For sure, some of the editorializing in the following article is  
gratuitous.
The Democrats have problems galore also and often these problems
are a direct reflection of the dubious mentality of Democratic  voters.
The point, though, is that there ARE problems with the mentality
of Republican voters. On that score the article is quite good.
 
For the record, I regard Trump as totally unfit for the presidency.
Trouble is, I'm having real difficulty in finding any other candidate
who is  fit for the presidency.
 
 
Billy
 
--------------------------------------
 
 
 
Mother Jones
 
 
The GOP's Problem Is Not Donald Trump
It's their voters.


—By David Corn
Sept. 3, 2015
 
 
 
Only a few weeks ago, pundits and political observers roundly proclaimed  
that Donald Trump, the reality-show tycoon who's mounted a takeover of the 
GOP,  would flame out, fade, implode, or whatever. Jeb Bush's campaign aides 
were  telling journalists that they had no concerns about Trump threatening a 
third  Bush regime. "Trump is, frankly, other people's problem," said 
Michael Murphy,  the chief strategist for Bush's super-PAC. It's becoming 
clearer, though, that  Trump, still dominating the polls and the headlines as 
the 
Republican  front-runner, could well pose an existential threat to the Grand 
Old Party (or  at least, its establishment, including the Bush campaign). 
But the fundamental  problem for the Rs is not Trump; it's Republican voters.
 
 
 
Trump is a brash and arrogant celebrity who is well skilled in pushing  
buttons, belittling foes, uttering outrageous remarks, causing a ruckus, and  
drawing attention to one thing: himself. He's a smart marketer and a 
brilliant  self-promoter. His name recognition is over 100 percent. He cooked 
up a  
wonderful ready-for-swag tagline: "Make America Great Again." He's 
incredible.  He's yooge. But none of this would matter if there was no demand 
for his 
 bombastic, anger-fueled, anti-immigrant populism—that is, if Republican 
voters  did not crave a leader who equates undocumented immigrants with 
rapists and who  claims that everyone else in political life is a nincompoop 
selling out the US  of A to the Chinese, the Mexicans, and just about every 
other 
government.
 
 
The polite way to say this is that Trump's message is resonating with  
Republicans. And polls show that his support is not ideological. He's winning  
over GOPers across the spectrum, from conservatives to evangelicals to  
supposedly moderate Rs. His assault on the GOP powers that be (or powers that  
were) is not the rebellion of one wing against another. (Political 
commentators  are so programmed to view party conflicts as battles between 
conflicting  
factions.) Instead, Trump is tapping into a current that runs throughout 
the  various strains of the GOP. It's a current of frustration, despair, 
anger, and  yearning—a yearning for a time when the United States will not be 
confronted by  difficult economic and national security challenges, and when 
you will not have  to press 1 for English and 2 for Spanish.
 
 
Republicans are pissed off. (In polls, they express far more  
dissatisfaction with the nation's present course than Democrats.) And they  
believe the 
nation has been hijacked by President Barack Obama, whose legitimacy  most Rs 
still reject. A recent Bloomberg/Des Moines Register poll of likely Iowa  
caucus participants found that 35 percent of Republicans believe Obama was 
not  born in the United States. A quarter said they were not sure. (Nine out 
of ten  Democrats said the president was born in the United States.) So 
nearly 60  percent of Rs believe there is cause to suspect Obama has 
hornswoggled 
the  nation. Meanwhile, according to another poll, 54 percent of Republican 
voters  say Obama is a Muslim. A third were not sure. Only 14 percent 
identified the  president as a Christian.
 
 
These findings—which echo a long string of surveys conducted during the  
Obama years—would seem to indicate that at least half of the GOP is unhinged 
and  living in its own fact-free and perhaps Fox-fed reality. To top it off, 
many  Republican voters have expected the GOPers in control of Congress to 
kill  Obamacare, shut down the government and slash the budget, prevent Obama 
from  issuing executive orders, and impeach the pretender who inhabits the 
White  House. Oh, and there's this: Benghazi! So they are mighty ticked off 
and  seriously disappointed. The Bloomberg/Des Moines Register poll found 
that half  of GOP caucus-goers said they were unsatisfied with the US 
government and 38  percent were "mad as hell" at it. Slightly more than half 
were 
unsatisfied with  Republicans in Congress; a fifth were mad as hell at them.
 
