https://www.politico.com/news/2020/06/15/trump-glide-reelection-republican-officials-316457
We’re thinking landslide’: Beyond D.C., GOP officials see Trump on glide path to reelection
Conventional indicators suggest the president’s bid for a second term is in jeopardy. But state and local GOP officials see a different election unfolding.
By most conventional indicators, Donald Trump is in danger of becoming a one-term president. The economy is a wreck, the coronavirus persists, and his poll numbers have deteriorated.
But throughout the Republican Party’s vast organization in the states, the operational approach to Trump’s re-election campaign is hardening around a fundamentally different view.
Interviews with more than 50 state, district and county Republican Party chairs depict a version of the electoral landscape that is no worse for Trump than six months ago — and possibly even slightly better. According to this view, the coronavirus is on its way out and the economy is coming back. Polls are unreliable, Joe Biden is too frail to last, and the media still doesn’t get it.
“The more bad things happen in the country, it just solidifies support for Trump,” said Phillip Stephens, GOP chairman in Robeson County, N.C., one of several rural counties in that swing state that shifted from supporting Barack Obama in 2012 to Trump in 2016. “We’re calling him ‘Teflon Trump.’ Nothing’s going to stick, because if anything, it’s getting more exciting than it was in 2016.”
This year, Stephens said, “We’re thinking landslide.”
Five months before the election, many state and county Republican Party chairs predict a close election. Yet from the Eastern seaboard to the West Coast and the battlegrounds in between, there is an overriding belief that, just as Trump defied political gravity four years ago, there’s no reason he won’t do it again.
Andrew Hitt, the state party chairman in Wisconsin, said that during the height of public attention on the coronavirus, in late March and early April, internal polling suggested “some sagging off where we wanted to be.”
But now, he said, “Things are coming right back where we want them … That focus on the economy and on re-opening and bringing America back is resonating with people.”
In Ohio, Jane Timken, the state party chair, said she sees no evidence of support for Trump slipping. Jennifer Carnahan, the chairwoman of the Minnesota Republican Party, said the same. And Lawrence Tabas, the chairman of the Pennsylvania Republican Party, went so far as to predict that Trump would not only carry his state, but beat Biden by more than 100,000 votes — more than twice the margin he mustered in 2016.
“Contrary to what may be portrayed in the media, there’s still a high level of support out there,” said Kyle Hupfer, chairman of the Indiana Republican Party. He described himself as “way more” optimistic than he was at this point in 2016.
The Republican Party apparatus that Trump heads in 2020 is considerably different than the one that looked at him warily in 2016. At the state level, many chairs who were considered insufficiently committed to the president were ousted and replaced with loyalists. But their assessments would be easier to dismiss as spin if the perception of Trump’s durability did not reach so far beyond GOP officialdom.
When pollsters ask Americans who they think will win the election — not who they are voting for themselves — Trump performs relatively well. And if anything, Trump’s field officers appear more bullish than Trump and some of his advisers. Even the president, while lamenting what he views as unfair treatment by his adversaries, has privately expressed concerns about his poll numbers and publicly seemed to acknowledge he is down.
“If I wasn’t constantly harassed for three years by fake and illegal investigations, Russia, Russia, Russia, and the Impeachment Hoax, I’d be up by 25 points on Sleepy Joe and the Do Nothing Democrats,” he said on Twitter last week. “Very unfair, but it is what it is!!!”
Yet in the states, the Republican Party's rank-and-file are largely unconvinced that the president is precariously positioned in his reelection bid.
“The narrative from the Beltway is not accurate,” said Joe Bush, chairman of the Republican Party in Muskegon County, Mich., which Trump lost narrowly in 2016. “Here in the heartland, everybody is still very confident, more than ever.”
At the center of the disconnect between Trump loyalists’ assessment of the state of the race and the one based on public opinion polls is a distrust of polling itself. Republicans see an industry that maliciously oversamples Democrats or under-samples the white, non-college educated voters who are most likely to support Trump. They say it is hard to know who likely voters are this far from the election. And like many Democrats, they suspect Trump supporters disproportionately hang up on pollsters, under-counting his level of support.
