Posted on 04/09/2016 5:15:51 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
Reuters headlines its story about this poll, “Exclusive: Blocking Trump could hurt Republicans in election.” Which is accurate, although it’s just as accurate that nominating Trump could hurt Republicans by alienating #NeverTrumpers (as well as many, many, many swing voters). All of that is old news, though. Republicans have understood for months that some small but important chunk of the party is walking away after the convention no matter who the nominee is.
The real takeaway here is just how many Trumpers say they’re willing to stick with the party this fall even if Trump gets shafted in Cleveland. I never would have guessed it’s as high as 66 percent. In fact, I would have guessed at this point that half or more of Trump’s fans would boycott the general election even if Cruz beat him fair and square in the remaining primaries to get to 1,237 delegates before the convention. It’s Trump or bust for his famously loyal fans, and if the bust involves, ahem, “theft” at the convention, then it’s war — supposedly. If you believe Reuters, that’s all wrong. The most devoted third of Trump’s supporters will walk but the others are ready, however grudgingly, to line up for Cruz and beat Hillary.
That’s not a poll of Republicans generally, it’s a poll of Republicans who support Trump. And still, 66 percent are prepared to vote for a non-Trump nominee. Granted, that number doesn’t include pro-Trump independents, who’ve been showing up for him in open primaries all spring. Many of those voters will be goners in November, as any Trump fan will eagerly tell you. The question, though, in weighing Cruz’s electability against Trump’s isn’t limited to how many new voters Trump’s unorthodox coalition might bring to the party. It’s also a question of how many current Republican voters would be alienated by either of them. Cruz will turn out Republican Party regulars, which means he’ll likely start with most of Romney’s 2012 base intact. Trump will, in theory, turn out plenty of GOP irregulars, but the thing about irregulars is that they’re unpredictable. You don’t know how many you can count on, and in the meantime many regulars whom you normally do count on will head for the hills. Adding five million votes from people who didn’t back Romney in 2012 doesn’t help if it costs you seven million votes from people who did. (Unless the first group is based mostly in swing states while the second second group is based mostly in safe states, which is statistically unlikely.) Jonathan Last runs through some math:
But the Trump-wins-by-turning-out-white-Republicans theory breaks down fatally when you look at where Trump is with every other group. In order to claw his way into the poor position he’s in with white voters, Trump has cheesed off every other demographic group: He’s minus-53 with self-described moderates; minus-62 with voters age 18 to 34; minus-71 with Hispanics.
In order to beat Hillary Clinton, Trump has to outdo the Romney 2012 numbers. But even if he does better among white votersand right now it looks like he’ll do worseit does no good if he can’t stay at Romney’s level among other groups. And Trump is poised to do much worse than Romney with just about everyone else.
He’s already viewed unfavorably in national polls among non-college-educated whites and white men, who are supposed to favor Trump so heavily that they’ll turn out in record numbers to help him overcome his deficit with various other groups. And Last makes another good point: Although Trump’s numbers did improve dramatically among Republicans soon after he entered the race last summer, they haven’t improved much since then. He hit 30 percent in a national poll for the first time at the end of last August, less than three months after he announced his candidacy. Seven months later, he’s only managed to add 10 points or so to that number in most primaries while watching his numbers sink among the rest of the electorate. “That shows you how hard it is,” writes Last, “for a candidate to convert marginal voters who aren’t naturally part of their coalition.” How does Trump get from the mid-30s among Republicans, where he’s been spinning his wheels for months, to the low 50s with the general electorate in the span of about four months when everyone already knows who he is and has a strong opinion — typically very unfavorable — about him?
That’s not the only fantasy math happening in Trumpworld either. Data journalists tracking the delegate fight are laughing at this quote:
Our target date is June 7, but our goal is in the middle of May to be the presumptive nominee, Paul Manafort, Trumps newly installed convention manager who has been given broad authority to shape the campaign going forward, said in a wide-ranging interview here…
After Wyoming, [Cruz] is done, Manafort said. Were going to have our act together. Were going to start putting numbers on the board and that will become infectious.
There’s just no way Trump will be in a position to clinch by mid-May, says Nate Silver, even if he sweeps everything between now and then. Breitbart, the most prominent pro-Trump site on the Internet, guesstimated a few days ago that he’ll still be 50-100 delegates short even after the final primary in California in June 7th. Thanks to the rout engineered by Team Cruz for Colorado’s delegates at the state convention, Trump now needs to win 60 percent of the delegates the rest of the way to clinch before the convention at a moment when the non-Trump vote in the primaries is consolidating behind Cruz. What Manafort’s doing with this comment, I assume, is signaling that he’s going to try to not only woo the unbound delegates that are still out there but to peel away many that have already committed to Cruz, which would bump up Trump’s total behind the scenes. That’s mighty ambitious, though, given just how much disorganization among state volunteers and campaign staff he’s going to need to sort out. (Yikes.) He’s been brought in, basically, to conduct an orchestra, except that half the orchestra’s missing and the other half doesn’t know how to play their instruments. What’s that going to sound like?
