Thursday, July 02, 2020

Trump's World Is Crumbling In Real Time

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Trump has taken to shrieking about a great silent majority backing him but he is utterly and hopelessly out of step with Americans-- and doesn't know it. Yep, he's the crazy old man sitting on his lawn chair on the front porch with a shotgun yelling at the kids getting out of school to not dare walk on his patchy half-dead old lawn strewn with weeks worth of dog shit.

You can tell by the mustard on her shirt that Karen is a big MAGA supporter


Yesterday, just as the new Gallup poll was showing how Americans, for the first time, want more not fewer immigrants (34-28%)-- and how 77% (versus 19%) say that immigration is good for the country-- Trump was sitting in his bedroom eating junk food and tweeting away his delusional racist screeds:



Meanwhile, a team of Wall Street Journal reporters wrote that "Biden has picked up support among young people as marches against racism and police violence prompt new activism, even though many protesters said they aren’t enthusiastic about the presumptive Democratic nominee’s campaign. A series of recent polls found the former vice president has expanded his lead over President Trump with younger voters, gaining among a demographic Mr. Biden lost to Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders in the Democratic primary race." Old conservative mainline Republicans abandoning Trump seem more enthusiastic about Biden that Bernie fans resigned to voting for him as the lesser evil. Even a poll I ran on twitter yesterday-- and imagine who follows me on twitter-- showed less than 20% unwilling to vote for Biden.



Reporting for the NY Times, Claire Cain Miller, Kevin Quealy and Nate Cohn took an interesting look at random Trump supporters who have decided they can't vote for him again this year. "For some," wrote the trio of reporters, "the disenchantment started almost as soon as Donald J. Trump took office. For others, his handling of the coronavirus and social unrest turned them away. For all of them, it’s highly unlikely they will vote for him again. These voters, who backed Mr. Trump in 2016 but say there’s 'not really any chance' they will this year, represent just 2 percent of all registered voters in the six states most likely to decide the presidency, according to New York Times/Siena College polls. But they help explain why the president faces a significant deficit nationwide and in the battleground states. 'I think if he weren’t such an appalling human being, he would make a great president, because I think what this country needs is somebody who isn’t a politician,' said Judith Goines, 53, a finance executive at a home building company in Fayetteville, N.C. 'But obviously with the coronavirus and the social unrest we’re dealing with, that’s where you need a politician, somebody with a little bit more couth. I’m ashamed to say that I’ve voted for him,' said Ms. Goines, who described herself as a staunch Republican."
Trump defectors play an outsize role in the president’s challenge. He won by a narrow margin in 2016, and he has made limited efforts to broaden his appeal. Even a modest erosion in his support imperils his re-election chances. Another 6 percent of Trump voters in these states say they no longer support Mr. Trump, while allowing “some chance” that they’ll vote for him again.

A majority of the defectors disapprove of his performance on every major issue, except the economy, according to the Times/Siena polls. Somewhat surprisingly, they are demographically similar to the voters who continue to support him. They are only marginally likelier to be women or white college graduates.



In interviews, many said they initially backed Mr. Trump because he was a businessman, not a politician. In particular, he was not Hillary Clinton. But they have soured on his handling of the presidency. Several mentioned his divisive style and his firing of officials who disagreed with him, and especially his response to the coronavirus and to the unrest in the aftermath of the death of George Floyd in police custody.

Not all of them are ready to back Joe Biden, but they no longer entertain the possibility of backing the president.

Over all, 78 percent of respondents in battleground states who said they wouldn’t vote for Mr. Trump again disapproved of his handling of the pandemic.

John Crilly, 55, a retired commercial diver in Reeders, Pa., said he voted for Mr. Trump “because the other option was Hillary Clinton.”

“What changed my mind? 120,000 deaths,” he said. “He refused to realize, ‘Oh my god, there’s a virus coming our way; shouldn’t we do something, guys?’ Covid was the turning point. It’s the thing that touches home with everybody.”

He plans to vote for a local write-in candidate instead of Mr. Biden, who he worries is too old.

