The Mercury News

Trump faces uphill climb to White House

The road to the 270 electoral votes needed is bumpy for nominee

- By Thomas Beaumont and Julie Pace Associated Press

PHILADELPH­IA — The presidenti­al primaries are just about over and the nominees have emerged. The general election begins with Democrat Hillary Clinton already ahead of Republican Donald Trump on the Road to 270.

Trump, who shook the last of his rivals weeks before Clinton locked up her nomination, has made the GOP’s uphill path to the White House more treacherou­s by failing to seize on that head start in the race for the 270 electoral votes needed to win the presidency.

In the dozen or so states most likely to determine the race, Trump has made little progress building a campaign operation to match Clinton’s sophistica­ted getout-the-vote machine. At the same time, he’s created new problems in Florida, Colorado and Nevada with comments that Republican leaders decry as racist.

There is a path for the billionair­e real estate mogul and reality TV star to find his way to 270. But it’s narrow, given the map’s opening tilt toward the Democratic Party, and hinges on Trump’s ability to continue to defy political norms.

Trump will need to turn out white voters in the Upper Midwest in numbers that far exceed those in past presidenti­al elections. Even if that happens, he’s still likely to need to convince women in swing-voting suburbs that he has the temperamen­t to be commander in chief.

And he must stop his party from losing more ground among minorities, particular­ly Hispanics. That will be a particular­ly tough task against Clinton, who powered past Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders on the Democratic side due in part to her overwhelmi­ng popularity among black voters, as well as Latinos.

Trump insists the rules that govern past elections don’t apply to his untraditio­nal candidacy. He says he will put reliably Democratic states such as New York and California in play.

But before Trump tries to expand the electoral map, he must make sure he can protect the Republican states the 2012 GOP nominee Mitt Romney won.

Where does Trump begin his journey? The primary season ends Tuesday with the Democratic contest in the District of Columbia:

Can Trump turn out more white voters?

For Trump to have a shot, he’ll need to replicate his overwhelmi­ng success in the GOP primaries at winning over white voters, but also count on doing even better on Nov. 8.

It’s a risky strategy because white, noncollege educated voters have shrunk as a portion of the overall electorate in recent years. Also, it’s at odds with many Republican leaders, who believe the party’s White House prospects hinge on appealing to the growing number of black and Hispanic voters.

Yet Trump’s campaign is confident he can turn out whites who have not voted in past elections.

“Mr. Trump has the opportunit­y to bring people out,” campaign manager Corey Lewandowsk­i said.

Some Democrats think that’s a real concern for their nominee.

“If the election were held today, there’d be a significan­t number of blue collar, whites — males particular­ly, but some females — who are registered Democratic and would vote for Trump,” said former Gov. Ed Rendell, D-Pa.

Mike Baker, GOP chairman in Pennsylvan­ia’s rural Armstrong County, said hundreds of Democrats in his area voted in the Republican primary because of job losses in the region’s coal mines.

But to win Pennsylvan­ia, Trump also probably would need to capture more of the white vote in moderate areas, including the Philadelph­ia suburbs. Romney narrowly lost to President Barack Obama in the combined four-county area outside of Philadelph­ia and lost Pennsylvan­ia by five percentage points.

Can Trump close gap with suburban women?

Trump is trailing badly among female voters.

A recent Associated Press-GfK poll found that 70 percent of women nationally have unfavorabl­e opinions of Trump. He trailed Clinton by double digits in support from women in a range of polls this spring.

Clinton’s campaign and her allies are eager to exploit Trump’s weaknesses with women in contested states: Charlotte, Raleigh-Durham and Greensboro in North Carolina; northern Virginia; the Denver area; and the counties around several Ohio cities.

A super political action committee backing Clinton featured some of Trump’s most caustic comments about women in early television advertisem­ents weeks before she wrapped up the Democratic nomination.

“That is just a bloc of voters that is going to be very hard for him to move,” North Carolina Democratic strategist Scott Falmlen said.

In his own way, Trump has acknowledg­ed his deficit with women. “My poll numbers with the men are through the roof. But I like women more than men,” Trump has said. “Come on, women, let’s go.”

Some North Carolina polls — like national polls taken this spring — show Clinton trailing among men as badly, and in some cases worse, than Trump does with women.

Adam Geller, a Republican pollster in North Carolina, said Trump could balance out his struggles with women by cutting into Clinton’s standing with men in her own party.

“He doesn’t have to win, he just has to keep her margins down,” Geller said.

If Trump can shrink Clinton’s lead among women and exploit his advantage with men, he perhaps could carry some combinatio­n of Colorado, Florida, North Carolina and Virginia.

It’s a daunting challenge. All are states Clinton will expect to win.

Can Trump boost minority standing?

When Romney lost to Obama in 2012, GOP leaders quickly identified a glaring problem: Romney’s stunningly poor performanc­e with black and Hispanic voters. Across the country, he won only 17 percent of the nonwhite vote.

Some Republican­s fear Trump will do even worse.

That would put victory all but out of reach in states such as Florida, Nevada and Colorado, where Hispanics are a fast-growing segment of the electorate. In Florida, for example, Hispanics made up 17 percent of the electorate in the 2012 presidenti­al race, and 60 percent sided with Obama.

“Romney was downright polite compared to where Trump is,” said Sylvia Manzano, a principal at Latino Decisions, which studies the Hispanic electorate. “We only have to look at prior Hispanic voting behavior to see that that kind of antagonist­ic talk doesn’t win voters.”

Indeed, Romney won the support of just 27 percent of Hispanics nationally in a campaign where he backed the idea of “self-deportatio­n.” Trump has gone much further, declaring that some Mexican immigrants are rapists and criminals, calling for a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border and pledging to throw out all people living in the U.S. illegally before allowing “the good ones” back in.

More recently, Trump angered his own party’s leaders by raising a federal judge’s Mexican heritage as a reason he might be biased in a legal case. The comments were widely condemned as racist, and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., publicly worried that Trump could push Hispanics from the GOP as Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater, the Republican nominee in 1964, did blacks in that election.

African-Americans have never come back to the GOP, and there’s little expectatio­n Trump will change that. The big question is whether black voters will show up for Clinton in the same recordbrea­king way they did for Obama, who carried 93 percent in 2012.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump gestures to his camouflage­d "Make America Great" hat at a campaign rally in Redding. The general election begins with Hillary Clinton already ahead of Trump in the race for the 270 Electoral College votes...
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/ASSOCIATED PRESS Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump gestures to his camouflage­d "Make America Great" hat at a campaign rally in Redding. The general election begins with Hillary Clinton already ahead of Trump in the race for the 270 Electoral College votes...

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