Posted on 05/20/2016 12:36:59 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
She struggles with working-class whites. Then there are those unfavorables. Make no mistake, this won't be easy
Last Tuesday was not a good day for Hillary Clintons campaign.
She lost the West Virginia primary to Bernie Sanders by about 15 points, a stinging setback for the presumptive Democratic nominee.
Worse yet, Quinnipiac University released a series of polls from three key swing states with bad news for Clinton. The poll results showed Donald Trump with a 4-point lead over Clinton in Ohio and in a statistical tie with her in Pennsylvania and Florida.
Most political analysts and pundits, myself included, have predicted that Trump is highly likely to lose the general election. The Quinnipiac poll results and West Virginia election outcome wont change that consensus.
But Tuesday is a reminder that Clinton is far from a strong candidate in her own right.
How flawed is Clinton?
The significance of Tuesdays election returns and poll results should not be overstated. Clinton emerged from the West Virginia primary with enough delegates to come within striking distance of the 2,383 she needs to formally secure the Democratic nomination.
And the Quinnipiac surveys relied on questionable assumptions about the 2016 electorate. In particular, the Quinnipiac polls projected that minorities would constitute a smaller share of the electorate in 2016 than in 2012. That is a highly debatable proposition when the GOP nominee is the most divisive and polarizing presidential candidate in modern history.
In 2012 polls that underestimated minority turnout correspondingly overestimated Mitt Romneys appeal. For example, four years ago, the Quinnipiac poll showed Romney leading Barack Obama in Florida, but high minority turnout enabled Obama to win the state in November.
Its also worth noting that this weeks Quinnipiac polls are not reflective of other polling data. If one looks at the overall average of all recent polls, Clinton leads Trump by 4 in Florida, by 7 in Pennsylvania and by 3 in Ohio.
Nevertheless, it is undeniably true that Clinton remains a flawed candidate. Here are four of her biggest vulnerabilities:
1. A poor public image
One of the ironies of Hillary Clintons career is that she first got into public life as a House Judiciary Committee attorney assigned to the Watergate investigation. But in her own political career she has been plagued by one scandal after another: Whitewater, Travelgate, the Clinton Foundation and now the uproar over her State Department emails.
The scandals arent her only image problem. In an age when presidents are expected to be funny and informal, Clinton has never developed a relaxed and straightforward public demeanor, particularly on television. Her image problems have taken a severe toll on her approval ratings as over 50 percent of Americans now view her unfavorably. Only Trump is viewed more negatively by voters.
Even fellow Democrats worry that she comes across as inauthentic. Former Obama adviser David Axelrod warned last year that Clinton needs to untether herself from the teleprompters and talking points and genuinely interact in real terms with people.
Thats far easier said than done. One doesnt just flip a switch and become natural overnight. And Trump has already made clear that personal attacks on Clinton will be a central and unrelenting theme of his campaign.
2. Liberals still feeling the Bern
As Trump unleashes his character attacks, Clinton will need Democrats to rally to her side.
But to unify the party, the Clinton campaign must reach out to white liberals more effectively than it has thus far. Although Clinton has won overwhelming and critical support from minority voters, she still has a long way to go to win over the white liberals who form the core of Bernie Sanders base.
To be sure, fear of a Trump presidency will undoubtedly motivate most Sanders Democrats to vote for Clinton in the fall. Moreover, she recently came out with proposals for subsidized childcare programs and a plan to allow middle-aged Americans to purchase Medicare coverage that will appeal to Sanders voters.
But with Trump taking volatile, unpredictable and incoherent stands on everything from the minimum wage to the national debt, the normal ideological lines will be heavily blurred in the 2016 campaign.
Until Clinton articulates a clear policy vision that unites all wings of the Democratic Party, her left flank will remain a potential vulnerability.
3. Working-class whites
Clinton has no chance of winning a majority of working-class white voters. They have voted heavily Republican for years, especially working-class men. In the 2014 midterm elections, for example, working-class whites voted for Republicans by a 30-point margin.
But Clinton needs to win some of them. In 2012 Barack Obama won the support of about 35 percent of working-class whites, which was enough to help him win reelection.
One of the more surprising aspects of Clintons primary campaign has been her failure to focus on working-class women. Trumps 70 percent unfavorable rating with women, combined with Clintons newfound populism on economic issues, gives her a real chance to make inroads with at least some working-class voters.
But if she lets Trump position himself as the tribune of the working class, shell only dig a deeper hole for herself with blue-collar voters.
4. American prejudice
Donald Trump is running a campaign that is dividing Americans along racial, religious and gender lines.
The tactics of divide-and-conquer have certainly worked in the past. For example, the GOPs Southern strategy, which stoked the fears and resentments of white voters, contributed to Republican victories in five of the six presidential elections between 1968 and 1988.
As the 2012 election results demonstrated, changing demographics have made the southern strategy far less effective than it once was. When Ronald Reagan won in 1980, 80 percent of Americans were white. Today only 62 percent of Americans are white.
