Los Angeles Times

Trump’s chance to ‘hit the reset button’

- By Mark Z. Barabak

He trails Hillary Clinton in most battlegrou­nd states. Some of the leading figures in his own party refuse to endorse him. The top Republican in the Senate won’t even say if he considers him qualified to be president.

Still there is a path, albeit narrow, for Donald Trump to win the White House.

It starts on the shores of Lake Erie when the Republican National Convention opens Monday in Cleveland’s downtown sports arena.

The gathering and its huge national audience will afford the presumptiv­e GOP nominee one of his last best chances to hoist himself into serious competitio­n with Clinton before three debates scheduled this fall.

Unlike those sessions, events over the next several days will be largely under Trump’s control — at least within the confines of the red-white-and-blue-filled convention hall. (The streets outside are another matter.)

So to give himself a decent shot in November, Trump needs to pull off a triumphant, gaffe- and glitchfree convention.

“It's his opportunit­y to hit the reset button,” said Don Sipple, who served as an im-

[Trump, age impresario for Bob Dole, the GOP’s 1996 nominee and the last Republican to enter a presidenti­al convention in such difficult straits.

It will also be an opportunit­y for Trump’s freshly chosen vice presidenti­al running mate, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, to introduce himself to a national audience and try out his new, higher-profile role.

For all his travails, Trump has several things working to his advantage, which has kept his race against Clinton, the presumptiv­e Democratic nominee, reasonably close.

The economy is in lessthan-stellar shape. Surveys show most voters believe the country to be headed on the wrong track. Not least, Clinton suffers a number of liabilitie­s, including persistent doubts about her trustworth­iness and personal integrity.

To take advantage, though, Trump must do something he has yet to achieve, even as he stormed past a field of far more politicall­y practiced rivals to seize the GOP nomination: convince a majority of voters that he has the steadiness of temper, solidity of character and capacity for leadership they desire in a president.

“He’s an unguided missile,” Sipple said. “He has to become serious and substantiv­e and drop the bombastic belligeren­ce so that people see him in a new light.”

In private conversati­ons, Republican­s who support the Manhattan business mogul and are helping to plan the convention acknowledg­e the considerab­le work that needs doing before the gavel falls Thursday night.

For Trump, “the large hurdle is, ‘Can I see him as president of the United States?’ ” said one strategist for the campaign, who asked not to be identified so as to speak more candidly. “That means different things to different people.”

For some, the strategist said, that means reassuranc­e that Trump possesses the cool head and steady hand needed to serve as president. For others it means learning there is more to his agenda than provocativ­e stands such as banning Muslims from coming to America or building a wall between the U.S. and Mexico.

Convention­s are, at bottom, enormous television extravagan­zas devoted to a single purpose — building the nominee up to heroic proportion­s and tearing down the opposition. For all of Trump’s unconventi­onality, the gathering in Cleveland will be no different.

The program will include testimonia­ls from family members, a sprinkling of sports and other celebritie­s and a handful of Trump’s vanquished opponents, including Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, who quit the race early, and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, his longest-lasting and fiercest foe.

Republican leaders will take their customary spot on the podium, among them House Speaker Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin, who will preside over the convention, and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell — even though the Kentucky lawmaker, when pressed, pointedly declined to say whether he thought Trump was qualified to sit in the Oval Office.

As he takes the convention stage, Trump faces the twin challenges of a daunting political map and a changing electorate.

While national opinion polls show him running close to even with Clinton, what matters more is their standing in individual states; the November election, after all, is a series of discrete contests in each of the 50 states and the District of Columbia.

Democrats have carried 18 states and Washington, D.C., in the last six presidenti­al elections, giving the party’s nominee 242 of the 270 electoral votes needed to win the White House.

Republican­s have won 13 states for a total of 102 electoral votes in each of those elections; tossing in others that typically lean the GOP's way, Trump can probably count on just under 200 electoral votes.

To win, he needs to carry all the states that Republican Mitt Romney won four years ago and then several more he lost, including Florida, Ohio and at least one large industrial state in the Northeast or Midwest.

The latest batch of polls shows Trump behind in North Carolina — a state Romney carried — essentiall­y tied with Clinton in Ohio and Florida, and trailing in every other state he would probably need to win, including Pennsylvan­ia, a prime target because of the large number of older and white working-class voters who formed Trump’s base in the primaries.

Adding to his difficulti­es, Trump has largely shunned two of the standard practices of presidenti­al campaignin­g, organizing and TV advertisin­g, leaving him at a considerab­le disadvanta­ge as he plays catch-up.

He badly lags Clinton’s on-the-ground operation in major battlegrou­nd states — in Ohio, for one, Democrats have roughly twice the staff as Republican­s — and has ceded the advertisin­g airwaves since the two candidates clinched their party nomination­s in May and June.

Clinton has broadcast more than 30,000 TV spots in Florida, Ohio, North Carolina and other states likely to decide the presidenti­al contest, according to an Associated Press tally. Trump has aired none.

Apart from a difficult map, Trump faces a demographi­c challenge: The face of the American electorate is rapidly changing, a shift led by voters — young people, Latinos, Asian Americans — put off by Trump and his racially charged rhetoric.

At this point in the race the only group among which Trump surpasses Romney’s performanc­e of four years ago is white men lacking a college degree; their turnout lagged considerab­ly in 2012, and to stand any chance of winning, Trump needs to spur a significan­tly greater number to the polls in November.

At the same time, he has to run much stronger than polls now suggest among women, college-educated white men, Latinos, Asian Americans and African Americans. Accomplish­ing those twin feats — courting one without alienating the others — would be a challenge, even for a politician far more skilled and supple than Trump.

If experience holds, Trump should get a boost in opinion polls after the convention is over, though that may be negated by a rise in popularity for Clinton after the Democrats hold their gathering next week in Philadelph­ia.

That leaves three debates and, of course, any number of surprise developmen­ts, such as Friday's terror attack in Nice, France. How those play out politicall­y — moving voters toward the presumed steadiness and reliabilit­y of Clinton, or driving them toward the tough talk and pugnacious promises of Trump — is unknowable at this point.

That elevates the importance of Cleveland.

“A coherent convention speech, a well-behaved candidate and then a strong, discipline­d performanc­e in the debates could put him in a position where the desire for change is just enough to carry him across the finish line,” said Sipple, the political media strategist.

That may sound like threading a needle. But it’s the daunting reality Trump faces.

Trump ‘is an unguided missile. He has to ... drop the bombastic belligeren­ce so that people see him in a new light.’ — Don Sipple, political media strategist

 ?? Drew Angerer Getty Images ?? DONALD TRUMP, with running mate Mike Pence, will try to broaden his appeal at the GOP convention.
Drew Angerer Getty Images DONALD TRUMP, with running mate Mike Pence, will try to broaden his appeal at the GOP convention.
 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? DONALD TRUMP, shown on a TV monitor inside Cleveland’s Quicken Loans Arena, is likely to get a boost in polls after the convention.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times DONALD TRUMP, shown on a TV monitor inside Cleveland’s Quicken Loans Arena, is likely to get a boost in polls after the convention.

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