Posted on 03/08/2016 8:31:05 AM PST by SeekAndFind
We’re 12 hours away from knowing whether the “Trump fade” hinted at by last week’s results is real or not, but if you’re looking for poll data to support the thesis in the meantime, you can’t do better than this. I can’t think of a poll taken this year, state or national, that’s looked worse for him. He’s still ahead but Cruz is now within single digits and every important trendline is steering in the wrong direction for him.
I’ve never believed that he has a hard ceiling, for the simple reason that the subtraction of candidates from the field should mean the addition of new votes from that candidate’s supporters to Trump’s totals. And yet, 40 percent looks suspiciously like a ceiling:
I remember when Trump was going to get half the Jeb/Carson/Christie vote and cruise to 45 percent. pic.twitter.com/KYaULO1rSM
— Ross Douthat (@DouthatNYT) March 8, 2016
Candidates may be dropping out (Ben Carson was only the latest) but it might also be that anti-Trump sentiment is spreading quickly enough outside Trump’s base that those new votes I mentioned are getting harder to come by.
Favorable ratings also indicate an increasingly tenuous standing within the party. In early January, Republicans clearly gave Trump more favorable than unfavorable reviews, 60 percent to 39 percent. That has narrowed to a 53-46 margin, with negative marks at their highest level in Post-ABC polling since Trump entered the race. His positive ratings also trail Cruzs 64 percent and Rubios 63 percent.
The Post-ABC poll finds that more than half of Republicans and GOP-leaning independents think Trump is dishonest, does not understand their problems, lacks the right experience, and does not have the right personality and temperament to be an effective president. By contrast, more than 6 in 10 Republicans say Cruz is honest, empathetic, and has the right temperament and experience; similar shares say Rubio has the first three qualities, while half say he has the right experience.
In a hypothetical head-to-head test of strength between Trump and Cruz, Republicans say they prefer the senator by 54 to 41 percent. Rubio is a narrower favorite in a one-on-one test against Trump, with an edge of 51 to 45 percent. The survey did not test a Trump-Kasich face-off.
Dip into the crosstabs and you’ll find that, among non-Trump and non-Cruz voters, Cruz wins … 72/17. In other words, if the field clears, virtually all of Rubio’s and Kasich’s support goes to Cruz over Trump. No wonder Cruz suddenly seems keen to finish off Rubio in Florida by starving him of conservative votes there; if these numbers are right, Cruz could beat Trump the rest of the way even if Trump has Florida in his back pocket.
Another killer data point: The #NeverTrump contingent within the GOP may be larger and more durable than thought.
He has a bare majority of his own party saying they’d be satisfied with his nomination and nearly a third say they’d be “very dissatisfied,” twice as many as say so for any of the other final three. Among the wider electorate, his favorable rating is 30/67(!) and, as noted in the excerpt, he’s collapsed on key “presidential” qualities:
To put that in perspective, even Hillary Clinton outpolls him on honesty, finishing with a 37/59 rating. Cruz is at least 15 points better than Trump in every metric; Rubio is at least 15 points better on three of the four, finishing nine points ahead of Trump on having the right experience. The only way you get down to 25 percent or so on questions like this, obviously, is if a significant part of your own party is giving you thumbs down in addition to all of the poor ratings you’re getting from voters in the other party.
And yet, as bad as all of this is for Trump, I wonder how much worse the numbers might be if Republican voters started to view him as unelectable. Right now I think they don’t. Trump’s led wire to wire in the primary, he has the financial resources to blitz Hillary in the general election in theory, he’s constantly talking about winning over centrist Democrats and expanding the party, etc. His whole image is grounded in the perception that he’s a winner. For the average low-information voter, why couldn’t the consummate winner win the election in November? WaPo’s numbers are a strong argument why not. As is this piece yesterday by Megan McArdle, who says Trump is far too poor to effectively fund a general election campaign by himself:
I direct you to his personal financial disclosure form, which said he had about $300 million in cash and marketable securities. Thats a lot of money! Stunningly, however, it is not enough money to run a major presidential campaign, which now clocks in at around $1 billion…
Of course, maybe people just arent bothering to send money because he says hes self-funding. Maybe in the general election, he could plead for funds and theyd open their wallets. Only part of his appeal is that hes so very rich that he doesnt need donations. How long does that appeal last if it turns out he doesnt have that much money in the bank and needs donors just as much as other politicians do?