Coronavirus also changed the mind of Ariel Oakley, 29, who works in human resources in Grand Rapids, Mich. “With coronavirus, even just watching the press conferences, having him come out and say it’s all fake,” she said. “I have family who have unfortunately passed away from it.”

It made her wonder how often he hadn’t told the truth before, she said. She plans to vote for Mr. Biden.

The president also lost voters because of his handling of the growing movement against police brutality and entrenched racism. More than 80 percent of those who won’t vote for him again say that Mr. Biden would do a better job on race relations or unifying America. Of the Trump voters who have not ruled out voting for him again, only around 10 percent said they trusted Mr. Biden to do a better job on race relations.

Kelvin Pittman II, 34, who is self-employed doing car detailing in Jacksonville, Fla., said he voted for Mr. Trump because “he was a great businessman.” As a Black man, he said he aligns with Democrats on many issues, but as a businessman, he favors certain Republican policies.

Then came the killing of Mr. Floyd. Mr. Pittman felt the president didn’t take it seriously: “It was kind of the last straw. It was like, this dude is just in it for himself. I thought he was supposed to be for the people.”

Cathleen Graham, 53, a nurse who lives in a mostly white suburb of Grand Rapids, Mich., has had very different life experiences, but came to the same conclusion. She said she had been shocked to learn how much racism still existed.

“I understand the movement and why it’s going on a lot better than I did than when the gentleman was kneeling at the football game,” she said, referring to Colin Kaepernick. “Even speaking up to support it, I’ve lost friends, friends that were crude, and I was like, ‘How can you even think that of another race?’”

Mr. Trump fits in that category, she said. She plans to vote for Mr. Biden.





Some former Trump voters said it was his personality more than any specific policy that turned them off. They observed his behavior as a candidate, but expected him to act with more decorum in office.

Robert Kaplan, 57, a supervisor at a water utility in Racine, Wis., voted for the president because he wanted to abolish Obamacare, and he didn’t trust Mrs. Clinton. But he was disappointed from the start.

“He’s an embarrassment,” he said. “He’s like a little kid with a temper tantrum when he doesn’t get things to go his way. He’s very punitive-- if you disagree, he fires you. He disrespects very good people in Washington trying to do some good. And I think it’s very disrespectful of the office to be tweeting all the time.”

More than 80 percent of the voters who won’t back Mr. Trump again agreed with the statement that he doesn’t behave the way a president ought to act. Their view is shared by 75 percent of registered voters across the battleground states.

“He said he was going to, quote unquote, drain the swamp, and all he’s done is splashed around and rolled around in it,” Mr. Kaplan said.

Mr. Biden wasn’t his first pick, but he believes he has a chance to “bring the people back together.” His choice of vice president is important, he said-- he hopes it’s someone younger, who can close the divide between the two parties.

John Chavez, 45, a manager at a car dealership in Queen Creek, Ariz., voted for both George W. Bush and Barack Obama. His 2016 vote was not so much for Mr. Trump, he said, as against Mrs. Clinton-- he was “spooked” by things he’d heard about her potential involvement in scandals.

“I thought, obviously he’s going to step it up and he’s going to have to change, he’s going to have to become more presidential,” he said. “But little did I know, he’s not. He got worse.”

There was one moment, he said, when “he lost me forever”: when Mr. Trump did not wear a mask during his recent rally in Tulsa, Okla. He said that the president should not have made masks into a political symbol, and that if the public should wear masks, so should he.

Mr. Chavez will vote for Mr. Biden, mostly as a vote against Mr. Trump.

Though many voters similarly described Mr. Biden as the least objectionable choice, some were more enthusiastic.

Craig Smith, 64, a veteran in Big Rapids, Mich., said he planned to vote for Mr. Biden because “he’s got integrity, he tells the truth, he’s got compassion and empathy.”

“Donald Trump represents the past,” he said, “and I believe that the Democrats and Joe Biden and the young people of the world are looking at the future.

“I will never vote for another Republican in my life because of Donald Trump,” Mr. Smith added. “What changed? Well, three years.”



