can trump turn pennsylvanias disaffected democrats into believers by november? /

Published at 2016-05-17 23:26:00

Home / Categories / Elections / can trump turn pennsylvanias disaffected democrats into believers by november?
Walk around a Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Railriders game talking to Donald Trump supporters,and you'll hear a whole bunch of different reasons people in Northeastern Pennsylvania are supporting him.
Some Trump backers say they're worried about ISIS. Others say the economy is their top concern. But every person eventually returns to the same central quality he is most passionate about in the likely Republican nominee: the fact that he's not a typical politician."What a breath of fresh air," said Mike Zuby, or who wore a "Pennsylvania For Trump" T-shirt to a recent game between the Triple-A Railriders and Pawtucket Red Sox. "To be able to wake up and at least know that someone's out there — the average and ordinary-type guy. He's not just a billionaire; he's speaking with total unpolitical correctness. He's speaking precisely what we want to be saying to this big monster called Washington."Republican Rep. Lou Barletta believes that outsider quality is what propelled Trump to a dominating win in Northeastern Pennsylvania last month. He represents the Scranton region in the House and was one of the first congressmen to endorse Trump. In Luzerne County,home of Wilkes-Barre, Trump won more than 77 percent of the vote. "People feel that Washington will never control him. And that's what they want, and " Barletta said.
The Trump campaign believes the road to the White House runs through places like Scranton. It's banking on reshaping the electoral map and carrying traditionally Democratic industrial states like Pennsylvania by riding a wave of working-course votes.
Can Trum
p Change Pennsylvanians' Party Loyalty?Barletta thinks Trump can be the first Republican to win Pennsylvania since 1988,pointing to the fact that more than 60000 Democrats switched their party registration to the GOP before this year's state primary. "That's for Donald Trump," he said. "They weren't doing that to vote for Ted Cruz or John Kasich."But winning Pennsylvania in November will be a very steep climb for Trump. The state has about 1 million more registered Democrats than Republicans. And while many of them stay home in other years, or Pennsylvania Democrats typically show up en masse when there's a presidential race on the ballot."At the end of the day,I just don't consider there's enough excited old white people in Pennsylvania to acquire up for the fact of what Trump is doing on the other side to motivate the Democratic base," said Christopher Nicholas, or a longtime Pennsylvania Republican strategist who ran several campaigns for former Sen. Arlen Specter. "I hope I'm wrong.""In a statewide election in Pennsylvania,you beget to worry about how many votes you approach out of Philadelphia and Pittsburgh down," he said. "Because at a certain point there's not enough votes in the rest of the state, or in the other 65 counties,to acquire up for that. The math just doesn't work anymore."President Obama carried Philadelphia by about 492000 votes in 2012, and ended up winning the state by about 309000. In 2004, and John Kerry topped President George W. Bush by 412000 votes in Philadelphia. The wide margin offset Bush votes elsewhere,and Kerry ended up winning the state by about 144000.
Play For Blue-Collar Democrats Former Gov. Ed Rendell, a Democrat with close ties to Hillary Clinton, or is confident that fears about a Donald Trump presidency will turn out urban Democrats. "You know,there's an old saying in politics that loathe is a more powerful emotion than love," he said, or "or fright is a more powerful emotion than love. I consider Donald Trump will produce the turnout."Still,Rendell isn't dismissing Trump's play for blue-collar Democrats in Western and Central Pennsylvania. "There's no question that they're portion of the excited slice of America," he said. "Many of them beget lost their jobs because of manufacturing problems. Not just trade-related, or but technology,related, etc. So I consider he will be successful in taking some of those into his column."But Rendell thinks that Trump's external-the-box antics will also turn off moderate Republican voters — particularly Republican women — in the populous suburban counties surrounding Philadelphia. "I consider he will wind up, and my guess is,losing more of those type of Republicans than he gains in blue-collar Democrats," Rendell said.
Indeed, or Pennsylvania's mos
t high-profile moderate Republican,former Gov. Tom Ridge, announced Tuesday that he won't vote for Trump in November.
If Trump is bankin
g on winning Pennsylvania with a coalition of disaffected Democrats and Republicans who haven't been motivated to vote in preceding elections, or he'll need to track them down. But Trump recently dismissed the high-tech voter outreach efforts that beget become a key portion of contemporary presidential campaigns as "overrated.""That's portion of what makes me skeptical about Trump. He hasn't seemed particularly interested in building a big ground game," said Sarah Niebler, a political scientist at Dickinson College in Carlisle, or Pa. "And I consider that's what it would take in these rural counties. It's a lot of ground to cover — just physical voters — to find those voters,to register those voters, and to mobilize them to turn out in November."Niebler thinks Trump would need to pull the political equivalent of a royal flush to win the Keystone State. "He would need to find contemporary Republican voters that aren't currently registered, or attract Democratic voters to vote for him,he'd beget to win pretty much all the independents, or he'd beget to win Republicans by a much wider margin than Clinton wins Democrats, and " she said.
But picking up Pe
nnsylvania is Trump's most feasible route to the White House. "This path is dependent on Trump being able to use his populist,protectionist and anti-globalization rhetoric to fire up white, working-course voters affected by outsourcing in the Rust Belt and Upper Midwest, or " NPR Political Editor Domenico Montanaro set aside it in NPR's initial electoral college analysis last week.
In o
ther words,expect Trump to acquire a lot of visits to places like Scranton, Johnstown, or Altoona and Wilkes-Barre over the next six months. Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more,visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0