texagbeliever said:
FireAg said:
texagbeliever said:
Phatbob said:
FireAg said:
J. Walter Weatherman said:
FireAg said:
Phatbob said:
FireAg said:
Okay...but my point is that there simply aren't very many that are going for DeSantis to begin with...
And that's why the national average gap is growing...at least for now...
I think there is a difference between the support base. DeSantis is a challenger. When you support a challenger, you are already admitting that the current frontrunner is not what you want and you are willing to back certain positions and ideas in rough form. Those get worked out throughout the primary season and that vote is fluid. There is going to be an ordered list of candidates that fit more or less what you support the most.
For Trump, there is a lot of the base that has a top 5 list that Trump has all 5 slots, and there is no examination of any issues beyond "Is their last name Trump". If it is literally not possible to break into that list, because the first criteria to be on the list is to be Trump, at some point, you have to point to the people with that list and call it what it is. This obsession with Trump and only Trump is what is killing the Republican party.
If DeSantis can't find a way to break into that list...he won't be the R nominee...
I'm sorry to say, but it is just that simple...
The point is he can't win over any of the Trump diehards because they are 100% Trump or bust in the primary. He just needs to win the other 65-70% of the party who is actually open to another option as the other candidates drop out, hopefully in time.
And this is where I think you (and to be fair, many others) are making a mistake...
I think in the primaries, as things stand right now, the number of "100% Trump" are greater than 30-35%...I personally think that, from a primary perspective, that number is north of 50% nationally...
That's what the national polling (and state polling) averages are telling my eyes at the moment...
You can't only be "realistic" about the numbers in one way, but ignore the numbers elsewhere. The reality of it is, there are a number of people, yes, even on the right, that will never vote for Trump. He has burned too many bridges. If we are going to win this battle against the left of "win at all costs", that will not happen for Trump. He has a very energetic base, and the rest don't want him at all. Trying to get someone to argue for Trump at work, or go knock on doors is a much bigger ask than for any other candidate, and it won't happen for this fight. You will get a bigger segment on the right to tune out. Politics won't be for them this go round.
So you can say to be realistic about if Trump gets the nomination, but I say be realistic to know that is what we are signing up for. Just don't get upset when the people who get dragged down with the ship aren't super enthused about doing the paddling along with those who picked the ship with gaping holes on the side.
See the last paragraph for an example of setting up the "I told you so so". Appreciate your help in illustrating my point.
Also it is tatologically failing. Trump is obviously a bad candidate. If that were true the obviousness would be true to primary voters and they would be voting for DeSantis. Which isn't happening.
The other explanation is that the average republican primary voter is dumb or ignorant. Okay but if DeSantis can't win over the dumb/ignorant Trump voters how is he suppose to win the way more ignorant non-primary voting moderate?!
Basically this is the test. If DeSantis can topple Trump he will be set to win over Biden, if he can't, then he wouldn't be as sure a thing as you guys believe. There is a highlander element to politics.
Correct…
And right now, I see a ton of red flags saying he may very well not topple The Donald…
They have this determinism conundrum. They think Trump will lose 2024 because he lost in 2018 and 2020. So if DeSantis loses to Trump in 2024 they will then be forced to look for someone else because DeSantis losing in 2024 means he can't win in 2028. It is a very poor way to look at the future but it is common throughout history. I call it the logic inertia fallacy.
Trump will lose in '24 because he has an Unfavorable rating well above 60% and has done everything he can to burn the bridges in GA and AZ without both of which he has no path to win. That might be fixable except he has 100% Name ID and very little chance of getting people that dislike him to change their minds, he isn't even trying to appeal to them. You cannot win with just the MAGA base, period. You must appeal to others.
Does that mean DeSantis will? We do not know for certain but he has all the characteristics to make that feasible along with a track record in FL of doing exactly that.
It's simply the science of politics and election cycles. Of course there are always exceptions and things can change but it is very, very unlikely that Trump can do so based on how set people are either for or against him. His only shot is that he gets the nomination and Biden stays the Dem candidate and becomes even more toxic than Trump. Even then the Democrats have their votes banked because of the machinery they have in place so they will get their turnout. I will definitely vote for Trump if he is the nominee but I can see no path, it's a far taller mountain to climb than 2016. If the Dems switch out Biden for Newsom or Granholm then it's even more impossible.
BTW, 2 questions Trump needs to be forced to answer before he gets that nomination because they are deal killers:
1. What happened to the $250 million from Stop the Steal?
2. If you are elected will you pardon yourself or will you allow the legal process to play out? As a follow up, what are you going to do about the 2 state charges against you and will they be a distraction in office since you have such limited time as a 1 Termer?
Make no mistake the Dems will hammer the crap out of him with those 2 questions once they know he is the nominee along with other really uncomfortable ones that he has no real response to. I'd rather he have to deal with that before he gets the keys to the car.
"The most terrifying words in the English language are: I'm from the government and I'm here to help."
Ronald Reagan