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Why a Republican Pollster Is Losing Faith in Her Party (You're the reason, naturally)
The Atlantic ^ | August 31, 2017 | Ronald Brownstein

Posted on 09/01/2017 2:42:06 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

“If I pack up my toys and go home, there are people in red MAGA hats who would be saying, ‘Don’t let the door hit you on your way out.’”

Kristen Soltis Anderson is losing faith in her party. And that should trigger alarms for Republican leaders concerned about the GOP’s long-term health.

Anderson is a smart and telegenic young Republican pollster. She has specialized in studying how the party can improve its anemic performance among the Millennial generation, which will pass the right-leaning baby boomers to become the largest generation of eligible voters in 2018.

Now she is wondering whether Donald Trump’s GOP has a place for people like her, who want a party that marries support for less government and robust national defense with a commitment to racial and social inclusion.

“There are still enough good people inside … that I agree with that I am still staying,” Anderson told me recently. “But I am significantly less convinced that I am going to succeed in this effort. [That’s] because at the same moment somebody like me is becoming very disheartened, there are voters who are thinking, ‘This is the Republican Party I have been waiting for.’ If I pack up my toys and go home, there are people in red MAGA hats who would be saying, ‘Don’t let the door hit you on your way out.’”

Anderson’s fear is that in a rapidly diversifying America, Trump is stamping the GOP as a party of white racial backlash—and that too much of the party’s base is comfortable with that. Trump’s morally stunted response to the violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, this month unsettled her. But she was even more unnerved by polls showing that most Republican voters defended his remarks.

“What has really shaken me in recent weeks is the consistency in polling where I see Republican voters excusing really bad things because their leader has excused them,” she told me. “[Massachusetts Governor] Charlie Baker, [UN Ambassador] Nikki Haley, [Illinois Representative] Adam Kinzinger—I want to be in the party with them. But in the last few weeks it has become increasingly clear to me that most Republican voters are not in that camp. They are in the Trump camp.”

The portion of the party coalition willing to tolerate, if not actively embrace, white nationalism “is larger than most mainstream Republicans have ever been willing to grapple with,” she added.

Anderson’s gloom is understandable. Even before Trump’s emergence, the GOP relied mostly on the elements of American society most uneasy with cultural and demographic change—the primarily older, blue-collar, rural, and evangelical whites who make up what I’ve called the “coalition of restoration.” As a candidate and as president, Trump has yoked the party even more tightly to those voters’ priorities—a tilt evident in everything from his “very fine people” remarks about the white-supremacist protesters in Charlottesville to his recent pardon of former Arizona sheriff Joe Arpaio.

All of this has predictably corroded Trump’s standing with the young people that Anderson has studied, both in her 2015 book The Selfie Vote and a perceptive post-2012 study for the College Republican National Committee. Her study reached much the same conclusion as the fabled “autopsy” that the Republican National Committee commissioned: that the GOP could court younger and diverse voters with a message of economic growth and government reform, but only if it embraced a more tolerant and inclusive vision on racial and cultural issues.

Given her perspective, Trump was never her choice in the 2016 primaries. But she didn’t exclude the possibility that in office he could reach a changing America. In February, she told me she thought Trump, as an outsider, could attract younger people with the growth and government-reform message she had championed in 2013—but only if he avoided decisions that would portray the GOP as intolerant and racially biased.

Now, though, Anderson sees Trump systematically advancing the most divisive elements of his agenda while slighting any reforms. “I cannot think of a worse possible direction we could be going,” she said glumly.

Polls showing Trump’s approval among young people falling to 25 percent or less justify her pessimism. And yet, as she noted, Trump’s approval among Republicans, while slightly eroding, remains at about 80 percent. Only one-fourth of GOP partisans criticized his handling of white-supremacist groups in a recent Quinnipiac University national survey.

All of this suggests that, as Anderson fears, any insurgency to define the GOP in more inclusive terms would face a tough climb. But it is nonetheless premature to declare Trump the permanent victor in the fight over the party’s direction.

