Posted on 08/22/2015 1:49:25 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
As the Republican-primary race moves into the fall, Donald Trump is exhibiting signs of becoming, if not a conventional candidate, at least a better-organized one. I have a much more traditional campaign than people think, he told me on August 18, two days after his campaign released the first in a series of position papers hes set to unveil.
The bar is low anything beyond winging it would pass for a signal of a more traditional campaign. Trump knows this. His position paper, which calls for Mexico to pay for a border wall and America to eliminate birthright citizenship, is so extreme that it appears to mock the concept of position papers, which is partially the point. I dont think the people care about it, because they believe in me, he said. Nonetheless, it has been treated with enough seriousness within the GOP that it has dominated the conversation for days, and Republican Establishmentarians who had once expected the Trump surge to peter out by Labor Day are now coming to terms with the candidates staying power and looking to the future with dread.
Inside the Trump campaign, the civil war that cleaved advisers into dueling camps is over. The new guard, led by Trumps 40-year-old campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, has successfully sidelined longtime advisers Roger Stone and Sam Nunberg. Lewandowski, a former Koch-brothers operative from New Hampshire, is little known on the national scene but, crucially, is wired into the states tea-party network. Trump has thrown his support behind Lewandowski, who in turn has marginalized the veterans. At the beginning of this month, Nunberg was fired. Days later, Stone quit (or was fired, if you believe Trump).
The purge at campaign headquarters also comes as Trump is staffing up in the field. In Iowa, where hes leading the polls by nearly eight points, his campaign is being run by Chuck Laudner, the canny conservative strategist and tea-party insider who drove Rick Santorum around the state in his pickup to win the 2012 Iowa caucus. Trump snapped up Laudner in February, after hed kicked the tires on several presidential campaigns, and Laudners team now totals ten paid operatives. They say in Iowa I have the most people working for me, Trump told me. Hes building similarly robust organizations throughout all the early primary states. I have a lot of people in New Hampshire and a lot of people in South Carolina. (He also reminded me that he has a lot of property in Nevada. Good property.)
No one none of the rival candidates, none of their armies of highly paid political consultants, not even Fox News chairman Roger Ailes or his boss, Rupert Murdoch has engineered a strategy to effectively handle Trump. Just last month, Scott Walker was confidently pitching himself to Manhattan fund-raisers as the candidate best suited to channel the partys rage. Walkers basic theory of the race is that theres anti-Establishment, anti-elite sentiment out there in the country and we need a candidate who can be the contrast to Jeb Bush both in the primary and the general, says one fund-raiser who met with him. Now Walkers Iowa campaign is flailing, and hes being forced to ape Trumps extreme talking points on immigration. Walker is in third! Trump told me with particular glee. He was expected to win Iowa, and its looking like hes not going to win it now.
If Trumps poll numbers hold, its likely that rivals or their associated super-PACs will feel forced to release a barrage of attack ads against the man in front, spending precious resources far earlier than theyd expected. The next step will be if these groups decide they have to take this guy down, says the fund-raiser. Theyll start focusing primary voters on the real Donald Trump with ads that say, This guy is a total fraud. That could be highly damaging to him. But, unlike other troublemakers Herman Cain and Michele Bachmann, for example, both of whom briefly led some 2012 primary polls before collapsing under voter scrutiny Trump can say, Screw it, Im not dropping out.
Trumps ability to self-finance his campaign allows him to stay in the race essentially as long as hes enjoying himself, and hes very much enjoying himself. I only want to go all the way, Trump vowed when I asked him if hed ever consider withdrawing. Ive already done everything. This may be bluster; he may underestimate the grind of a desperate presidential campaign. But Trump could continue to be dangerous to his rivals and his party long after the mania fades.
Given the way the primary schedule is set up as many as 20 states will assign delegates proportionally before Floridas winner-take-all primary on March 15 theres a good chance that no candidate will lock up the nomination until May. This means that even if Trumps poll numbers fall, he can remain a plausible-enough contender to keep the primary conversation around subjects like whether immigrants are rapists and television anchors are menstruating.
Its also possible that a Trump who is losing would be more erratic than the one who is winning. His numbers are going to come down, and then hes going to panic, a Trump friend told me. He doesnt believe it will ever happen. He has not confronted this in his mind, says another conservative who knows Trump well. So, if you think Trump has been unpredictable now, just wait. The things that have already come out of his mouth are so much worse than so many things that sunk Herman Cain and the other flavors of the month last time, another Trump friend says. Its not hard to imagine Trump launching a kamikaze mission against the candidates left standing.
