DONALD TRUMP
"Rodeo Drive"
OVOODOCORVO
The
Guardian view on Donald Trump: the joker in the pack
Editorial
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http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/sep/18/the-guardian-view-on-donald-trump-the-joker-in-the-pack
The
Republican establishment is looking on in horror as the party takes
the ultimate non-politician to its heart
The candyfloss-type
arrangement that sits atop Donald Trump’s pate has been compared to
many things: a furry rodent, a caterpillar, rogue tumbleweed. But the
one thing his combover is rarely mistaken for is hair. So ingrained
are the doubts that a few weeks ago he invited a supporter on stage
in South Carolina to check it. As such it stands as the most
conspicuous emblem of his outsized personality: brazen, ostentatious
and barely credible.
For most of the
summer Mr Trump’s candidacy for the Republican presidential
nomination has been understood in the same way. Speculations
regarding the his motivation for standing – a lust for the
limelight, an elevation of his brand, unrestrained egomania – were
many. But nobody (possibly not even himself) took it seriously.
His initial
popularity surprised many, but concerned few. In such a crowded
field, name recognition and a penchant for the outrageous counts for
a lot. Low on policy, experience, self-awareness and charm, and high
on bluster, logorrhoea, invective and misogyny, conventional wisdom
was that his bubble would burst. Instead it has kept rising. Mr Trump
has been ahead in the polls for two straight months, usually with
double-digit leads as high as 16%. A few recent polls even suggest he
could win in a direct contest with the most likely Democratic
contender, Hillary Clinton.
So it is that over
the last few weeks America’s media and political classes have been
jolted upright by the realisation that whatever it looks like, Mr
Trump’s candidacy, like his hair, is for real. To the horror of the
Republican party establishment and Wall Street funders, he has a
serious shot at becoming the nominee. Rank-and-file Republicans
believe he can be president: two-thirds of them say they would be
“enthusiastic” or “satisfied” if he were the party nominee.
Moreover, the more they see of him the more they like. In mid-June,
shortly before he announced his candidacy, 20% of Republicans had a
favourable impression of him. Since then he has insulted women,
Mexicans, immigrants, journalists, a Republican war veteran and the
last Republican president. Today his favourability ratings are 60%.
Mr Trump is the most
audacious, bizarre and arguably authentic expression of the Tea-Party
mood that captured the right’s imagination a few years ago.
Incoherent in his principles – in 2009 he was a Democrat who
supported gun control, universal healthcare and abortion rights –
and incandescent in his rage, he channels the frustrations of a
section of white America nostalgic for a return to their local
privileges and global status – a time before social mobility
stalled, wages stagnated and when jobs were secure. Xenophobic –
he’s accused Mexico of sending “rapists” and “criminals”
over the border; and isolationist – “China only undercuts America
because it cheats”, he speaks in full-throated tirades to the those
who feel forgotten against the disorienting effects of globalisation.
His sexist sleights are couched as a middle finger to “political
correctness”.
Thus far, the
standard laws of politics have not applied to Mr Trump. When
committing what most would consider campaign-ending gaffes – he put
one debate moderator’s tough questioning down to her menstrual
cycle – he not only doesn’t apologise, he goes on the attack. As
such he is the consummate anti-politician – to his growing number
of admirers his rough edges do not diminish him before more
experienced politicians, but distinguishes him from the political
elites they so despise.
His candidacy has
already made an impact. His inflammatory comments and incendiary
behaviour have sucked much of the oxygen from other candidates.
Wisconsin governor Scott Walker – once championed by the
Conservative establishment – is struggling to gain any traction and
Jeb Bush, still the best-funded and bookies’ favourite, has failed
to break through. His comments about immigration may have tarnished
the Republican brand in the eyes of many Latinos, a growing
constituency they can ill afford to further alienate. At first, few
candidates would take him on; now they are lining up to take a swing.
In this week’s debate, Carly Fiorina, the only woman in the race,
faced him down, slamming his remarks about her personal appearance
and questioning his business record. But while it’s been beneficial
to her, given his ability to deflect criticism, it won’t
necessarily do him harm.
It’s early days
yet and Republicans are notoriously fickle. At this stage in the race
for the 2012 nomination the front-runner was Rick Perry. Within a few
weeks he was down to single figures. The likelihood remains that Mr
Trump will trip over the foot he keeps putting in his mouth and fall
flat on his face. Over the last month he has been mentioned less on
television and radio and, compared to other candidates, he is taking
up less space on Twitter.
But that can no
longer be considered a certainty. The man himself may be a joke, but
his candidacy can no longer viewed as such. Thanks in no small part
to the copious amounts of hot air Mr Trump keeps exhaling, his bubble
may yet rise further.
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