country deal with issues such as the social unrest connected to police killings of unarmed black men, she said.
It will also help the country deal with foreign leaders.
The thought that Trump could win makes me sick, she said, adding that Clinton is a very strong woman, highly intelligent.
Adams was a lifelong Republican who joined the Democratic Party so that she could vote for Clinton in the primary.
I think shes the best," she said.
She doesnt believe Clinton could have done anything more to save the U.S. ambassador to Libya, J. Christopher Stevens, or three others killed in attacks on a diplomatic compound in Benghazi.
John Todorich, of Ellwood City, is a retired union representative who gave $75 to the Clinton campaign.
Like Adams, he said theres no evidence that Hillary Clinton has done anything that should disqualify her from becoming president despite Republicans' best efforts to prove otherwise.
The Republicans spent millions trying to nail her," he said. "Theyve found nothing on this lady.
Clinton has spent her entire career trying to improve the lot of working people and the poor, he said.
Business owners divided
But Clinton couldnt begin to run a business," said Calvert, the lumber store owner from Sharon.
He has greater faith that Trump understands how to improve the business climate, he said.
Small businesses are overburdened with taxes, he said, and too many politicians spend because someone else is paying for it."
Matt Sernell, president of Eagle Ridge Industries, a telecommunications company in Johnstown, said Clintons economic proposals are bumper-sticker fodder.
I dont trust anything she says, said Sernell, who gave $20 to the Trump campaign.
How you do better is to let me do better, he said. The government cant create private sector jobs."
Small businesses would be better off with the types of tax cuts that Trump would seek, he said. That would level the playing field and help all businesses not just the ones that are large enough to lobby for loopholes and other advantages.
But the business community is hardly unanimous on the race.
About twice as many Pennsylvanians who described themselves as company presidents, CEOs or owners gave money to the Clinton campaign as Trumps, federal campaign disclosures show.
Virginia Feitner, managing partner for Sensational Sweets, a Lewisburg-based candy maker, is one of those business people backing Clinton. She's given $383 to the Clinton campaign.
She said theres no reason to believe that Trump has interest in helping small businesses. She points to anecdotes from contractors whove accused him of short-changing or stiffing them after theyve done work at his casinos and resorts.
I have no confidence that hes going to suddenly change," she said, and become interested in the good of all businesses, rather than his alone.
Unlike the Millennials, seniors will vote.
The country needs a change this election. Voting for Hillary is a vote for keeping things the same.
I don’t know what the cool generation name is for college kids today, but my son just completed his absentee ballot this afternoon.
Trump!4
Cause I raised ‘em right
A vote for Clinton is a vote for lighter traffic.
Clintons political skill will help the country deal with issues such as the social unrest connected to police killings of unarmed black men, she said.
Sure just like her political skill helped our people in Benghazi!
Are people really this clueless or do they just not care?
Half the population is on the left side of the intelligence bell curve.
This basic logical concept both categorizes AND perplexes the vast majority of those on the enemy Left.
“...Clintons political skill...”
Now there is the oxymoron of the day...what a crock.
The thought that Trump could win makes me sick, she said
It's Dennis I feel sorry for.
I just spotted a big good ol’ boy in Hobby Lobby wearing a Trump That Bitch shirt.
I complimented him on his awesome choice of a clothing.
Good
Get Out The Vote
OUTSTANDING !
LOL :-))
I see similar things everywhere, here.
LOTS of Trump enthusiasm going on.
:)
A vote for Clinton is a vote for lighter traffic.
Cyclotic, you may or may not know how accurate that statement is. As many of you know my second career after broadcasting was as a trucker. I started trucking in 1988 and ther period from ‘88 to about ‘97 was fraught with frustration over delays and back-ups especially around the larger metros. About 2006 I noted that things had changed markedly. The rush hours were shorter, the traffic lighter and my job was less frustrating. By 2013 when I retired from the road, the traffic was remarkably lighter and manageable. Could it be that there really are 97 MM fewer folks in the workforce? Pshaw!
And it HAS to be absolutely eating the media pukes and their fuhrer bitch alive,
knowing they've thrown all they have at us and yet the movement just keeps GROWING !
I've seen a half-dozen C/K signs in the little college town across the river and regularly give the occupants/open curtains a stiff FU finger on driving past.
Tons more Trump signs/stickers all around here too, especially out here in farm country.
No retreat, No prisoners !
Seniors have a much more comprehensive memory of slick hilly than any other age group and understand best the consequences of voting for the felon.
And Eisenhower, and Kennedy, and Johnson, and Nixon, and Ford, and Carter, and Mr. Ronald Reagan. That memory is as solid as it gets.
...Clintons political skill...
If that phase means ‘superior abilities in evading prosecution’, then, yeah, she’s a good politician.
Unlike the Millennials, seniors are more informed about our history, the Constitution, and the vision and values of our Founders. They want a President of the United States, not the world.
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