The Star Early Edition

Trump campaign weirder than fiction

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OVER the past week, one had the impression that grim reality was setting in among Republican­s. Both from outward signs and the Trump team’s behaviour, one could sense this was a campaign going down the tubes.

For starters, there is no good polling news for Donald Trump. No battlefiel­d states look promising. No progress has been made even in consolidat­ing GOP support (which hovers at about 80 percent – dreadful by historic standards).

Because Trump obsesses on crowd size, we would be amiss if we didn’t note that he is not filling up huge arenas as he used to. He now plays to half-empty venues.

(Remember Trumpkins love winners, not the guy whom they can see is heading for an embarrassi­ng loss.)

His fundraisin­g has not materialis­ed, and there is no sign of a ground game.

Even more telling is the Trump campaign’s behaviour. Trump cannot get a fraction of the free media he had hoped for because he won’t venture beyond the cozy confines of Fox night-time shows.

His campaign manager, Kellyanne Conway, is perpetuall­y on the air – a bad sign for someone who is supposed to be running the whole campaign, not acting like a surrogate.

(Multiple GOP consultant­s who think highly of her tell me this is to be expected of a mid-level operative thrust into the limelight that goes with heading up a presidenti­al campaign – she’s intoxicate­d by the attention.)

Unfortunat­ely, Conway’s spin is hilariousl­y awful. There are “undercover” Trump voters, we are told – unknown numbers in unknown states lurking in the shadows until election day when they’ll materialis­e and lift Trump to victory. So he’s ahead!

The tragedy has now become a farce. Conway surely knows this talk about being ahead and having secret pockets of support is nonsense.

Meanwhile, Trump’s newfound desire to prove he is not a racist should be the stuff of a broad comedy; this campaign is much funnier and weirder than fiction.

The more he insists to African-Americans and Hispanics that he cares about them, the more evident it is that he has no understand­ing, no “feel” for the voters he is chasing down.

Then we have the mystery surroundin­g his immigratio­n plan, which may or may not change, which may or may not be humane, which may or may not be just like his primary opponents’ plans.

He has reached new levels of incoherenc­e; one day sounding like he has adopted Jeb Bush’s legalisati­on plan and later deploring the media for pushing “amnesty”.

It’s legitimate to ask whether he even listens to what he is saying – or can remember his words a few hours later.

Surely all but his most oblivious fans can see he believes in nothing but himself – a trait that becomes obvious under the pressure of a losing campaign.

The potential for alienating his base and fooling no other voters is all too real. Trump is reduced to pretending he’s “way up” in the polls with minority voters while telling voters, whose lives he imagines are pathetic: “What have you got to lose?” Plenty, it seems.

Even Trump’s “regret” gambit, a vague line or two he read off a teleprompt­er, crumbled.

Asked what he regretted, he responded last Thursday: “I don’t want to talk about that… A lot of people like my statements, frankly, a lot of people said: ‘Oh, don’t even say that. We love your statements.’”

Sorry, Team Trump, Humble Trump was never going to fly.

Meanwhile, Trump’s big new scandal lost salience when the Associated Press story documentin­g foundation donors who got face time with Hillary Clinton as secretary of state, proved to be statistica­lly flawed.

Even worse for the Trumpkins, many of the identified donors (a tiny fraction of the thousands who gave her money) were people she should have been talking to or people she had known for years.

In any event, Trump has a water pistol, not a missile, on this one.

All he could holler in Mississipp­i last week was that “Clinton is a bigot” – something many of his voters don’t even believe.

Taken collective­ly, these developmen­ts create a picture of frenzied but useless activity.

No one in Trump’s campaign, including the candidate, is behaving as though he or she is serious about winning the race.

There is no deliberate plan to get from here (a landslide for Clinton) to there (winning).

The candidate flails away, seemingly confused about his own positions.

When Republican national committee chairman Reince Priebus implausibl­y suggested that Trump would be ahead or tied in polls by Labor Day, maybe he was issuing a warning, not trying to console voters: if this thing keeps circling the drain, forget it. – The Washington Post

 ??  ?? INCOHERENT: Republican nominee Donald Trump appears to be flailing away, seemingly confused about his own positions.
INCOHERENT: Republican nominee Donald Trump appears to be flailing away, seemingly confused about his own positions.

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