The Hill: Republican voters coming home to Trump

The Hill‘s Jonathan Swan and Niall Stanage see Republican voters coming home to Trump:

Liam Donovan, a former aide to the National Republican Senatorial Committee, said that recent polls notwithstanding, Trump’s “greatest challenge” has been his inability to consolidate self-identified Republicans.

“At some level the base naturally wants to come home, but Trump’s mouth keeps getting in the way,” Donovan said. “When the polling looks good it’s because he is performing like previous nominees — no more, no less.”

Donovan said Trump gains with hesitant Republicans only when he campaigns with discipline.

Offering Trump some unsolicited advice, Donovan said, “Put away the Android Twitter app. Let the news cycle consume your opponent instead of trying to seize back the spotlight.”

Full piece here.

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CBS News: Can Trump Win the Popular Vote?

CBS’ Will Rahn ponders a hypothetical split between the popular vote and the Electoral College:

However, Liam Donovan, a conservative columnist and former Republican operative, makes a convincing case that the popular vote is also likely beyond Trump’s grasp.

It’s exceedingly rare for a candidate to win the Electoral College but not the popular vote, of course, which is why it’s only happened three times. “But to the extent it’s possible,” Donovan told CBS News, “what you’d need is for Trump to run up the score in ‘garbage time’ within the densely populated blue wall,” especially along the coasts.

Trump would also need to outperform Mitt Romney in big blue states like California and Illinois, but “we don’t see any indication of that happening – if anything, he’s doing a bit worse as the GOP-friendly ‘burbs desert him.”

Trump so far hasn’t made up that deficit with the working class white voters that were supposed to prop him up. And given demographic changes in the south, he’ll likely be getting fewer Republican votes in places like Georgia and Texas, two deep red states that have been flashing blue a bit lately.

In other words, even if Trump does a bit better than a typical Republican nominee in places like Maine and Connecticut, he’s still underperforming Romney when it comes red states, which could easily cancel out any gains in Democratic areas. In fact, he’s currently underperforming Romney in a majority of states, a point recently made by Huffington Post polling director Ariel Edwards-Levy.

“Bottom line: if Trump wins the popular vote, the Electoral College will follow,” Donovan says. “And the sort of uniform swing you’d see there probably busts well through 270 electoral votes, in my opinion.”

Full piece here.

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The Hill: How does Trump get to 270?

The Hill‘s Jonathan Swan ponders Donald Trump’s narrow path to 270 electoral votes:

In reality, however, Trump has the much tougher path to 270, assuming polls are reasonably accurate.

In fact, Liam Donovan, a former aide to the National Republican Senatorial Committee, argues a Trump win would depend on a “huge systemic failure.”

“Trump isn’t going to thread the needle,” he said. “If he wins, it’s because everything we know is wrong.”

If everything pollsters are doing is wrong, Donovan said, it’s possible a whole host of states could go to Trump. But that’s not to say he’s arguing that possibility is likely.

“For instance, Pennsylvania doesn’t flip without a uniform swing that would bring Colorado and Nevada and Wisconsin and New Hampshire with it,” he said. “So it seems like boom or bust from my standpoint, with almost metaphysical certitude on bust.”

Full piece here.

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CNN: No, The Polls Are Not Rigged

CNN‘s Eric Bradner on the Donald Trump’s repeated accusations of media outlets “rigging” the polls in favor of Hillary:

It’s been a frustrating episode for Republicans who work in politics.

Ex-National Republican Senatorial Committee staffer Liam Donovan tweeted: “You can’t fix what’s wrong with the party so long as its most influential voices persist in lying to the base.”

https://twitter.com/LPDonovan/status/790620994721415169

Full piece here.

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The Atlantic: Trump Goes to War

Molly Ball goes through the MAGA looking glass to report on the waning days of the newly “unshackled” Trump campaign:

For the Republicans who capitulated to Trump, the best-case scenario was a genteel defeat. Instead, they got the worst case: the party burned down from within, its own voters cheering the fire. Like so many of those who have gone into business with Trump, they trusted him to hold up his end of the bargain, only to find themselves stuck with a bill he refuses to pay.

“I resigned myself long ago to the fact that this was going to be a disaster,” Liam Donovan, a Republican strategist who has worked for the party’s Senate committee, told me a few days ago. “But there’s no real gratification in having it confirmed in the most obvious and predictable way.”

Donovan has taken to reposting on Twitter a National Review commentary from May wherein he argued that Trump could never win a general election. (“The Archie Bunker routine that succeeded among a subset of the Right is precisely what put him in his current hole,” Donovan wrote back then. “It turns out that what revs the GOP engine is repellent to everyone else.”)

“It’s been a dark six months,” Donovan said, but Trump’s increasing personal toxicity combined with his jihad against the party that nominated him could still get worse. “That’s the scary part,” he said, noting that Trump had tweeted over the weekend that he wanted the politicians pulling back from him to lose their elections.

Trump probably doesn’t know he’s going to lose, Donovan said, but “he’s laying the narrative preemptively to place the blame after this goes down”—to pin it on the traitors in the Republican establishment who fled the sinking ship like so many rats. Based on primary votes, “14 million people are at least susceptible to this argument,” he added. “Is he going to spend the next 20-some days dragging everybody down with him? So there’s a lot of looking into the abyss.”

None of Trump’s presentations are driven by polling or strategy, particularly now that he’s cast off any pretense of politeness. “His instincts are what they are. He always goes back to the same well,” Donovan said. “The message he’s putting out is doubling down on the underlying sentiment of his whole candidacy: us against the elites, redemption for people who feel ignored. People like Paul Ryan are keeping you down.” Pure resentment with no veneer. Trumpism distilled to its essence.

Full story here.

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