In lieu of an exit question, here’s your thought for the day. As the man himself would say: Sad!
Isn't it a shame that the person who will have by far the most delegates and many millions more votes than anyone else, me, still must fight
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) April 9, 2016
Trumps new convention manager speaks out
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IivP2Q12nnQ
Paul Manafort, Donald Trumps new convention manager, says he reports directly to Donald Trump and is confident that Trump will have clinched the GOPs nomination before the convention.
“Ted Cruz has seen his better days.”
66 % seems like a bogus number...
The GOPe just makes up polls to support their positions.
Hot Air is one of the paid shills.
Says the new consigliere.
“The real takeaway here is just how many Trumpers say theyre willing to stick with the party this fall even if Trump gets shafted in Cleveland. I never would have guessed its as high as 66 percent.”
It’s not. This poll is bogus nonsense.
Cruz is now fully exposed as an Establishment Insider. He is not the SOLUTION, he is the PROBLEM Trump is trying to solve!— Bill Mitchell (@mitchellvii) April 9, 2016
If Trump gets shafted at the convention, look for Kamikaze Voters taking out Republicans everywhere.
“66 % seems like a bogus number...”
It is a bogus number. I’m a Trump supporter and have not met the first Trump supporter, in person or online that would vote for Ted Cruz or John Kasich. Actually, it would be a cold day on hell in hell before I voted for a lying Canadian, who’s absolutely not a natural born citizen, therefore ineligible for the office, or vote for a closet democrat in Kasich. If the nomination is stolen from Trump and he still has won more delegates going into the convention and millions of more votes, which will certainly be the case, I’ll write in Trump’s name and call it a day. Then I can watch the returns come in and see Hillary Clinton beat Cruz like a cheap rug.
If Trump is blocked via GOP crap maneuvers then he should run not third party, but TEA PARTY. It’s been a long time coming.
The author would have a better chance of juggling flaming chainsaws while unicycling, than getting me to believe these numbers.
No Trump, no vote!
“..however grudgingly, to line up for Cruz and beat Hillary.”
If Cruz had 100% of the GOP, and he will not get close. Hillary would beat him like the rented mule he is.
Vote Cruz. Hillary thanks you.
So essentially what this is saying is that Trump supporters are more loyal and have better character than do Cruz supporters.
Already knew that.
THIS Trump woman supporter will not vote for anyone but TRUMP!!!
It is bogus
It’s about 53%
Trumps delegate history is within a few points of just maintains course and knots
And he’s sailing into favorable waters
Cruz wil be knocked out soon as he loses 19 delegates out of the remaining 890
So why will he be there?
To steal it from Trump through shenanigans or be used by the GOPe for some price only he knows
Ditto Kasich
It’s like JR said
In a normal year whoever is last possible standing to have the possibility to 1237 is the winner even before the convention
If Trump gets 1100 or so and Cruz 700 and Cruz or the GOPe think they can then take it from the plurality whilst all these guys hang in for their own ends
Then think again
I see a pure revolt not a go along despite all the rah rah we’ll hear from Rush and Sean
Not this time
How so, if you look at the poll it is very bad for the republicans should they decide to go Cruz alone.
In 2012 the Dems got 65.9 million, the republicans got 61 million.
Right now Trump Is getting 31~32 percent of the traditional republican votes, plus just under 10 percent (~8 to 9) of the regular republican votes added in non traditional republicans votes.
Assuming that there are no republicans fallouts you get a pool of around 66 to 67 million volts, just what they need to win.
If you lose ~15 percent of Trumps 32 percent regular voters (.32 x 61 million x.15 = 2.9 million votes lost) plus 85 percent of the non traditional voters he brought in (.85 x6 million = 5.1 million) you get a republican total of 58 to 59 millon voters.
Where is the republican party going to get these votes....they are not.
But If trump wins, he will loos a lot of die-hard Cruz voters. So Trump needs Cruz.
only possible victory at this point is Trump Cruz 2016
Hot Air is one of the paid shills.
TRUE.. but it should be emphasized.
The GOPe just makes up polls to support their positions.
Hot Air is one of the paid shills.
Amen. NOT going to happen.
Oh, please. This psyops crap is really getting old. Now we’re going to be seeing all kinds of polls for umpteen weeks, all trying to create a group-think meme so Trump people will fall on the sword ONCE AGAIN and vote GOPe.
Ain’t. Gonna. Happen. The GOP Establishment just haven’t accepted it yet. And they probably won’t until they see the blood in the streets of Cleveland. And if not then, maybe when GOP politicians up for reelection see their voting base stay home in November.
Are we having fun yet?
I swear, we need a list of these shills. It’s a waste of my time to even click.
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