And this memo from a Republican pollster shows why the idea of a Trump win is improbable.
Trump fans like to argue that he will expose Hillary and that she will look like an establishment stooge next to his supposedly candid style (to argue that Trump is at all candid is a joke, but that's a topic for another thread), but none of their arguments are based on any credible data. It's just based on a gut feeling and gut feelings are weaksauce in the face of data.
Reasons from the memo that Trump will likely lose to Hillary:
- In a recent CNN poll, 35% of Republican voters said that they would never vote for Trump. I don't expect number will stay that high when he get into the general election, but that is still an incredible number and shows that he would have a very hard time uniting the Republican party.
- 68% of female voters have an unfavorable view of Trump. With devastating adds like this being run by Republicans, don't expect that to change no matter how many times Trump says he cherishes women. Also, even at the worst of times, no Republican has ever polled so badly with women. In a head to head match up with Clinton, Trump loses 64% to 34%. Those numbers are unprecedented.
- Both candidates have problems with Independent voters, but Trump does worse, losing 44% to 48%. Even if he were to win Indies, they wouldn't make up for the gap with women and minority voters.
- Which brings me to my next point. 74% of minority voters have an unfavorable view of Trump; 81% of Latinos have an unfavorable view of him. For context, remember that Republicans' terrible performance with minorities is why Republicans have been routed in the last two Presidential elections. Trump would have to win the white vote by unprecedented margins to make up for this deficit. Establishment Republicans know they have a huge problem with Hispanic voters. This will only get worse with Trump, who wins only 16% of the Hispanic vote against Clinton. Yikes.
- The vast majority of head to head polls show Clinton easily beating Trump. As time goes on, these polls are getting worse for Trump. The latest CNN poll has Trump losing by an 8 point margin, which is huge in a general election.
- While Clinton has extremely high unfavorables, Trumps are even worse. According to the CNN poll, 55% see Clinton unfavorably whereas 60% see Trump unfavorably. Some polls show that number to be even higher. Because of wide name recognition, these unfavorables will be hard to shift.
- 40% of voters say that he is the candidate that they would most dread seeing on TV for 4 years, the highest for any GOP candidate.
- 40% of conservative voters have an unfavorable view of Trump.
- 67% percent of voters think that Trump lacks the appropriate temperament to be an effective President. A certain subsection of the Republican party may like Trump's antics, but most people don't.
To address other arguments that Trump fans bring up:
- They argue that many Bernie supporters will support Trump over Clinton. Yet that number is low enough (at 7%) that, as the article says, Clinton's team is probably not losing any sleep. That figure is not nearly as concerning as the 35% of Repubs that say they won't for Trump.
- They also argue that Republican primaries have had much better turnout than their Democratic counterparts. While this is true, but it's abundantly clear that there is no historical correlation between primary turnout and general election turnout. Before 2008, the year that Democrat's had the highest turnout was in 1998 in which Michael Dukkakis was the Democratic nominee. As most of you know, Dukkakis lost in one of the most lopsided contests in election history. In one of the lowest turnout years for Democrats, Bill Clinton easily won the general election. In short, the turnout argument holds no water. And it can be easily explained: Dem turnout is lower because the race is less suspenseful and Clinton is essentially running as a continuation of Obama's third term. Republicans are more enthusiastic because they are trying to take the White House back and their party is experiencing a potential political realignment.
- Trump fans claim that he will make states that usually go Democratic competitive as well as win rust-belt states like Pennsylvania. The data does not support this conclusion. In head to head polls, Trump gets blown out in New York, New Jersey, and loses badly in Michigan. While the margins are much closer in Ohio and in Pennsylvania, Clinton still wins those states convincingly.
- Trump fans claim that his coalition will be the stuff of legend. Yet he consistently fails to secure a majority of the vote. In fact, RedState.com has made an extremely compelling argument that Trump is the weakest front runner in Republican history. Democrats will likely go into the general election as a more unified party. When has a candidate that divides the party ever been a recipe for electoral success?
Basically, the whole "Trump will crush" narrative is difficult to believe when his fundamentals are so bad.
Embedded version of the attack ad that highlights Trump's women problem:
Maybe he'll make up for his deficit with women with Gamergate votes lol.
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