Posted on 03/18/2019 2:16:56 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
The next election belongs to Trump.
Donald Trump will win the 2020 presidential election.
Thats not a prediction. That is a projection based upon history.
Beginning with the presidential contest of 1900, the party holding the White House has stood for its second term a total of 12 times. In 11 of those 12 campaigns, the incumbent party has triumphed. Thats about a 92 percent success rate. Those odds must look pretty good to a swashbuckling politician of the Trump stripe.
There is a single exception to the two-term incumbent party lock: President Jimmy Carter. The Georgian lost his re-election battle in 1980. At that time, the Democrat Party had held the White House for only four years, following Carters victory over GOP President Gerald Ford in 1976.
Undermining Carters presidency was the widespread perception that his time in office was a period of malaise. The economy sputtered, inflation skyrocketed, the Soviets invaded Afghanistan, and the Iranians held hostages in the American embassy, a persistent sign of the administrations weakness and ineffectiveness. In retrospect, it may be too easy to attribute Carters four-year loss to the greatness of his 1980 opponent, Ronald Reagan. But at the time, Reagan was viewed by Democrats and their mainstream media allies as an aging, warmongering, not-very-bright B-movie actor in the thrall of an extreme conservative ideology. He would, they thought, be the easiest Republican to defeat.
Boy, were they ever wrong.
Besides Carters own missteps and his underestimating Reagan, two other political factors contributed to that singular four-year Democrat loss. First, Massachusetts Senator Ted Kennedy, heir to the liberal halo of his assassinated brothers, challenged incumbent Carter in the 1980 primaries. Although Carter won a tough nomination fight, he failed to unite or inspire the liberal activists embittered by their Bay State heros defeat.
The 1980 election also witnessed the third-party candidacy of independent John Anderson. Anderson may have served as a Republican congressman, but his trajectory had moved steadily leftward over his two decades in the House. By 1980, Anderson came out of central casting as a RINOs RINO. While he certainly took votes from both parties, his largest percentage came in the Kennedy home state of Massachusetts, where Anderson broke the 15 percent mark. This provided just the margin needed for Reagan to take the Commonwealth, a feat he repeated in his 1984 landslide. Astonishingly, Ronald Reagan, the most conservative president of the post-World War II epic, squeaked out presidential wins in the most liberal state in the nation.
The Carter four-year Democrat jinx has lessons for President Trump. One, avoid an economic downturn at all costs. Two, stay away from potential foreign policy quagmires in North Korea or the Mideast. Three, make every effort to prevent any viable primary challenge. Four, beware a third-party candidate who could siphon voters away from the GOP and then swing critical electoral votes to the Democrats.
If Carter is the one president in more than a century who failed to hold his party in the presidency for at least two terms, he is hardly the only incumbent to lose re-election in the 20th Century. Four times, an incumbent GOP president lost for re-election. Still, each loss followed from eight to 16 years of Republican dominance in the corner office. Thats quite a different scenario from a party losing after only four years in the White House; there is a certain inescapable logic to the eight-year cycle.
One time, the Great Depression cost the GOP the White House. Twice, third party candidates helped submarine Republican incumbents. In 1912 running as the third party Bull Moose candidate, former Republican President Teddy Roosevelt challenged his designated successor President William Howard Taft, providing the opening for Democrat Woodrow Wilson to serve two terms. Roosevelt proved the most potent third party candidate of the modern two-party era. One might fairly call him the second party candidate, as he tallied more popular and electoral votes than Republican standard bearer Taft.
In 1992, Texas billionaire H. Ross Perot sabotaged the re-election effort of fellow Lone Star Stater George H. W. Bush. Of course, Bush, himself, had already undermined his own campaign by inking a tax-hike deal with big-spending Democrats that simultaneously surrendered the anti-tax re-election issue and broke his word solemnly declared at the Republican convention: Read my lips, no new taxes.
That Bush tax hike was inevitably linked to the Bush recession that fed Bill Clinton his campaign theme, Its the economy, stupid!
Rarely in political history has a single poor decision caused as much self-inflicted political pain. In the third term of the Reagan-led Republican ascendancy, President Bush carelessly ruptured his political coalition, by giving into the Democrats on tax increases. This helped secure his uncertain, hand-wringing image as a pragmatist willing to work across the aisle, while tarnishing his personal credibility, an irreplaceable political asset. Then his tax hikes inevitably connected to a severe economic downturn presenting an almost insurmountable difficulty for an incumbent, at the same time it gave Clinton his surefire top-tier issue.
Unless hes willing to follow the four-year rule of Democrat Jimmy Carter or the single-term George H. W. Bush model, President Trump would be well-advised to learn from their mistakes. Lauded in some circles as centrists or moderates, their paper-thin political support crumbled in the face of economic problems and demonstrable weaknesses.