The candidate most imperiled by Trumps staying power is Bush, whose campaign had expected that Trumps childish antics would position the former governor favorably as the partys resident grown-up. Instead, the opposite has happened: Day after day, Trump is highlighting Bushs enthusiasm gap and laying bare the emotional distance between the Establishment front-runner and his more radical constituents. Trumps events, which have featured Aerosmith soundtracks and helicopter rides, make Bushs campaign stops seem about as exciting as Brookings Institution panels. A few days ago, when both candidates were in New Hampshire, Fox News cut to a commercial during a Bush speech in mid-sentence and teased an empty Trump stage, suggesting that even a vacant Trump lectern is more interesting than Bush talking. He really lacks energy, Trump told me.
The Bush campaign and its supporters are now taking the fight to the medium where Trump dominates: television. On August 16, Bushs super-PAC, Right to Rise, announced it will be dropping $10 million in ads in early-primary states. And yet, this is likely to goad Trump into a counterattack. If Trump starts doing TV spots, hed be a huge problem, says the fund-raiser. Trump told me hes prepared to counter Bushs ad buy with whatever it takes.
While Trump assured me that he thinks Bush is a nice person, he has told friends in private that his animosity is personal. According to one friend, Trump blames Bush and Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim for Univisions decision in June to cancel a $13.5 million contract with Trump to televise his Miss USA pageant. Five days later, Slim scrapped a deal with Trump to develop shows in Mexico. Trump responded by filing a $500 million lawsuit against Univision. Trump believes it all goes back to Jeb, the friend says. He thinks Jeb and his wife, Columba, are close with Carlos Slim and Univision got pressure from Slim operatives. In a move that further confirmed Trumps suspicions, Univision has hired Miguel Estrada, a Washington lawyer with deep Bush ties.
When if? Trump withdraws from the campaign, he will no longer have a ready landing pad on television. (His Apprentice deal with NBC has been canceled, too.) This is a prospect that is likely terrifying for Trump and should, in turn, be terrifying for Bush. In a recent phone call with a longtime friend who has been acting as an informal adviser, Trump warned: If Im going down, then Bush is going down with me. Hes not going to be president of the United States.
I think that is exactly what Sen Cruz thinks also
I’m Ted Cruz and I approve this message.
If Trump takes down Bush and drops out of the race I’ll kiss Trump’s ass on national TV.
As long as anyone is able to yank illegals and the threat of Islam center stage, then ¡Yeb and Rubio are going down.
The chamber of amnesty cannot withstand the light of day.
I didn’t go past the”so exteme”. At that point the rest of the article was, blah, blah, blah.....
The article uses a lot of biased language against Trump, and who are those anonymous “Trump friends” who are quoted?
You said it MUCH better. Hats off!
Will that be on pay per view?
Terrifying? Seriously?
My guess is that if Trump does not become the candidate, he will soon address the glaring market need in this country for a conservative media station. Fox has certainly left the building.
Oh, by the way, Trump canceled the Apprentice by deciding to run, not the other way around. Sheesh.
If Trump wants to work out an equitable deal with the pay per view providers.
I’d be happy with 20% of the gross.
I can’t forget how McCain was supposedly down and out but look what happened. I heard for months that Romney couldn’t win the nomination. Look what happened.
Bush has the money to stay in after everyone but Trump has dropped out or flamed out.
I hope I’m wrong. As I’ve said, if Bush wins I will be 100% convinced that votes don’t count.
“In fact the entire Republican establishment!”
The smartest thing establishment Republicans can do, at this point, is to jump on the Trump Bandwagon and shout: “Me too!”
That’s what Scott is trying to do, although ham-fistedly.
“If Trump takes down Bush and drops out of the race Ill kiss Trumps ass on national TV.”
What if Trump takes down Jeb and makes Cruz his vice president for two terms, setting Cruz up for two terms as Potus?
If he does that, I'LL kiss his...
Well, maybe not. But I'll send him a nice note of thanks and maybe a gift certificate.
Not that there's anything wrong with that.
Not true. Cruz has more hard money than Bush or anyone else and is second only to Bush in soft money.
A kamikaze declaration on Bush. I like Trump more every day!
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