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Monday, August 15, 2016

It’s true. Donald Trump probably should be winning this election.

That’s not just the assessment of Trump himself — who has reached the stage of mourning where all he does is complain about how powerless he is to the mean old press and warn his supporters that their votes probably won’t even count. That’s the verdict of the “Time for a Change” model developed by political scientist Alan I. Abramowitz, which has correctly predicted every presidential election since 1988.

But Abramowitz doesn’t see a Trump victory coming any more than Trump does.

“Based on the results of other recent presidential elections, however, as well as Trump’s extraordinary unpopularity, it appears very likely that the Republican vote share will fall several points below what would be expected if the GOP had nominated a mainstream candidate and that candidate had run a reasonably competent campaign,” he wrote last week. “Therefore, despite the prediction of the Time for Change model, Clinton should probably be considered a strong favorite to win the 2016 presidential election as suggested by the results of recent national and state polls.”

Americans want a change. Maybe it’s the eight years of a Democrat. Maybe it’s the 36 years of conservative economics spewing money up while trickling nothing down.

Whatever the cause, it’s increasingly clear the change they’re seeking won’t be coming from Donald Trump.

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In a recent YouGov poll, 50 percent of voters found that Trump’s version of change feels more like regression, which makes sense since that’s the promise of his campaign — to return American to a time when minorities, the LGBTQ community, women and people with pre-existing conditions had fewer rights.

If Trump ends up winning, it will be because Hillary Clinton presents a too rosy view of the possibilities America faces. But Trump’s defeat will come from his assertion that he “alone” can deliver a change that America doesn’t want.

It isn’t just Trump’s policies that are extraordinarily unpopular. It’s the man, personally.

While about 30 percent of the population loves him and would believe him if he started quoting passages from The Hobbit and insisting they were from the Gospel of Luke, much of America senses that he’s trying to sucker them with a constant stream of lies and propaganda more suited for convincing cult members to drink Kool-Aid than sustaining a democracy.

Here are the five biggest lies Trump keeps trying to sell a nation that  doesn’t seem to be in the market for his nonsense.

  1. His supporters are the only “real Americans.”
    In several recent polls, Trump has no — zero — support from African Americans. Trump’s support among Latinos is lingering around 20 percent, much worse than Romney’s 27 percent, which was worse than John McCain’s support in the low thirties, which was worse than George W. Bush, the last Republican nominee to get near 40 percent. To win, Republicans either need to increase to Romney level of support among minority voters or attract more white votes than any candidate since 1988. Instead, Trump is doing worse with white voters, suffering unprecedented losses with college-educated Republicans and Republican women. Still, somehow, Trump has convinced America’s loudest, angriest, and most ungrateful minority that they’re silent and a majority. “Most Americans are white, most are Christian, most don’t have college degrees, and most live in the South or Midwest Census Bureau regions,” FiveThirtyEight‘s Nate Silver wrote. “And yet, only about 1 in 5 voters meets all of these descriptions.” America’s working class is increasingly diverse. While Trump has endeavored to do something Republicans have failed to do for generations — empathize with the pain of American workers who’ve been displaced by globalization — he’s speaking to a stereotype of blue-collar hard hats who won Richard Nixon the 1968 election, while ignoring the millions of service and retail workers who increasingly represent the real working class of America. That working class is sick of blaming minorities for their suffering and is ready to take on the real problem — a system that’s tilted entirely to the rich.
  2. He was against the Iraq War.
    Trump’s one foreign policy credential is a lie. Unlike Barack Obama, Trump was for the war when it was hardest to be against it. And he was for the withdrawal that he now blames for the creation of ISIS. In a sane world what Trump feels about Iraq would be irrelevant, but since he’s using this to bolster his credentials to seek a job where he has promised to use torture, intentionally kill civilians, and shut down basic freedoms of the press and religion that we take for granted, he needs to be confronted on this lie every time he trots it out.
  3. He would help workers.
    In his big economic speech in Detroit last week Trump completed his evolution to full Romneyism/ Bushism/ Rubioism while maintaining his trademark racism. It’s the same old tax breaks that mostly or only help the rich, matched with… nothing to help workers. “If such policies were effective, we would remember George W. Bush’s presidency as one of great prosperity, instead of a period of stagnant wages for blue- and white-collar workers,” said Larry Mishel, president of the Economic Policy Institute. Trump would uninsure 20 million Americans from working families while pushing policies that would drive wages lower and lower, eliminating one of the biggest raises workers have gotten in decades.
  4. The press is killing his campaign. 
    When he’s focused enough to care, Trump is now running against the press. As if the press were to blame for a disastrous campaign that has Republicans abandoning him like he was the Iraq War in 2007. Trump’s act used to feature him bragging about polls and acting awed over his success. Now that the stench of failure follows him like a dazed Mike Pence, he’s stuck ranting against the institution that made his rise possible — free media. The Washington Post‘s Greg Sargent points out that while Trump’s “dominate all media” strategy worked in the GOP primary, he was completely unprepared for how “the coverage and scrutiny are inevitably getting a lot harsher, at precisely the moment when Trump is devolving into his worst bouts of depravity and unhinged behavior yet.”
  5. Society is rigged against a fortunate son who’s relied on government help his entire career.
    Trump’s rich daddy gave him every advantage known to man, which helped Trump avoid the draft and launch his business. The courts protected him from creditors — over and over again. City government and tax breaks fueled his first development projects. Powerful lobbyists keep him from paying taxes. Conservative media gave him a platform. Cable news desperate for relevance let him exploit their airwaves to perform informercials of hate. And a Republican Party eager to win an election that could decide the Supreme Court for generations begged him not to leave it. Yes, the system is rigged — for Donald Trump and his kids. And his escalating wrath comes from knowing that as rigged as his success has been, he’s facing the greatest failure of his life, perhaps the most resounding defeat suffered by any candidate in a generation. And he’s losing fair and square. Sad!
  • charleo1