Ted Lovdahl, chairman of the Republican Party in Minnesota’s 8th Congressional District, said he has friends who will tell pollsters “just exactly the opposite of what they feel.”
When he asked one of them why, his friend told him, “I don’t like some of their questions. It’s none of their business what I do.”
Recalling that polls four years ago failed to predict the outcome, Jack Brill, acting chairman of the local Republican Party in Sarasota County, Fla., said, “I used to be an avid poll watcher until 2016 … Guess what? I’m not watching polls.”
Instead, as they prepare for a post-lockdown summer of party picnics and parades, Republican Party organizers sense the beginnings of an economic recovery that, if sustained, is likely to power Trump to a second term. They also see a more immediate opening in the civil unrest surrounding the death of George Floyd.
“The further and further the Democrats tack left, and the further you get to where it’s the defunding the police,” said Scott Frostman, GOP chairman in Wisconsin’s Sauk County, which Obama won easily in 2012 but flipped to Trump four years later. “I think we have the opportunity as Republicans to talk to people a little bit more about some common sense things.”
Biden has rejected a national movement to defund police departments. But elections are often painted in broad strokes, and local party officials expect Trump — with his law and order rhetoric — will be the beneficiary of what they see as Democratic overreach.
“The other side is overplaying its hand, going down roads like defunding the police and nonsense like that,” said Michael Burke, chairman of the Republican Party in Pinal County, Arizona, a Trump stronghold in 2016.” “Most of the American people are looking like that saying, ‘Really?’”
By most objective measures, Trump will need something to drag Biden down. He has fallen behind Biden in most swing state polls, and he lags the former vice president nationally by more than 8 percentage points, according to the RealClearPolitics polling average. A Gallup poll last week put Trump’s approval rating at just 39 percent, down 10 percentage points from a month ago. Democrats appear competitive not only in expected swing states, but in places such as Iowa and Ohio, which Trump won easily in 2016.
Little of that data is registering, however. State and local officials point to Trump’s financial and organizational advantages and see Biden as a weak opponent. They’re eager for Trump to eviscerate him in debates. “While the Democrats have been spending their time playing Paper Rock Scissors on who their nominee is going to be, we’ve been building an army,” said Terry Lathan, chair of the Alabama Republican Party.
James Dickey, chairman of the Texas Republican Party, said it took Biden “days to figure out how to even successfully operate, or communicate out of a bunker” and that he “has clearly not been able to deal with any real challenging interview.”
Local officials brush off criticism of Trump by Republican fixtures such as former Secretary of State Colin Powell, who said last week that Trump “lies all the time.” They dismiss press accounts of the race. Dennis Coxwell, the chairman of Georgia’s Warren County Republican Party, said: “It’s gotten to a point where I cannot believe anything that the news media says.”
Many admire Trump’s bluntest instincts — the same ones that have cost him among women and independent voters, according to polls. “The left called George Bush all kinds of names and just savaged him all the time … and Bush never said a word,” said Burke, who worked for Trump in the late 1980s and early 1990s overseeing his fleet of helicopters. “It was frustrating for those of us on the right. Now a guy comes along, you attack him, you’re getting it back double barrel. And everybody’s sitting around saying, ‘Yeah, that’s right, give it to ‘em.’”
And most of all, they put their confidence in an expectation that the economy will improve by fall.
Doyle Webb, chairman of the Arkansas Republican Party and general counsel to the Republican National Committee, said the only concern that he would have about Trump’s reelection prospects is “if the economy had another downturn.”
“But I don’t see that happening,” Webb said.
Instead, he predicted an improving job outlook and a return to “the old Clinton mantra: ‘It’s the economy, stupid.’”
“I think that people will be happy,” Webb said, “and [Trump] will be re-elected.”