And it isn't just ordinary GOP voters who are starting to turn on Señor T. Elite Republicans were never all that thrilled, but look at this Reuters headline from yesterday: Hundreds of George W. Bush administration officials to back Biden. That shouldn't shock anyone. Biden has always been more like a mainstream conservative than Trump has been. He's the candidate of the status quo (rather than the candidate of extreme populist reactionary proto-fascism). Yesterday these Bush administration alumni launched a SuperPAC for Biden, not just against Trump. They haven't named their members yet but Reuters reported that the list includes "Cabinet secretaries and other senior people in the Bush administration."
The group is the latest of a number of Republican organizations opposing Trump’s re-election, yet another sign that he has alienated some in his own party, most recently with his response to the coronavirus pandemic and nationwide protests over racial injustice and police brutality against Black Americans.

“We know what is normal and what is abnormal, and what we are seeing is highly abnormal. The president is a danger,” said Jennifer Millikin, one of the 43 Alumni organizers, who worked on Bush’s 2004 re-election campaign and later in the General Services Administration.

The other two members who spoke to Reuters are Karen Kirksey and Kristopher Purcell. Purcell worked as a communication official in the Bush White House. Kirksey was on the Bush 2000 campaign, and later in the Agriculture and Labor Departments.

Millikin said the group was not yet ready to name all its members or its donors. It has to provide a list of initial donors to the Federal Election Commission by October.

...Despite policy differences with Biden, “hundreds” of former Bush officials believe the Democrat has the integrity to meet America’s challenges, the 43 Alumni members said.

“This November, we are choosing country over party,” said Purcell. “We believe that a Biden administration will adhere to the rule of law... and restore dignity and integrity to the White House.”

“We really have had overwhelming support for our efforts,” Kirksey said.
A friend of mine, on drugs and frustrated with isolation, jumped 27 27 stories from his apartment to his death last week. Yesterday, William Wan and Heather Long, reporting for the Washington Post, wrote that "Nationwide, federal and local officials are reporting alarming spikes in drug overdoses-- a hidden epidemic within the coronavirus pandemic. Emerging evidence suggests that the continued isolation, economic devastation and disruptions to the drug trade in recent months are fueling the surge." While Trump revs up for another destructive and divisive culture war few in America want, a new poll from Morning Consult shows a stunning 75% of Americans feel the country is on the wrong track and that 59% of voters disapprove of the job Trump is doing as president.






At the same time, CNBC reported that a poll they commissioned from Change Research shows that "Voters in six key 2020 election states have little good to say about how President Donald Trump is handling the coronavirus as the pandemic tears through the country, according to a new CNBC/Change Research poll. As cases spike in pockets of the South and West after states reopened their economies, likely voters in Arizona, Florida, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin believe Trump shoulders much of the blame, the survey released Wednesday found. When asked to select two people or groups most responsible for the recent increase in hospitalizations, 35% said the president-- the largest share among the answers. Trump was followed by “people not wearing masks” at 34%, “states reopening their economies too soon” at 32% and “people not social distancing” at 29%.




The respondents also say that Trump is pushing the states to reopen too quickly, faster than public health experts say is safe for the country:




The state by state breakdown among swing states is terrible for any hopes that Trump still has some kind of a pathway-- even remotely-- to reelection. He's going to wind up with a much of Confederate states-- though by no means all of them-- plus West Virginia, Wyoming and the Dakotas.
Arizona: Biden 51%, Trump 44% (11,553 COVID cases per million)
Florida: Biden 50%, Trump 45% (7,403 COVID cases per million)
Michigan: Biden 48%, Trump 43% (7,118 COVID cases per million)
North Carolina: Biden 51%, Trump 44% (6,355 COVID cases per million)
Pennsylvania: Biden 50%, Trump 44% (7,176 COVID cases per million)
Wisconsin: Biden 51%, Trump 43% (5,015 COVID cases per million)





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2 Comments:

At 5:30 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Trump's world is crumbling? How come it's OUR world which is showing the damage?

 
At 11:35 AM, Blogger Knockout Zed said...

I agree with you wholeheartedly.

 

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