    We have all heard of the skunk that crashed the garden party. But never before Trump, has the skunk been welcomed in, and made the guest of honor. Some Party they’ve got there!

  • Wolfesgang

    The man’s a disgrace not only to the U.S. but also to humankind. It still strikes me as unbelievable that an individual like that could be made the official presidential candidate of Abraham Lincoln’s party.

    • Independent1

      It may make it easier to think about a skunk like Trump representing Lincoln’s party if you keep in mind that the GOP claiming today that they are the party of Lincoln, is just one more attempt of the GOP to fabricate reality. In reality the GOP today was really the enemy of Lincoln back in the 1860s, not the party that represented him. The GOP’s claim that Lincoln was a Republican is in name only, not in ideology. That transformation all took place back in the 1960’s when the southern Dixiecrats bolted from what was the Democrat party and have become today the major base of what is today the Republican party; the people who go around waving the Confederate Flag are Republicans today – the enemies of Lincoln – clearly not the party who supported his vision of America.

      The party that supports today what Lincoln supported 150 years ago are called Democrats – the enemies of a skunk named Trump.

    • This isn’t Abe’s party any more.. In fact, they would down thumb him if he were here today. There’s still good Republicans but it’s difficult to recognize the good one’s when their surrounded by bad apples.

      • RED

        Sorry, not trying to be rude to you personally but I sure do hate the “good Republican” myth. It’s simply not true, being a good person and being a Republican are mutually exclusive. It’s like saying there were a few good Nazis. I mean sure, I bet lots of them loved their kids and took care of stray animals and volunteered for charity. But they still joined an organization who’s entire message was hate and racism.

        • Wolfesgang

          So what about Abraham Lincoln? No “good Republican”?

          • Independent1

            Sorry, Lincoln was a Republican in name only. The ideology he fought for, freeing the slaves and trying to make everyone equal, is the ideology today OF THE DEMOCRAT PARTY.

            You are just spewing more GOP fabrications of reality. It’s pretty hard to think of Lincoln as a Republican, when the Republicans troop around today paying homage to the Confederate Flag – the flag that represents the people that Lincoln, who commanded the Union Army, fought against!!

            Don’t you think it’s a real stretch to try and associate yourself with what many people consider America’s best president – when the people you actually are supporting today were Lincoln’s enemies 150 years ago!!!!!!

          • Wolfesgang

            Sorry, but you’re wrong — I’m not ‘representing’ anyone except myself, and I’m not even an American citizen. I’m just someone wondering what the world, and especially the Republican party, is coming to.

        • I understand your intention but there’s also the kind of people, let’s call them moderates or even progressives who have ideas that could be useful to a nation but their surrounded by dogs, let’s call them conservatives, and the dogs keep them at bay.. never allowing them to hunt and keeping them in quiet rooms.. oops, I mean in the dog house. Now if these moderates could somehow eliminate the conservatives (as they had done pre-1980) then they could work with the dems and progress through compromise like they did pre 1980.. Once St. Raygun came into power he brought with him the conservative by words that they live by even today.. It certainly is ‘their way or the highway’ but that doesn’t include all of them but alas, those are the ones stuck in quiet rooms learning the ways of the right wing extremists so that when it comes their time to shine they will forget everything they knew about morality but that doesn’t mean they never possessed those traits. Hate, racism, lies and propaganda was spawned not by Republicans but by conservatives.. One being as the other but not all. Eisenhower was more a progressive.. Even Nixon was more moderate than conservative then came Reagan and turned over a cow paddy and out popped the conservative majority and they took over in mass and now hardly anyone can tell them apart, and why? Because those who could be considered humane they keep locked up in the shadows and treat them like scum if they don’t convert.. Case in point, ask Jon Huntsman, jr.