It’s a widely-held view. In Pennsylvania last week, Veral Salmon, the Republican Party chairman of the state’s bellwether Erie County, measured enthusiasm for Trump by the large number of requests he has received for Trump yard signs. In Maine, Melvin Williams, chairman of the Lincoln County Republican Committee, saw it in a population he said is “getting sick of this bullshit,” blaming coronavirus-related shutdowns on Democrats. And across the country, in heavily Democratic San Francisco, John Dennis, the chairman of the local GOP, was encouraged by the decreasing number of emails from the “Never Trump” crowd.
Not in his city, but nationally, Dennis said, “I’m pretty confident that [Trump] is going to pull it off.”
USA - США - SAD
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Quelques jours avant les commémorations de l’appel du #18juin, à l’heure où nous devons nous souvenir que le Général #DeGaulle a fait vivre la flamme de la résistance, la vandalisation de cette statue à Hautmont est scandaleuse. Cela appelle des sanctions fortes ! pic.twitter.com/jdtaMNU48b
— Xavier Bertrand (@xavierbertrand) June 15, 2020
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Sotir wrote:
А овде нема ништа од тога. Сви криминалци, осим ступидне приче за развој главних ликова, су само неки ликови које треба упуцати као НПЦ у играма.
Тако да мислим да није случајна ова полицијска бруталност. То је један наратив који се негује већ деценијама, да се свако може упуцати ако и мало крши закон.
Није само то. У колико филмова се све врти око 1 убиства, и испадне да је убиство узгредна штета од нечег већег, па крену да освајају тврђаву главног злоће који је иза свега, и притом рокају његове гориле горе него Бата Валтер, и то нису убиства, нема истраге, то се не броји нигде.
Тј развија се на обе стране та прича да није проблем гинути ако се нађеш тамо где треба у улози
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И кажем себи у сну, еј бре коњу па ти ни немаш озвучење, имаш оне две кутијице око монитора, видећеш кад се пробудиш...
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imali smo sreće da je šuntavi Bajden ispao kandidat za POTUS-a. njemu će teško prikačiti neku vezu sa anarho-sindikalistima-socijalistima ili koji god go qrac da u je pitanju u Sijetlu. znatno lakše bi republikancima to bilo sa Sandersom ili Vorenkom.Bendegúz Somogyi wrote:https://www.politico.com/news/2020/06/15/trump-glide-reelection-republican-officials-316457
We’re thinking landslide’: Beyond D.C., GOP officials see Trump on glide path to reelection
Last edited by Gargamel on Mon Jun 15, 2020 5:48 pm; edited 1 time in total
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mislim da ste i ti i Vasa donekle u pravu.Vilmos Tehenészfiú wrote:Ama ne mislimo slično uopšte. Vasa misli da je problem anglosaksonsko puritansko iživljavanje, ja mislim da je problem što je američko obrazovanje otišlo u kurac...
dosta toga ovde deluje kao ritualno iskupljivanje za prvobitni greh (guženje domorodaca + robovlasništvo). a visok nivo narcisoidnosti je dobrim delom posledica obrazovnog sistema.
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Da, realno i hodajuci les mora da ima neku prednost nad trampomGargamel wrote:imali smo sreće da je šuntavi Bajden ispao kandidat za POTUS-a. njemu će teško prikačiti neku vezu sa anarho-sindikalistima-socijalistima ili koji god go qrac da u je pitanju u Sijetlu. znatno lakše bi bilo sa Sandersom ili Vorenkom.Bendegúz Somogyi wrote:https://www.politico.com/news/2020/06/15/trump-glide-reelection-republican-officials-316457
We’re thinking landslide’: Beyond D.C., GOP officials see Trump on glide path to reelection
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Bendegúz Somogyi wrote:čovek presekao revoluciju u korenu
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Jer su, za razliku od ljudi bele boje kože, svi crni i braon ljudi istog porekla....