But Clinton cannot take a backlash against Trump for granted on the assumption that it will simply happen automatically.
To win a national majority, the Clinton campaign will need to build a biracial coalition of voters along the lines of the Obama campaigns in 2008 and 2012. Those campaigns worked because Obama was one of the most effective campaigners in modern American political history.
Thus far, however, Clinton has not been a particularly effective or inspired communicator on the campaign trail. She has had solid debate performances but has not offered a single memorable speech during the 2016 campaign. In an election that will likely strain American unity like no other in recent years, Clintons coalition-building skills will be put to the test.
Campaign quality matters
The Quinnipiac polls notwithstanding, Clinton has a significant lead over Trump in most national and swing state polls. By any measure, she remains a heavy favorite to win in the fall.
But Sanders victory in West Virginia underscores the extent of Clintons own vulnerabilities as a candidate. The 2016 election is extremely winnable for Clinton, but the White House wont be handed to her.
“4. American prejudice”
Bullsh!t Solon. It is Hillary and the dimoKKKRATS who are dividing this country.
A lot of Americans would move to America if she loses.
No, I think that was Monica Lewinsky's responsibility.
“the GOP nominee is the most divisive and polarizing presidential candidate in modern history”
Bitter clingers were not available for comment.
It helped that the media and the pop culture elites coronated him and the Republicans put up two ringers in a row to assure his victory. Any weak and unqualified candidate with that behind them could easily win, too.
I trashed reading any more in this article after that sentence.
The Democrats are...” running a campaign that is dividing Americans along racial, religious and gender lines.”
Fixed it.
The Democrats pander to every minority and then expect the working class to pay the bills.
Progressive writers projecting onto conservatives what they have been doing for years. Such predictable BS.
The division started with the democrats, and it's looking like they'll never stop until all is destroyed.
Their problem is, one they actually don't recognize, they have finally run up against opposition that is smarter, tougher, is willing to and knows how to fight them.
So they have to whine about him.......
“Donald Trump is running a campaign that is dividing Americans along racial, religious and gender lines.”
Tell a lie often enough....
No he is not. This is the big lie Democrats have been selling since the 1970s about every GOP Canidate
The dirty truth of American Politics is this. The modern US Democrat Party exists solely to exploit racial, religious and gender. It cannot win an election on issues. It cannot win an election on facts. It can only win elections by exploiting the fears and haters of their self created "victim" classes
Hillary is seen here scarfing a NY Street Weenie using the Lewinsky Method popularized by her husband and that woman with whom he did not have sex.
Ah, the mythical "Southern Strategy".
The Democrats had a lock on the South after Reconstruction. They just can't admit to themselves that in 1968, Southerners could no longer vote for an increasingly Progressive party platform. The 1968 Democrat convention was the last straw.
There was no "strategy" by the GOP. The Democrats simply squandered the support of one of their biggest voting blocs.
Without commenting on the merits of the four specific reasons given, there is at least one more: her temper. The Donald knows how to make her blow her top. And when she does, she looks absolutely ridiculous.
Sir Thomas More (a.k.a. St. Thomas More) and Erasmus firmly believed that humor was a powerful agent for social change. I think they were right. Just think how influential late night comedians and Saturday Night Live have been in creating the narrative about everything from gay rights to James Stockdale.
Stockdale’s question “Who am I? Why am I here?” was a legitimate rhetorical way of introducing himself, a political unknown, to the electorate. But it was poorly executed. And it was the ridicule he suffered at the hands of Saturday Night Live that did him in. He was actually a brilliant man, and a legitimate war hero. But he was out of his element, and they made toast out of him for it.
The Donald knows how to use humor, too, and he uses it effectively. All he needs to do is to get Hillary to blow up and mouth off, and he’ll know how to turn it against her. She’s her own worst enemy, politically speaking, in much the same way that Stockdale was.
I’ve been saying for months that The Donald will capture the nomination first, and then the White House. It won’t be because he’s the most qualified—I don’t believe he was the most qualified GOP candidate. It will be because he knows how to manipulate the media like no one else in the race, including Hillary.
Hillary’s boring. Even to the media, who love her. But they live on advertising revenue, and who will watch four more years of Hillary?!
Then there’s The Donald. He’s been good copy for decades. They can’t get enough of him. They hate him, and at the same time they hate themselves for loving him. That’s why he’s gonna win. He knows how to get them to do his bidding, and they love him for it even as they hate him for it. He’s like their cocaine. Deep down they want another “hit” and they’re gonna keep going to their supplier to get it.
LOL
And Obama hasn't been doing that for 8 years? And Hillary's BLM pandering, and "first woman president", and "I'll fight for women rhetoric" is uniting?
Even though Trump is massively unpopular and there's no way he can get elected, liberals better make sure to vote!
LOL.
” Even fellow Democrats worry that she comes across as inauthentic.” Inauthentic is code for “liar”
more bilge from saloon.
We weren't asked to comment.
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