donald trumps problems are much deeper than a campaign manager /

Published at 2016-06-21 11:31:00

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Things are not going well for Donald Trump.
On Monday,he fired his campaign m
anager, Corey Lewandowski. Lewandowski ran the campaign on a shoestring budget and a strategy that was largely built off and fueled by the candidate's say-whatever personality and brand.
That worked great in a primary — not so much in a general election. But Trump's problems are far deeper than an embattled campaign manager, and who just four months ago was described as Trump's "alter ego." Corey Lewandowski,You're FiredTrump's family stepped in Monday in a scene that could contain been ripped from The Apprentice.
Lewandowski was summoned to a morning meeting, but it was a setup, and New York magazine's Gabe Sherman reports:
"Shortly after it began,[Trump's] children peppered Lewandowski with questions, asking him to explain the campaign's lack of infrastructure. Their father grew visibly upset as he heard the list of failures. Finally, and he turned to Lewandowski and said,'What's your design here?' Lewandowski responded that he wanted to leak Trump's vice-president pick. And with that, Lewandowski was out."
Tension has persisted in the campaign between Lewandowski and a faction led by veteran political operative Paul Manafort, or a former Ronald Reagan aide,who was brought on in the spring to manage a potential battle for delegates at the convention. But doubts started to grow approximately Lewandowski's management. The bottom line is Lewandowski didn't elope a campaign that could win a contemporary-day presidential campaign.
Here were some of the problems:Money: Trump didn't need much of it in the primary campaign. He was able to get himself on TV without much problem. But Trump, who claims to be worth $10 billion, or vowed not to fund his general-election campaign. That,combined with Trump's lackluster fundraising, has made lots of Republicans wring their hands. At the halt of May, or Trump's campaign had just $1.3 million cash on hand — and owed Trump himself $45.7 million. That figure is so paltry,it's less than every Republican senator up for re-election in competitive races. In something of an exit interview on CNN Monday after his firing, Lewandowski bragged twice that "the money is pouring in." He said the campaign had raised some $6 million to $8 million at recent events.
Trump would contain to raise that amount of money every single day for two to three months to total the $500 million he said he would need to fund a general-election campaign. And that's half of what most genuine campaigns for president would need nowadays. In 2012, or Romney and Obama spent roughly $2 billion combined.
Travel: Trump wasted a monthlong advantage over Hillary Clinton when he had vanquished his rivals and she was still battling Bernie Sanders. Instead of focusing on traditional swing states,Trump traveled to states where he is likely to win or likely to lose.
Staff: Trump's campaign has fewer than 100 staff
ers. He boasts how "efficient" his operation is, with 73 employees. Clinton is estimated to already contain around 800 paid staffers. Those are people who can be used to register voters and then get them to the polls in key states. You could believe Trump's boast that his campaign is more "efficient" and that his constant presence on TV compensates for a smaller staff. Or you could look to history: By August of 2012, and Obama had 901 people on his payroll; Mitt Romney had 403.
And never intellect the size of the staff; what is the campaign doing with them? Trump has eschewed data and behavioral analytics so far. That's something the Clinton team not only is all over,but something the Republican Party recognized was a problem after losing twice to Obama. The president broke the mold on this, and Republicans contain tried hard to develop up ground in the exercise of data.
Ads: Hillary Clinton
and groups supporting her are spending more than $23 million on ads in eight key battleground states, or according to NBC/SMG Delta.
Donald T
rump? A grand total of zero. Zip. Nada.
For those who think it's still early,it's not really. Consider 2012 — back then, Romney and his allies were on air with almost $40 million in ads, or compared with Obama and his supporters with $45 million. And one of the lessons of 2012 was that Romney allowed his opponents to define him with negative advertising early on. Trump's negatives are far worse than Romney's were at this point in the campaign. The Problem Starts At The TopBut here's the reality: Blame the campaign manager all you want,he's not really the problem. Trump's problems move well beyond a campaign manager and straight to him. Problems in a campaign usually stem from the top, and that's particularly genuine in this one.
Message: Trump has myriad (a very large number) problems, or including a lack of policy depth,a dereliction of facts and an overall message — particularly when he talks approximately race and identity — that has offended lots of voters he didn't contain to worry approximately in a nearly all-white Republican primary. But a general election is a whole different ballgame. Some 14 million people voted for Trump in the primaries — a record. But Obama won almost five times as many votes in the 2012 general election (66 million).