In many ways, that battle has not been fully joined because other Republican leaders, despite their private misgivings, have been so reluctant to publicly articulate a clear critique of Trump’s insular, racially barbed nationalism. If leaders voiced a more defined alternative to Trump, more of the rank and file might rally to it. It’s worth recalling that even in 2016, Trump did not win 50 percent of the vote in any Republican primary until New York, near the finish line. And while he dominated among Republicans without a college degree, ABC’s cumulative analysis of all exit polls found he carried only about one-third of college-educated Republicans. Trump also lagged among Millennial Republicans.

Those white-collar and younger Republicans would be the likely foundation of any potential effort to reverse Trump’s direction, whether that means electing House and Senate Republicans who reject it or supporting an uphill 2020 primary challenge. In polls, college-educated and younger Republicans are generally less supportive than their blue-collar and older counterparts of Trump’s hardline approaches on immigration and somewhat less likely to say he shares their values. In a Pew Research Center survey released Tuesday, these groups were also considerably less likely than others in the GOP to say they like Trump’s conduct as president.

Yet Anderson fears that Trump has “changed the balance in the party” by driving out those voters and absorbing more who are attracted by his winks toward white identity politics. Anderson isn’t interested in joining the Democrats, but she wonders whether “there is space that I haven’t considered before” for a centrist third-party ticket in 2020. Like the business leaders who stampeded away from Trump after Charlottesville, or the surveys showing the party’s standing collapsing among the rising Millennial generation, Anderson’s step toward the exit measures the price Republicans are paying for tolerating Trump’s serial intolerance.


TOPICS: Issues; Parties; State and Local
KEYWORDS: establishmentvote; gop; millennials; polling; pushpolling; republicans; socialliberalism; third100days; trump; youthvote
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1 posted on 09/01/2017 2:42:06 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

So...... she’s a democrat.


2 posted on 09/01/2017 2:44:51 PM PDT by wbill
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Now she is wondering whether Donald Trump’s GOP has a place for people like her, who want a party that marries support for less government and robust national defense with a commitment to racial and social inclusion.

Less government?........she must be delusional................

3 posted on 09/01/2017 2:45:19 PM PDT by Red Badger (Road Rage lasts 5 minutes. Road Rash lasts 5 months!.....................)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Anderson’s fear is that in a rapidly diversifying America, Trump is stamping the GOP as a party of white racial backlash—and that too much of the party’s base is comfortable with that. Trump’s morally stunted response to the violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, this month unsettled her. But she was even more unnerved by polls showing that most Republican voters defended his remarks.

Another moron who cannot stand the truth being told.

4 posted on 09/01/2017 2:46:02 PM PDT by dirtboy
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Anderson’s fear is that in a rapidly diversifying America, Trump is stamping the GOP as a party of white racial backlash—and that too much of the party’s base is comfortable with that. Trump’s morally stunted response to the violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, this month unsettled her. But she was even more unnerved by polls showing that most Republican voters defended his remarks.

Another moron who cannot stand the truth being told.

5 posted on 09/01/2017 2:46:02 PM PDT by dirtboy
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Now she is wondering whether Donald Trump’s GOP has a place for people like her, who want a party that marries support for less government and robust national defense with a commitment to racial and social inclusion.


Well, bless your heart. If you expect Trump’s supporters to get behind social liberalism, get ready to be disappointed.


6 posted on 09/01/2017 2:46:41 PM PDT by sparklite2 (I'm less interested in the rights I have than the liberties I can take.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Not interested enough to read it, but I bet she thinks amnesty is the answer.


7 posted on 09/01/2017 2:48:36 PM PDT by Lurkinanloomin (Natural Born Citizen Means Born Here Of Citizen Parents - Know Islam, No Peace -No Islam, Know Peace)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
TLDR;

Don't let the door hit your backside on the way out hunny.
8 posted on 09/01/2017 2:49:08 PM PDT by Garth Tater (Return to sound money and Constitutional governance.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Republican Pollster ==> Republican Parasite


9 posted on 09/01/2017 2:51:36 PM PDT by Secret Agent Man ( Gone Galt; Not averse to Going Bronson.)
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To: Lurkinanloomin

Not interested enough to read it, but I bet she thinks amnesty is the answer.
__________________________________

Of course, and massively increasing the amount of “refugees” the US accepts.