He could maybe mortgage some of his interests, borrowing a billion dollars to fund a campaign. But this seems unlikely. For one thing, by the most generous non-Trump estimates of his net worth, that would mean mortgaging about a quarter of his assets for a near-certain loss. Or mortgaging less but spending down all his liquid assets.
He could accept public financing as the GOP nominee, although that won’t get him anywhere near parity with Hillary. Small Republican donors will contribute, but look back again at those numbers showing how many are dissatisfied with the thought of him as nominee. He may have less of a donor base than other Republican nominees have had. Wealthy Republican donors will also help him out, but there too he might be at a comparative disadvantage as some of them balk at supporting him. Some might even end up backing Hillary. Trump would be forced to make up the difference with Clinton with lots of earned media, at which he’s done an expert job in the primary — except that it’s conventional wisdom among Republicans that the media will be much harder on him this summer and fall when it’s Hillary Clinton, not Marco Rubio or Ted Cruz, who stands to suffer if they aren’t. I still think Trump can win but it’s not a stretch to believe he’d have a tougher time of it than Cruz, Rubio, or Kasich. The more Republican voters come to see that too, the more his lead will slip. As I say, we’ll have an inkling sometime tonight.
Exit question: If Trump had prepared diligently for the debates and had spent, say, $50 million in attack ads against Cruz and Rubio, would the race be over already?
Wasn’t it ABC that started the “Trump supports the KKK lie?”
Those could have been Hillary’s poll numbers! She is the least trustworthy.
Always trust WaPo.
So the MSNBC poll is praised for showing Trump in a positive light. This one is hated. LOL
No, it was Jake Tapper and CNN.
LOL! Looks like Cruz has peaked in RCP avg.
I believe that was CNN, when after he had renounced David Duke multiple times over the years, he didn’t do it on CNN’s State of the Union program.
I’m no fan of Trump, but the idea he is supports or ever supported the KKK is ludicrous.
This poll seems to be saying that as candidates drop out, their supporters are going to Cruz, Rubio and Kasich.
Look at the Democrats. Do you think Democrats care that Sanders is more electable than Hillary? Nope
Yet where we are, concerned Republicans worrying about the elect ability of Trump. If Cruz was unelectable, do his supporters really care?
I do agree that Cruz needs to have Rubio defeated in Florida to clear a path to one of one with Trump. I wouldn’t assume that even by doing that Cruz could win. If Trump wins both Florida and Ohio I believe this nomination is over no matter what Cruz does or doesn’t do.
My opinion is that people (except for die hard Trump supporters) are sick of the 24/7 negative news and want it to go away. So the attack ads on Trump by the establishment types has worked.
It’s also kept any negative focus off of the other candidates.
Trump is holding up rather well considering he is sustaining heavy and constant bombardment from the media and the GOP.
Suprisingly, the only group not pounding him with everything they’ve got are the democrats.
I suppose they figure why do the dirty work of destroying a serious republican threat to Hillary when the republicans will do it for them.
Rut roh, the DJT Twitter feed must be burning right now...Ouch, that thing must hurt...Donald better put some ice on that!
I am a Trump fan and I agree that it is ludicrous to claim Trump supported the KKK in any way.
The people are sick of negative news so they are being influenced to support candidates who are bombarding Trump with negative attack ads?
I don't get it.....
No surprise, the smear machine works and it is working over time on Trump.
Curious how they justify this sample size?
32D-25R-32Indy.
Guess the headline you want is more important then an intellectually honest polling sample.
Especially regarding Carson. It appears Cruz has been picking up the Carson voters.
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.