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https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/06/15/magazine/jon-stewart-interview.html
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This is too fucking good! @FoxNews anchor inadvertently reads Monty Python dialogue from "The Holy Grail" thinking it was real discord between anarchists in the #CHAZ pic.twitter.com/PHmnuYO3PU
— Franklin López (@Franklin__Lopez) June 15, 2020
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Mentally ill man spent nearly 5 months in jail before body cam video revealed officers beat, tased and mocked him. A group of Garfield Heights police officers punched, kicked and repeatedly shocked a man who suffered from bipolar and schizophrenia disorders with a stun gun, according to body camera videos obtained by cleveland.com.
The videos show the officers hurl curse words at 28-year-old Kenta Settles as he lay handcuffed on the ground.
Officer Michael Malak stopped Settles Jan. 23 as he walked on the sidewalk on Turney Road in the city’s main business corridor. Malak immediately detained Settles without telling him why, and, in a matter of seconds, Malak and another officer, Robert Pitts, tackled Settles to the ground and shot Taser prongs into his back as he lay in the fetal position, the videos show.
The ensuing scuffle left Malak with a broken nose and Settles with a chipped tooth, a rotator cuff injury and a slice near his eye, according to police and court records.
Settles was indicted by a grand jury seven days after his arrest on charges of felonious assault of a peace officer and obstructing official business. He was jailed on a $250,000 bond. Garfield Heights police were cleared two weeks after his indictment by an internal investigation that lay all of the blame for the altercation Settles.
He remained in jail for nearly five months, facing more than two decades in prison, as his case inched through the court system. Then the disclosure of the police officers’ body camera videos, which had been a public record for more than five months, sparked a flurry of developments in the last week.
A judge on June 8 granted Settles a personal bond and released him from the county jail. Settles on Thursday filed a lawsuit in federal court in Cleveland accusing Malak, Pitts and three other Garfield Heights officers who aided his arrest of using excessive force against him and violating his constitutional rights.
Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Michael O’Malley’s office on Friday dismissed the criminal charges against Settles, two days after the county prosecutor whose office indicted Settles in January viewed the body camera video for the first time.
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Bendegúz Somogyi wrote:This is too fucking good! @FoxNews anchor inadvertently reads Monty Python dialogue from "The Holy Grail" thinking it was real discord between anarchists in the #CHAZ pic.twitter.com/PHmnuYO3PU
— Franklin López (@Franklin__Lopez) June 15, 2020
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Stacey who has been a cop for 15 yrs went to @McDonalds She paid for it in advance and this is how she gets treated for being a cop:cry::rage: Come on America. We are better than this. pic.twitter.com/IcudsNfVLY
— :tulip::flag_us:Ann:flag_us::tulip::rabbit2: (@tkag2020_ann) June 17, 2020
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И кажем себи у сну, еј бре коњу па ти ни немаш озвучење, имаш оне две кутијице око монитора, видећеш кад се пробудиш...
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Mr.Pink wrote:sta je problem sa sijetlom? ukratko grandz
jedan moj prijatelj porodicni je radio tamo u boingu, toliko mu se svidelo da se devedesetih vratio i vozio tramvaj po bg. pre toga je naravno ozenio neku iranku, napravio dete i uzeo neki kes od kredita i ziveo ovde ko bog
Zbog čega grandž?
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Joe Biden: "You ought to marry into a family with 5 or more sisters... You know why that's the reason? One of them always loves you." pic.twitter.com/NIz0QOBkX4
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Bendegúz Somogyi wrote:Joe Biden: "You ought to marry into a family with 5 or more sisters... You know why that's the reason? One of them always loves you." pic.twitter.com/NIz0QOBkX4
— The Hill (@thehill) June 18, 2020
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umri baba, odmori u grobu.mp3
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Statue of George Washington felled in Portland. pic.twitter.com/D05otcwHpX
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And Will's father stood up, stuffed his pipe with tobacco, rummaged his pockets for matches, brought out a battered harmonica, a penknife, a cigarette lighter that wouldn't work, and a memo pad he had always meant to write some great thoughts down on but never got around to, and lined up these weapons for a pygmy war that could be lost before it even started