10 posted on 09/01/2017 2:53:22 PM PDT by HenpeckedCon (Covfefe Trump!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I hear this same talk from church “experts”. They tell you to water down your message, hide your beliefs, become the alternative in everything but name. What they fail to understand is that if we stand for nothing, then why does it matter if we exist at all? I don’t care if the party called “Republican” wins another election. I care about certain values that the Republican party seems to have and the Democrat party definitely does not have.

Same for church. If we have to become the “Church of What’s Happenin’ Now” to attract people, then let’s just dissolve it and sleep in on Sundays.

If Republicans have to become Democrats to win, then I’ll vote for the Democrats because they already won and we all need to be registered as a Loyal Party Member at that point!


11 posted on 09/01/2017 2:53:25 PM PDT by Bryanw92 (If we had some ham, we could have ham and eggs, if we had some eggs.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

12 posted on 09/01/2017 2:53:50 PM PDT by Fiddlstix (Warning! This Is A Subliminal Tagline! Read it at your own risk!(Presented by TagLines R US))
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To: Red Badger

>>Less government?........she must be delusional................

She probably means less state and local government, because Transnational Progressives like her would call FedGov their god.


13 posted on 09/01/2017 2:55:18 PM PDT by Bryanw92 (If we had some ham, we could have ham and eggs, if we had some eggs.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
"who are attracted by his winks toward white identity politics."

Is the Atlantic nuts? That is all we get 365/24/7 from MSM, Dems, GOPe, NYT, WaPo: Identity politics. In fact that is the only kind of politics they know. They are obsessed with identity politics.

Hey lady, don't let the door hit you where the good Lord split ya!

14 posted on 09/01/2017 2:57:06 PM PDT by Governor Dinwiddie
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Anderson’s fear is that in a rapidly diversifying America, Trump is stamping the GOP as a party of white racial backlash—and that too much of the party’s base is comfortable with that.

President Trump is NOT stamping the GOP as a party of white racial backlash. It is the narrative of the MSM that Trump is stamping the GOP as a party of white racial backlash. The vast majority of Americans understand that difference. Apparently Anderson does not.

15 posted on 09/01/2017 2:59:48 PM PDT by taxcontrol (Stupid should hurt)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

It’s our fault she has a room temperature IQ.


16 posted on 09/01/2017 3:01:09 PM PDT by MrEdd (Caveat Emptor)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet; All
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17 posted on 09/01/2017 3:01:44 PM PDT by musicman (The future is just a collection of successive nows.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

In other words, I will work for Democrats, so please hire me.


18 posted on 09/01/2017 3:03:09 PM PDT by ifinnegan (Democrats kill babies and harvest their organs to sell)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Thru a glass, darkly. Her preconceptions filter her conclusions.

Why do the pollsters ignore the Gen Xers? They are 40s-50s, now. Where do they stand? Are they lumped into the increase in *white nationalists* flocking to Trump?

There are over 400k members on r/T_D, most, from what I can tell, older than millennials and younger than Boomers. Like FR, they are not all Caucasian. Their younger siblings, so-called Gen Z, will vote in the next series of elections and the Internet censorship is driving them rightward.

What sort of pollster holds these fears and still works for the GOP(e). (rhetorical)

I think Brownstein and his ilk at the Atlantic are hoping for a Deus Ex Machina in the form of a third party composed of moderate GOP.

It’s going to be a nail-biting couple of elections coming.


19 posted on 09/01/2017 3:04:48 PM PDT by reformedliberal
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To: ifinnegan

Maybe the Greens can put together some money to hire her.


20 posted on 09/01/2017 3:05:05 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (You cannot invade the mainland US. There'd be a rifle behind every blade of grass.)
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