Baltimore Sun

Drawing up plans to beat Trump

Clinton team puts together playbook to battle his antics

- By Evan Halper

WASHINGTON— Hillary Clinton’s sprawling network of operatives and opposition researcher­s were all set to go with an exhaustive­ly investigat­ed playbook to use in the general election — against Jeb Bush. They also had one for Scott Walker. And Marco Rubio. But Donald Trump? Clinton’s team had bet it wouldn’t need to pull that one from the shelf.

Now, putting a Trump playbook together is proving vexing. After Trump and Clinton’s sweeping triumphs on Super Tuesday, the prospect of a matchup against the impulsive billionair­e prone to angry outbursts, outrageous statements and questionab­le alliances no longer seems too good to be true.

“I say to people, ‘ Be careful what you wish for,’ ” said David Brock, a longtime Clinton confidant who helps run a coalition of super PACs focused on getting her elected president. “This is very complicate­d. There is not a typical playbook you can run.”

Trump is willing to tread into territory other politician­s will not — and he has been rewarded for it. He is unpredicta­ble. He is tapping into anger in the electorate that Clinton is still figuring out how to navigate.

He has mastered social media like no other candidate, he throws off rivals with deft put-downs that draw in voters the way they once did viewers to his reality TV program, and his knack for showmanshi­p affords him an uncanny ability to change the subject when it suits him.

“He will be able to run away from his incendiary primary positions better than any candidate in history,” Dan Pfeiffer, President Barack Obama’s former communicat­ions director, wrote in an email. “You can see him saying: ‘I said that to win the primary; now it’s the general election and my goal is to win so that I can make America great again.’ He would actually embrace the ‘do or say anything to win’ caricature that all politician­s fear like death.”

The goal of the Clinton machine, her advisers say, is to keep voters from getting distracted by his antics.

For every disenchant­ed Democrat or independen­t whom Trump draws in the Rust Belt, Clinton is aiming to bring on two new suburban female voters appalled by his remarks about women or Latino voters unsettled by his plans for a wall to keep out Mexicans.

Armies of researcher­s are building massive dossiers on Trump’s boorish comments, his personal disputes, his company’s use of immigrant labor. There are the bankruptci­es, the bewilderin­g refusal to repudiate former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke, and the leaders in Trump’s own party who have been lining up to admonish him.

The strategy has already been taking shape on the campaign trail, with Clinton questionin­g Trump’s temperamen­t, asking voters to envision him calling the shots in sensitive diplomatic negotiatio­ns or in the White House Situation Room during the operation that took out Osama bin Laden. Mobilizati­on efforts are underway to tap Trump’s anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim tirades to re-energize the diverse coalition of voters that propelled Obama’s victories.

Yet the volume of available material is not quelling anxieties.

“We have been saying he is going to self-destruct since last September, and he hasn’t done that despite his best efforts,” said Ed Rendell, a former chair of the Democratic National Committee. “He is just a difficult person to run against.”

Such uneasiness motivated two longtime Clinton confidants, pollster Stan Greenberg and strategist James Carville, to take a deep dive into the zeitgeist fueling Trump’s rise. The poll findings they released last week suggested the Republican electorate has unpreceden­ted anger with the opposition party, with nearly 90 percent feeling its policies are so misguided that they threaten the nation’s well-being. Distaste for Clinton runs even deeper than it does for Obama, the poll found.

But it also revealed deep anxieties about Trump, with 1 in 5 Republican voters saying they would not be able to bring themselves to cast a ballot for him in a general election. The poll also made clear Trump’s weaknesses: There was considerab­le worry even among Republican­s about Trump having control of the nation’s nuclear weapons, about his attitude toward women and about his perceived egomania.

The Clinton machine is girding to exploit all that.

The attacks will be lobbed at Trump by all manner of surrogates, likely including Bill Clinton, who Trump has already announced can expect to have his own baggage with women and personal finances dragged back into public view.

EMILY’s list, the powerful super PAC focused on electing women, is taking aim at all the things Trump has said or done that might repulse female voters.

“It is important to make sure every voter in this country knows who Donald Trump is and what he has said, not just on the campaign trail, but in his life,” said Stephanie Schriock, president of the group.

Pfeiffer said such issues could be Trump’s undoing if Democrats are smart, creative and discipline­d in how they use them.

“His goal is to get under your skin,” Pfeiffer said. “Stick to your line of attack and do not chase him down every rabbit hole.”

Tribune Newspapers’ Chris Megerian contribute­d from Charleston, S.C.

 ?? CAROLYN COLE/TRIBUNE NEWSPAPERS ?? Democratic presidenti­al hopeful Hillary Clinton brings her “fighting for us” message to a rally Wednesday in New York City.
CAROLYN COLE/TRIBUNE NEWSPAPERS Democratic presidenti­al hopeful Hillary Clinton brings her “fighting for us” message to a rally Wednesday in New York City.

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