Posted on 06/20/2015 10:46:54 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Were it left to me, Id probably retire the clown car analogy for the crowded 2016 Republican presidential contest. Like the Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs line employed by those who sought to dismiss Hillary Clinton and the other contenders for the 2008 Democratic nomination, I think it diminishes the real competition that is going onand the real distinctions between the candidates.
But the clown car line is going to be amplified as Donald Trump grabs for the wheel.
Trumps candidacy begins as a punchline, and its hard to imagine how it will end as anything other than that. After teasing the country for years about entering politics, Trump finally declared Tuesday that this is no longer a joke: Ladies and gentlemen, I am officially running for president of the United States
Because Trump is Trump, his campaign will be characterized as political theater of the absurd.
Of course, that is not necessarily disqualifying these days.
Presidential campaigning has, for all intents and purposes, and with a few honorable exceptions, become political theater of the absurd. So Trump fits right innot merely to the Republican race but to the broader 2016 competition.
After all:
* The presumed front-runners for the nominations of both major parties are the wife of one former president and the son and brother of two former presidents. Both Hillary Clinton and Jeb Bush, no matter what their other strengths, begin the 2016 race with the presidential-level name recognition that most other candidates can only dream of. But Trump does not have to dream. He is a son of privilege whose determination to grab the spotlight has, over many decades of publicity grabbing, gained celebrity that is proximately presidential.
* It is quite likely that the eventual nominees of both major partiesand the various and sundry political operations and independent political enterprises associated with their candidacieswill each end up spending well in excess of $2 billion. (Thats up from the $1.2 billion for Team Romney and the $1.1 billion for Team Obama in 2012, but America is suffering from exceptional political inflation in this Citizens United era.) Claiming a net worth of $9 billion, Trump says he is the most successful person ever to run for the presidency, by farwith a Gucci store thats worth more than Romney .In the new age of money in politics, that is certainly some sort of qualification.
* Because of the money and the manipulation of the process, neither party is likely to nominate the candidate who speaks the values and the ideals of its base. This is not a guaranteed circumstance, and both Bernie Sanders and Rand Paul will do their best to upset the insider calculus. But if all goes according to pattern and plan, the nominees will be compromise choices rather than right-from-the-start favorites. Thats what our politics has become. It has been noted, of course, that Trumps disapproval rating among Republicans is high43 percent in the latest Public Policy Polling survey. But Chris Christies disapproval rating in the same poll is 49 percent, and Bushs is 40 percent. And while Scott Walker is quite popular in national polls of voters who do not know him well, his disapproval rating in recent polling of Wisconsinites is 55 percent.
* The debates that both parties are organizing will constrict and constrain serious political discourse rather than encourage itand, in the case of the Republicans, very possibly create a two-tiered system that effectively stamps some candidates as unworthy of serious consideration. Worse yet, the expectation is that the winners of the Democratic and Republican nominations will then appear in a handful of overly scripted fall debates that exclude third-party candidates and all sorts of issues and ideas. If Trump is excluded or diminished by Republican debate planners, count on him to raise a ruckus. And that would be terrific.
* The overwhelming majority of the messaging from both parties and from the myriad Super PACs and charitable organizations that seek to influence our politics will be negative. We will literally have a national campaign of enormous consequence in which the essential message will be Dont Vote. Democrats will say Dont Vote for the Republican. Republicans will say, Dont Vote for the Democrat. But the core theme will be one of discouragement and disenchantment. And who does negative better than Donald youre fired Trump?
Barring a radical twist or turn on the campaign trailand lets hope there are many of these between now and November 2016this presidential race will be a theater of the absurd.
So congratulations Donald Trump. You have finally found the role you were meant to play.
If you're not familiar with it, The Nation is very far left.
...because, truth be told, the Democrat field looks even more likely to be caught wearing greasepaint and rubber noses.
That is appropriate...so is the Donald.
The presumed front-runners for the nominations of both major parties are the wife of one former president and the son and brother of two former presidents. Both Hillary Clinton and Jeb Bush, no matter what their other strengths, begin the 2016 race with the presidential-level name recognition that most other candidates can only dream of. But Trump does not have to dream. He is a son of privilege whose determination to grab the spotlight has, over many decades of publicity grabbing, gained celebrity that is proximately presidential.
So, in this guys estimation, Billy Carter would have been a viable candidate.
I think Trump will make things interesting, if nothing else.
Sort of like when Kinky Friedman ran for governor of Texas.
He won’t win...but having become a cynic...whoever the establishment wants to win...will.
I’d have voted for him before his brother ... or Jebbie.
Heck, Junior Samples is looking good right about now.
Trump is sucking out all oxygen in the primaries! He is getting more coverage in MSM than any other candidate! And after the first debate, he is likely to get 90% of coverage.
This will be a good test for the others to speak up, give clarity on their positions. Otherwise, they deserveably will be forgotten. Would a President Trump be a bad idea? A successful businessman, a red-blooded American, a nationalist, truly sounds like he’ll really build a wall on the border... He’s even speaking favorably of traditional marriage, etc. Against the likes of Bush III, his shadow Rubio, Paul, Fiorina, Christie, Perry, and the other wannabes, Trump seems worth considering. Not sure about Cruz, he’s lost a lot of luster lately and Trumps already trashed him, Walker? Not sure anymore. They are all in the shadows. Even Clinton got pushed aside a bit. Clinton vs. Trump? I’d bet on Trump.
I’d rather see The Donald run for mayor of NYC.
I would add one factor that will give Trump's candidacy more boost than the DC insiders are considering. They just don't have a clue how fed up US citizens are, or they just don't care. I don't know which is worse. So, they keep doing things that further alienate them from us. And Trump's the only one speaking the way we feel about it.
Once again, no real consideration of what he’s saying, if it might attract voters and why.
He says what others are afraid of saying because it might hurt thier campaign and chances. They will not include him in thier dbates narrated by liberal progressive media shells. Im sure he will pay for a spot to talk to the people directly. Sit back the shows about to start
...Scott Walker...his disapproval rating in recent polling of Wisconsinites is 55 percent.
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Wow! Paul Ryan did not carry his home state of WI as the GOP VP candidate in 2012. Should Walker be the nominee, I wonder..... Could he be another Al Gore and not even carry his home state?
fall debates....If Trump is excluded or diminished by Republican debate planners, count on him to raise a ruckus. ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Yeah; like running as an Independent/Third Party candidate and handing the election to Hillary. That is my greatest fear about the Election of 2016.
Yes funny how these guys just can’t stop writing about Trump. There is no such thing as bad publicity.
IF the GOp bans Trump from the debates—even if he gets the required 10% opinion polls, It Would set the stage for massive revolt in a fractured GOP—It might even cause a split and a 3rd Party Run for Trump. In the end it could help Cruz and Rubio. Mitt may well be the right guy to heal the wounds (but I don’t think so) -—Its going to be a wild primary season. At this point I would rather a Trump in the White House than a Hillary or Sanders. The GOP will try to knock Trump out like they did Sarah Palin—early. His biggest enemy will be his own Party as well as the Liberal Media branding him a clown, and the Democratic Machine as a “Rich Man” like Mittens.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.