          • Independent1

            And aren’t those ‘moderate Republicans’, the ones that the rabid terrorist side of today’s GOP-loving Republicans keep in those ‘quiet rooms’, the ones that GOP-loving Republicans call RINOs today??

  • rednekokie

    What makes this all so sweet, is that he has, alone, brought all this upon himself.
    And, charleo1, this skunk not only stinks to high heaven, he is about the most stupid skunk ever to come wandering down the garden path.
    Call the election exterminator, please!

  • FT66

    My old mum was asking me how do the rest of the world are thinking of US supporting a man like Trump. I answered her that they are stunned as you are. And she agreed.

  • Paul Bass

    The GOP made Trump.
    Nixon’s “southern strategy” was conservative racism.
    Reagan, even more conservative than Nixon, w/ “Reagan Dems” code for white racists.
    HW Bush, even more con than Reagan, remember “Willie Horton”?
    GW Bush, most conservative GOP since HH, “Swift Boated” Kerry?
    The GOP created Trump, he just took them for a ride.

  • DOC

    How can a guy be such a blow heart have such thin skin? Really a cry baby or just a brat.

    • Independent1

      Interestingly, most people who go around bullying people with words and threats as Trump does, are really narcissistic cowards..

      • Eleanore Whitaker

        In my experience working with 2 major CEOs, their are more deadly to employees, customers and taxpayers when they are in their back room meetings where most of the damage to the economy is done.

  • “he’s facing the greatest failure of his life, perhaps the most
    resounding defeat suffered by any candidate in a generation. And he’s
    losing fair and square. Sad!”

    Not so sad.. I’m laughing MY ass off..

    • Eleanore Whitaker

      The worst is? When, not if, Trump loses the election, his days as a business man are over. Would you trust a man with Trump’s mentality to do business with?

  • Eleanore Whitaker

    Personally, what I find most satisfying is that The Donald has once and for all time eviscerated CEO mindsets that formerly were privy only in those back room Executive Board meetings.

    The thing Americans are seeing first hand is the CEO mentality. Out in the open, it proves what most of us conjectured. That some, not all, CEOs are not in business for an but themselves. Is that what business is for? To make 1% of the population Andocratic control freaks?

    Business has always had several elements: the business owner(s), employees and customers. There never has been a business that operated solely by a billionaire employer who never needed assistance of employees and customers. Therefore, this proves that today’s megalithic mega billionaires like Trump stiffed not just their own customers and employees, but also taxpayers and their own suppliers.

    Who goes around not paying for business supplies? In my past experience? Quite a lot of business owners who should know better. But, they figure so long as they get away with it, where’s the harm? The harm is they cannot be trusted EVER.

  • Independent1

    And clearly what this article covers are only a small portion of the lies that come out of Trump’s mouth as PolitiFact in checking found that 90% of the hate rhetoric Trump spews is based on lies!!!

  • Jon

    I can understand how the NRA and hate groups, racists, xenophobes, misogynists, billionaires, nuclear war advocates, chicken hawks, those who serve in the military and their families, anti-1st Amendment people, those with close ties to Russia and are pro-Russian, and those who want to punch people like Donnie said he wanted to do on several occasions during his rallies support Donne but I am surprised to read that these various groups make up 30% of voters. How they buy his constant lies, laugh at his sick jokes, and support him is mind boggling. His constant lies like his oft repeated lies about Iraq referred to in the article continue to be believed by his rabid acolytes. His sick jokes about Captain Kahn’s parents, his exhortation to his 2nd Amendment people to do something about Hillary Clinton, and his fantastical belief that President Obama and Hillary Clinton are co-founders of ISIS/ISIL must have those supporters who actually get his warped sense of humor and recognize his words as jokes as he is speaking them must roll on the floor howling with laughter as he tells these jokes.

  • 788eddie

    I hope that voters, awakened to the GOP “issues” (promoted bu the GOP leadership) that in no way are good for the general US population, will not only not vote for Trump, but will also support, on the state level, candidates who will have a healthier view of the direction in which this country needs to head.

    As a registered Republican, I find myself ready to support Hillary Clinton for President, as well as Democrats for congress and state offices (if they are willing to give support of Clinton’s proposals). I want her to not only win, but to be able to actually get Congress to move ahead on important issues we need to address, like repairing infrastructure and income inequality.