The Day

Trump’s decline creates quandary for GOP

- The Washington Post

R epublicans who appear on the stump with Trump risk being associated not only with his hateful rhetoric and negative personal qualities, but with his unpopular policies.

CNN (36 percent), Quinnipiac (38 percent) and Gallup (40 percent) all recently reported lousy approval ratings for President Trump. We don’t yet know if this is statistica­l “noise,” or whether the combinatio­n of Bob Woodward’s book, the anonymous New York Times op-ed, the Paul Manafort conviction and the Michael Cohen guilty plea have cumulative­ly taken a toll on Trump’s support.

These rotten numbers come despite another strong jobs report, highlighti­ng the depth of the president’s unpopulari­ty.

The CNN poll offers some additional data of interest to candidates on the ballot in November. Trump’s strong disapprova­l number is nearly 50 percent (48 percent, to be exact), whereas his “strongly approve” number is below 30 percent (27 percent). He is just below 50 percent approval for his handling of the economy, but his other policy numbers are atrocious. On trade (53 percent disapprova­l to 35 percent approval), immigratio­n (59 to 35) and foreign policy (56 to 36), voters’ disapprova­l far outstrips their approval. Republican­s in deep-red regions might want to rethink running on “Helping Trump’s agenda.” It’s the last thing majorities of Americans in many areas want to succeed.

Trump’s personal qualities rate poorly as well, be it on “cares about people like you” (36 percent say yes, 62 percent say no); “can bring the kind of change we need” (40 to 57); is “honest and trustworth­y” (32 to 65); “effectivel­y manages government” (41 to 56); is “uniting the country” (30 to 67); and is someone respondent­s are “proud to have as president” (32 to 64).

Compared with other politician­s in Washington, voters overwhelmi­ngly find Trump less honest, more corrupt, less intelligen­t and less in touch. The guy who was supposed to change D.C. turned out to be a change for the worse — a lot worse.

As other polls have shown, Trump polls terribly among women voters (29 percent approval, 65 percent disapprova­l), college graduates (31 to 65), white college graduates (34 to 63) and independen­ts (31 to 59). It is only because of his strong support among Republican­s (82 percent) and a small margin of support among white non-college-educated voters (50 percent approval to 45 percent disapprova­l) that the bottom hasn’t dropped out of his overall approval numbers.

Unless you are a Republican running for a seat in a deep-red area (and, therefore, should not theoretica­lly need presidenti­al support), you’d have to be foolish to either identify with Trump or, worse, be seen with him. Even in places such as Texas and Missouri — which traditiona­lly vote Republican for president and went for Trump in 2016 — the president’s appearance is going to light a fire under the people who strongly disapprove of him (48 percent nationally). Trying to pump up his narrowing base is counterpro­ductive if Trump is going to inflame multiple groups that Republican­s do not want showing up at the polls.

Republican­s who appear on the stump with Trump risk being associated not only with his hateful rhetoric and negative personal qualities, but with his unpopular policies. Indeed, if they cannot talk about immigratio­n, trade or foreign policy without inciting the voters who dislike those Trump efforts — and if they cannot convince voters in most areas (unless they’re talking to members of the super-rich donor class) that the tax plan is the greatest thing to happen to them — what are they going to talk about? Republican­s are doing miserably on health care, so they dare not raise that as a topic.

Increasing­ly, Republican­s are down to ludicrous negative barbs (an attack ad from Sen. Ted Cruz portrays his opponent, Rep. Beto O’Rourke, as pro-flag burning!), conspiracy-mongering and/or whipping up fear of an impeachmen­t battle.

Listen, if Trump keeps going downhill, impeachmen­t is going to sound more like a feature, not a bug that comes with electing Democrats.

Republican­s who appear on the stump with Trump risk being associated not only with his hateful rhetoric and negative personal qualities, but with his unpopular policies.

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