Since the Carter years, Americans have grown accustomed to two-term presidents. Beginning with Ronald Reagans White House years, political parties have routinely held the executive branch for eight years. For the first time since the earliest days of the Republic, we have witnessed three consecutive presidents serve out two full terms apiece: Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama. And going back to Ronald Reagans victory in 1980, the United States has seen four out of five chief executives serve two full terms. The last time a similar pattern of consistency held in the presidency, illustrious figures roamed the White House corridors: Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, and Andrew Old Hickory Jackson, interrupted only by the single term of President John Quincy Adams of Massachusetts.
For all the media carping about turmoil and uncertainty, we live in the midst of a remarkable wave of presidential stability.
Will Donald J. Trump maintain that historic trend?
One cannot predict with absolute certainty. But those 11-to-1 odds look persuasive.
George H. W. Bush was inaugurated as the 41st President of the United States, and ended on January 20, 1993. Bush, a Republican, took office after a landslide victory over Democrat Michael Dukakis in the 1988 presidential election.
1 Term
Trump is a for sure guaranteed lock.
With opponents like Willie’s Ho, Fauxcahauntas, Creepy Uncle Joe, Run the children over Beto, some homo named Buttgig, a gay black guy (not Obama again), a demented old Socialist from Vermont, and other assorted losers - there is no way to lose this!
TL;DR version: It will take people more than 4 years to wash the stain of Hillary Clinton off the Democratic Party.
3rd consecutive term for the GOP tho which is the comparison being made
I like those odds, but these are unusual times.
Something else interesting about H.W.
No other president in the History of POTUS ever had a 92% approval rating like he did. The highest of any president.
Granted this 92% was immediately after Bush I won the Gulf War. And it was brief and didn’t last - but still.
Lots of people blame the “Read my Lips...” comment. They are wrong. The blame goes to Ross Perot.
BS. Bush would have lost even if Perot never got in the race.
DON’T GET TO COMFY!!! That’s their game plan!! Too many positive stories about trump’s numbers and election probability along with good economy articles coming out lately! Yes good news but be very very wary of those POS! OBTW, I thought mueller was about to close shop along with no impeachment etc...now I hear he is looking into other Trump’s campaign people ..WTH!!! SHUT THIS WITCH HUNT DOWN!!..now!!! C’mon Barr do your job!! Close it down!!!
“The Man Who Supposedly Cost George H. W. Bush the Presidency”
http://www.pollingreport.com/hibbitts1202.htm
> Beginning with the presidential contest of 1900, the party holding the White House has stood for its second term a total of 12 times. In 11 of those 12 campaigns, the incumbent party has triumphed. <
That argument only holds if conditions today are pretty much the same as they were back during that span of time. But sadly they are not.
Don’t forget the American hostages held in Iran during the entire campaign year of 1980 (from November 1979 to January 1981 — the day Reagan was inaugurated). It was such a big factor the daily news broadcasts always started with a day count like: “Good evening. This is day # 372 of the Iran hostage crisis.” And Carter was seen as weak in handling it.
> Lots of people blame the Read my Lips... comment. They are wrong. The blame goes to Ross Perot. <
You are really on to something there. A decent liberal third party candidate in 2020 would pretty much guarantee a Trump win. Sanders, for example.
And a decent “conservative” third party candidate in 2020 would pretty much guarantee a Trump loss. Kasich, for example. And before I get yelled at for saying that, we should all remember that Trump won the 2016 election narrowly. Democrat voter fraud in 2020 is going to be much worse.
But there is somewhat of a solution. Presidential run-off elections, like the do in France.
Be on the lookout for the new Ross Perot.
I dont see anyone of the donkey clown party even mounting a challenge at this point. All the Dem candidates are either hard left or hard crazy.
Be on the lookout for the new Ross Perot.
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Like Mark Cuban? He too is a Dallas billionaire. Who has made rumors of running.
Fortune favors the bold! :)
There is a single exception to the two-term incumbent party lock: President Jimmy Carter.
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Without a doubt the worst President in American history until 2008.
It will take people more than 4 years to wash the stain of Hillary Clinton off the Democratic Party.
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...the stain of Hillary Clinton... Man, you do have a way with words. I like it!
Something else interesting about H.W.
No other president in the History of POTUS ever had a 92% approval rating like he did. The highest of any president.
Granted this 92% was immediately after Bush I won the Gulf War. And it was brief and didnt last - but still.
Lots of people blame the Read my Lips... comment. They are wrong. The blame goes to Ross Perot.
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Another factor played into that election. I remember it as a turning point for the media. They took off the gloves and went full on for Bil Clinton. Before that they pretended to be actual journalists. Today, there is no doubt in anyones mind that the media is owned by the DNC.
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