Posted on 08/17/2015 8:08:10 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
National polls taken in August in the year before a presidential election do not reveal a great deal about whom the parties are going to nominate at their conventions the following summer. Still, you know this national poll of self-identified Republicans is not what Republican consultants, members of Congress, donors, and governors wanted to see after the Fox News debate.
Mark Halperin
✔ @MarkHalperin NEW @FoxNews national poll. Trump & Carson big.
8:02 AM - 16 Aug 2015
From an establishment point of view this is a shockingly multifaceted disaster.
Let us count the ways:
1) Trump is unbowed, unbent, and unbroken
The Fox News debate hosts went hard at Trump and probably succeeded in making him even more toxic to a general election audience, but they didn't actually dent his support. Trump as the GOP nominee remains fantastically unlikely, but for now at least, Republicans need to keep talking about him, the media is going to keep covering him, and an independent run seems like a real possibility.
2) Ben Carson is rising, not falling
Before Trump-mania, the world was prepared for Ben Carson to play the role of not-gonna-be-the-nominee-but-polling-well-early. That meant Trump largely seemed at first to be overshadowing Carson. But Carson's poll numbers are now strong and rising. With Trump in first and Carson in second, all the actual politicians are lagging way behind.
3) Ted Cruz is beating the rest of the real politicians
Unlike the guys in first and second place, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz is a real politician. And while it would be unusual for a first-term senator to win a presidential election, it did happen as recently as 2008, so it's not the craziest idea in the world. What would be crazy, however, would be for a party to nominate a first-term senator who's despised by the party's congressional leadership and whose record in office consists largely of counterproductive tactical blunders.
4) The Trump/Carson/Cruz/Huckabee vote is bigger than the Bush/Walker/Rubio/Kasich/Christie vote
Back on August 5, I was dismissive of Trump's lead in the polls on the grounds that when the more mainstream candidates' support was consolidated it still overwhelmed Trump. That's no longer really the case.
The combined 26 percent behind Bush/Walker/Rubio/Kasich/Christie is basically neck-and-neck with Trump. A majority of Republican voters currently say they like Trump, Carson, Cruz, or Huckabee none of whom are acceptable to the party elites.
Simply consolidating everyone behind one of the candidates who is acceptable to elites isn't going to get the job done. Party leaders need to find a way to actually pry support away from one of the candidates who's unacceptable to them. So far, they have no idea how to do that.
5) The good performances didn't help
Watching the debate, I thought Ohio Gov. John Kasich and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio had the most impressive performances. So did almost every other journalist I know.
Guess who doesn't get a vote in the GOP primaries? Most of the journalists I know. And yet "can sound good to moderate-to-liberal journalists without conceding much on policy substance" is a skill that would be useful in an actual nominee. But Republican voters don't much seem to care about it.
6) The most likely nominees are underperforming
It still seems very likely that either Jeb Bush or Scott Walker will be appearing on the ballot in November 2016. The August slide in their poll numbers reminds us, however, that so far Bush has looked rusty and Walker has looked dull. These guys are having trouble getting Republican rank-and-file to care about them. And while there's little chance that will result in Trump or Carson becoming the nominee, it does mean that to ultimately win Jeb or Walker may have to fire up crowds with increasingly extreme positions.
Walker's debate contention undisputed by Bush that to be authentically pro-life requires making abortions illegal even when necessary to prevent a pregnant woman from dying is a hint of the kind of stance a long primary can draw out.
7) Mike Huckabee ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
For years now, people have been talking about Republicans' "strong bench" compared with the weak set of Democratic Party alternatives to Hillary Clinton. That bench is the legacy of the bumper crop of governors elected in the GOP's sweeping 2010 midterm victory, almost all of them reelected in 2014.
And yet, guess who is beating every single member of that farm team? A former governor who left office in 2007, ran for president in 2008, and whose views are anathema to the party's donor base.
There are a handful of “Christian conservatives” who are Huckabee-ites no matter what. It baffles me. He has yet to catch on in two election cycles. His book did ok, not great. His debate performances are ok, not great. A true mystery.
The GOPe spit in the faces of conservatives after the 2014 midterms. They have used us and played us far too long.
They will lose if they give us another GOPe candidate.
>> Hilarious.
Yeah, no kidding.
“Trump as the GOP nominee remains fantastically unlikely”
Throwing in bias in the form of adjectives unsupported by the raw data — i.e. “fantastically” unlikely — is an only slightly more subtle form of yellow journalism than outright name-calling.
I’m loving this “king-maker” meltdown that our press and pundits are experiencing waaaaay too much.
Yeah, I think “toxic to the general election” must be the new talking point.
I think the reverse is true. Trump is going to pull blacks, hispanics and women from the democrat base in greater numbers than any republican in the past.
His “Jobs” theme resonates with blacks and hispanics. He’s reached out repeatedly to women. He is a very smart campaigner.
Well, the battle is on. The GOPee are likely working on Cochraning as many of their enemies as pissible.
Pretty much just summed it up for us, Matthew. You, and the other journalists you know, are just as clueless as the GOP elite.
LOL. Those "tactical blunders" are a big part of the reason that Ted Cruz is ahead of all the other politicians in the race.
And this passes for "analysis". Give me a break.
Upon reflection, no need to fix the spelling....
” I thought Ohio Gov. John Kasich and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio had the most impressive performances”
Someone is on crack.
Mathew needs to take a 10 day vacay.
does anyone know Carson’s net worth? I’ve heard he’s extremely wealthy.
This was the funniest one, though, like Doctor Phil's diet book.
I know a doctor who doesn’t even practice anymore, he just owns a chain of surgery clinics and he’s worth nearly a billion dollars, so Carson might be in that neighborhood.
“Watching the debate, I thought Ohio Gov. John Kasich and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio had the most impressive performances. So did almost every other journalist I know.”
I think everyone is getting sick and tired of “sounds good!”
Rubio sounded wonderful, but you know he can’t wait to get into office to backstab the conservatives and do the work of the GOPe.
I cant believe Nixon won. I dont know anyone who voted for him."
--Pauline Kael
Misses the essential point that Trump deals the GOP the wild card they never dreamed they’d get: a candidate who doesn’t need their money and who doesn’t give a damn what they say or think.
A total game-changer.
And to think we keep sending these people back to Washington. It really isn't very difficult. Do, or at least make a good faith effort to do what you said you would do, and what we elected you to do. How can people who claim to be so smart, be so stupid?
BWAHAHAHAHAH!
We shall see. I am glad Trump is pulling issues out for all to discuss. This is good for the nation. It's long over due. However, Trump does not strike me as a patriotic constitutionalist. His conservative creds are nil. He blows in the wind. Right now, he correctly has a pulse on which way the wind is blowing, and it is in favor of the conservative movement, in at least it is the opposite of what Obama represents.
When the media can get their game back on track and the winds change direction, what will Trump do to remain in the spotlight, to continue his hero play? Trump is about his image and standing. I have my doubts he cares about the the future of the nation 50 or 100 years out. I think Trump wants to be the next Bill Clinton in terms of name recognition and popularity. He wants to be able to get $300K speaking fees down the road.
He might be better for the country than any liberal in contention. But I am not confident he will stick to his current conservative views once elected. Trumps claim to fame is knowing when best to fold. He has made lots of money by predicting failures and getting out early.
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.