 
Given the psychological state of the GOP base, it's not surprising that the 
 fellow expressing the most outrage on the campaign trail—the guy who 
sounds like  he, too, is mad as hell—has taken the express elevator to the 
penthouse floor of  the polls. After all, he's the only one in the pack who has 
confronted Obama on  his birthplace. Trump has not renounced his birther ways. 
He has already made  that point for this audience and can move on. (In the 
past few days, Trump also  came close to endorsing another far-right 
conspiracy theory. He essentially  accused Huma Abedin, Hillary Clinton's 
longtime 
aide, of being a security  problem because she is married to disgraced 
former Rep. Anthony Weiner and  presumably shared classified State Department 
information with this "perv." For  years, conservative conspiracy theorists 
have claimed Abedin was a Muslim  Brotherhood mole within the US government.)
 
 
The anti-immigrant, anti-Obama, anti-establishment sentiment that Trump is  
tapping runs deep within the Republican electorate. Many Republicans 
clearly see  the president as a foreign-born secret Muslim with a clandestine 
plan 
to weaken,  if not ruin, the United States—remember the death panels—and 
they have a dark,  nearly apocalyptic view of Obama’s America. (My email box 
of late is full of  fundraising notes from right-wing groups claiming Obama 
is about to confiscate  all guns, suspend the Constitution so he can run for 
a third term, relinquish  American sovereignty to the United Nations, and 
mount a military operation  within the United States to subdue any opposition 
to him.)
 
 
If this is your perspective when seeking a presidential candidate who will  
represent your desires and demands, you are unlikely to be drawn to a 
politician  who wants to gain your vote by presenting a 27-point economic plan 
or 
by  advocating charter schools. Voters this dissatisfied and this detached 
from  reality will be looking for someone who can vent for them. Trump does 
that. He  also promises quick and simple action to address their concerns: a 
wall  (not  a fence), great trade deals at a snap of the finger, the end of 
ISIS,  you name it. And you just won't believe how great this country will 
be after  four years of President Trump. A focus group of Trump backers 
recently conducted  by GOP pollster Frank Luntz found that Trumpites fancied 
Trump as much for his  cut-the-crap manner as for the substance of his remarks.
 
As a way to counter Obama, the Republicans eagerly courted the tea partiers 
 and other dissatisfied voters. They rode that tiger into the congressional 
 majority in the low-turnout elections of 2010 and 2014. They whipped up 
the  frenzy. (During the Obamacare fight, House Speaker John Boehner hosted a 
tea  party rally on Capitol Hill, during which the crowd shouted, "Nazis, 
Nazis" when  referring to Democrats.) Washington Republicans vowed they would 
take the  country back from Obama for the tea party. They exploited the 
Obama hatred, but  their often effective obstructionism was still not enough to 
feed the beast that  had carried them into power.
 
 
Though Trump may beg to differ, Trumpmania is not about Trump. He's merely  
supplying the rhetoric and emotion craved by a large chunk of the GOP  
electorate. That yearning won't go away. Ben Carson, who in the latest Iowa 
poll 
 tied for first place with Trump, is pushing a similar message—America is 
going  to hell and the nation needs an outraged outsider to clean up the 
mess. His tone  is kinder and gentler (and musical!). But like Trump, he is 
mining profound  dissatisfaction and promising a national revival. Combine the 
Trump and Carson  electorates at this point, and it's close to a majority of 
Republicans.
 
A Trump-Carson ticket? Maybe not. (But if so, you heard it here first.) The 
 point is, the GOP is overflowing with voters who long for a candidate who 
echoes  their rage and resentment. Whatever happens with Trump in the months 
ahead, this  bloc of voters won't go away. Neither will their fury. This is 
the true dilemma  for the Republican Party and its pooh-bahs. Trump, the 
deal-making businessman,  is merely responding to market forces. He's just the 
supplier. Trump is the  drug, and the voters need to score. The demand is 
what counts.
 

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