Posted on 07/23/2015 8:46:45 AM PDT by Kaslin
After a few days of vacation, I wondered whether the Donald Trump phenomenon would have burnt itself out somewhat, as it did four years ago in a summer fizzle. Instead, Trump’s polling has strengthened nearly to the same level as in the spring of 2011 among Republican primary voters. So why is Trump picking this time to threaten to leave the GOP? The Hill’s exclusive interview with the mogul this morning includes a demand for fairness from the RNC from Trump, with an explicit warning that Trump may consider a third-party run:
The RNC has not been supportive. They were always supportive when I was a contributor. I was their fair-haired boy, the business mogul told The Hill in a 40-minute interview from his Manhattan office at Trump Tower on Wednesday. The RNC has been, I think, very foolish.
Pressed on whether he would run as a third-party candidate if he fails to clinch the GOP nomination, Trump said that so many people want me to, if I dont win.
Ill have to see how Im being treated by the Republicans, Trump said. Absolutely, if theyre not fair, that would be a factor.
Two aspects of this strike me as strange. First, it seems a tad bit whiny for a multibillionaire who publicly backed Hillary Clinton for VP seven years ago to complain that the RNC may be unfair to him. Isn’t this the same man who claims to be fearless because he’s not beholden to anyone? And what precisely would “unfairness” look like, anyway? No one’s talking about locking Trump out of the debates — at least not yet.
Trump extends the umbrella to other Republicans as well, which seems to suggest that he doesn’t want to face any tough criticism, even as he’s ripping them repeatedly from the campaign trail. That looks a bit thin-skinned, again rather surprising from a man whose selling point is his toughness and bluntness.
Second, this also looks a bit premature. Trump waited a while four years ago to start pressing the third-party run button, which ended up pressuring Republicans to come kiss the ring — most notably Mitt Romney, who took a lot of flak for it in the media due to Trump’s focus on birtherism. Trump’s ascending in the polls among Republican voters now, not descending, so why choose this moment to threaten to make their path to defeating Hillary Clinton more difficult? It’s true that some frustrated GOP voters have sympathy for a party schism, but in the past those impulses have coalesced around figures like Sarah Palin, who had a lifetime of solid conservative credentials — not someone who was backing Democrats until seven years ago, pushing Canadian-style health care reform, and demurring on action regarding late-term abortions.
Finally, one has to wonder just how seriously to take this. The threat’s not entirely an empty one, but it would take more dedication than Trump has shown thus far. His second-quarter fundraising numbers came to less than $2 million, all but $93,000 of it from his own pocket. The Republican and Democratic nominees will get on the ballots in the states because the state parties already have the infrastructure to manage that process. Ross Perot had to spend a ton of money — some his, much of it from donors — to replicate that as an independent, and so far Trump hasn’t put the time or money into the organization necessary to run a campaign within the GOP, let alone outside of the two-party system.
Trump’s most likely pulling the media’s chain and giving it a juicy narrative just for the sake of its juiciness. That’s a pretty good description of the whole Trump 2016 phenomenon, just as it was of the Trump 2012 phenomenon.
Update: Speaking of chain-pulling, here’s what Trump said about this literally the day before this interview while speaking with Dana Loesch (via Matthew Newman):
I spoke with 2016 contender Donald Trump today on my Blaze television program and asked him about sharing Lindsey Graham’s cell phone number with the public, the Planned Parenthood controversy, same sex marriage, what he would do to fix the VA, and whether he intends to run third party — which he flatly denied. Said Trump:
“I will only ever run as a Republican.”
Er … yeah.
Bush I didn’t lose because of Perot, he lost it all on his own.
Whatever.
Most people voted against Clinton.
As crazy as it sounds I feel quite confident they would choose Hillary. And there lies the problem
We are already finished as a Republic.
In case you missed it, the SCOTUS succeeded in eviscerating the First and Tenth Amendments a few weeks ago.
Heck we can’t even say we are a Democracy (shudder) when we have a Judiciary that makes Law rather than upholding the CONSTITUTION.
If Perot doesn’t run, Bush still loses.
The media needs no encouragement to attack Trump.
Like Cruz he threatens their profits.
And the fact of the matter is that Trump would be a viable 3rd party candidate if he is blatantly cheated of the nomination.
But a national joke if he ran after losing even a barely fair primary.
Most people who voted for Perot, would not have voted for Clinton.
Gee, after reading that Hit Piece, I think Hot Air is really full of Hot Air.
Probably a good number wouldn’t have even voted, Clinton still wins.
Bush lost because scum of the Earth, and Independent Council, Lawrence Walsh decided to indict Cap Weinberger and a few others for Iran-Contra the week before the election, to ensure Bush lost.
Bush was surging and looked likely to squeak back in before that happened. And it was timed perfectly so Bush couldn’t respond.
>>>Most people who voted for Perot, would not have voted for Clinton<<<
A lot of those same Voters would have never Voted for Bush either.
We had Perot and the Left had Nader. Same old, same old.
I don't believe that extroversion and humor are the secret to his multi-billion dollar empire. I think there's an extremely hard-nosed, smart negotiator in there, and when he shows that face that even us semi-supporters will do a double take.
Probably not.
You seriously think conservatives will split the votes between love the illegals Jeb and fearless Trump?
This has always been his plan. Be a Perot style spoiler for his pal Hillary
Mullah Pundit at Hot Air is rabidly anti-Trump. Every article he writes is anti_trump, no other subject!
But the feedback he gets on Hot Air is 90:10 for Trump.
Do you first seriously think conservatives are going to select Jeb in the primary?
If it’s against JebBer or another super RINO...it’s an option that should be seriously considered. In a 3 way race, hoof-in-mouth Hillary is not a shoe-in, not even close.
The Bushes still have a lot of conservatives fooled.
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.