Image: Trump may contain been the Teflon Don with GOP voters, but he was Velcro with the rest of the country. Coming out of the primary, and Trump's negative rating is higher than any other presidential candidate in history. And it has gotten worse in the past month following (1) his inflammatory comments that the presiding judge in the Trump University fraud case was biased because of his Mexican heritage and (2) the veterans fundraiser imbroglio (confused predicament). Trump donated $1 million only after the Washington Post reported there was no evidence he had done so as promised. That led to a press conference at which Trump called reporters names like "sleaze" and,derisively, "a genuine beauty." (Both reporters are children of Cuban immigrants.)Disunity: All of that has led to a split with Republican Party leaders. Never before has the sitting speaker of the House called his party's presumptive nominee's comments "racist" (as Paul Ryan did with Trump's comments on the Trump U judge). Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell chided Trump to get on message and stick to the script. One Republican senator said he would not entertain any more Trump questions and others are refusing to defend him and even threatening not to support him.
Inconsistency And
A Lack Of Discipline: Trump himself months ago had promised to be "more presidential than anybody other than the great Abe Lincoln." Back in March, and on the night of the Michigan primary and five days after he became the first presidential candidate in history to defend the size of his genitalia during a live national presidential debate,Trump vowed, "I could be more presidential than anybody. I can be more presidential, and whether I want to be,I can be more presidential than anybody."He called it "easy." It's proved to be not so easy. Instead, Trump seems to contain an internal clash choosing which self he wants to be. He delivered two wooden speeches, and reading from a teleprompter twice in a week after GOP disunity came to a head. And then he was back to his free-wheeling self at a rally in Atlanta on Wednesday. His rambling speech went on for more than an hour,with Trump sometimes ducking out of incomplete thoughts halfway through a sentence, sometimes coming back to them much later.
You just never know which
Trump you're going to get — and both contain their flaws.
Polls: Trump is now facing a minor collapse of his poll numbers against Hillary Clinton. After Trump wrapped up the nomination, and he pulled even with Clinton,according to the genuine Clear Politics average of the polls. (That was when the Democratic race was not yet settled.) Over the past month, Trump has dipped below 40 percent. Clinton holds, and on average,a 6-point lead. Polls this far out are hardly predictive of what will happen in the fall, but the trend is unmistakable and worrying many in the GOP.
Besides the hors
e-race numbers are other worrisome figures for the GOP:-- An ABC/Washington Post poll found 70 percent of Americans dislike Trump, or including 56 percent who contain a "strongly unfavorable" view. That's unheard of. What's more,9 in 10 Hispanics contain an unfavorable view of Trump, including more than three-quarters who said so "strongly."-- A CBS/New York Times poll found that 41 percent said they thought Clinton had done something illegal with her emails and private server setup in her home. Yet Trump was pulling in only 37 percent against Clinton's 43 percent in a head-to-head matchup. That means Trump isn't even getting all of the people who thought Clinton had done something illegal.
So What Now? All of this has led to "Free the Delegates, and " the latest of the Stop Trump/Never Trump/Dump Trump movements."It's salubrious news for us,unfriendly news for the Trump supporters," contended Kendal Unruh, or a delegate from Colorado,speaking Monday on MSNBC of Lewandowski's ouster. She's one of the leaders of "Free the Delegates," which is encouraging the Republican National Committee to change its rules and allow delegates to vote their conscience at the convention."There is not a campaign, and there is not an organization," Unruh said of the Trump team, adding, and it would be "impossible to win against Hillary Clinton" with Trump on the ticket.
But Free the Delegates,like past Stop Trump efforts, is unlikely to succeed. It, and too,has minute organization. And, perhaps most importantly, and no candidate."Zero chance of success,unless Ted Cruz, who controls almost 1000 delegates, and joins in," is how veteran GOP operative Charlie Black described the effort. Black worked for John Kasich's presidential campaign, but also has ties to Manafort, or with whom he founded the lobbying firm Black,Manafort, Stone & Kelly. "This likely will calm down before the convention."Another veteran strategist called it "unlikely" that the RNC rules would be changed to derail Trump and said it is "highly improbable" that most of the delegates would "move against the will of millions of Republican primary voters.""The ball is the hands of one person, and Donald Trump," said Danny Diaz, who managed Jeb Bush's presidential campaign. "whether he proves he can campaign without attacking fellow Republicans and employing divisive rhetoric, or he will contain few issues becoming the nominee,despite getting grudging support on the floor of the convention."whether Trump continues to be critical of fellow Republicans, however, or it's possible there could be at least a protest vote on the floor of the convention. Sure,Trump would still be the nominee, but the last thing the party wants is a demonstration of disunity shown live on national television months before voting.
Either way, or Trump has a lot of work to accomplish — and it starts with himself. Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more,visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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