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Republicans! Trump is the man of your dreams

As November approaches and the United States gears to pick its next president, battle lines are being drawn not only across America, but also within the Republican Party. Senior party leaders are banding together to challenge Donald Trump’s meteoric ascension to the Presidential nomination. With 20 primary wins under his belt, Trump now enjoys the support of 736 delegates with Texas Senator Ted Cruz following with 463 and Ohio Governor John Kasich with 143. It is laughable to call it a 3-corner race as the real estate magnate has maintained a significant lead, with the Republican Party convention in July drawing near.

The anti-Trump campaign despite being loud, is also failing to pick up steam as many Republican leaders are choosing to remain neutral.

Yet his rhetoric driven campaign, inflammatory messages against minorities and lack of a policy agenda, has spooked Republican leaders with the prospect of the party being divided in an election year, abandoning the Centre-Right and becoming defined by Brand Trump for years to come.

Prominent Conservative leaders held a meeting in Washington earlier this month for a ‘unity ticket’ against Donald Trump, lobbying delegates and other Republicans to choose a ‘real’ Conservative candidate at the party convention to take on the Democrats. Ex-Presidential candidates Mitt Romney and John McCain have issued a warning to the Republican Party over pitching Trump, while a majority of Presidential candidates pushed out of the race have swung their support behind Ted Cruz, hoping he closes the gap before July.

However, the popular will backing Trump is strong. His brand of politics has resonated among multiple age and social groups including minorities as he continues to pick delegates from states with different demographic settings. The anti-Trump campaign despite being loud, is also failing to pick up steam as many Republican leaders are choosing to remain neutral. Even John Kasich, who persists in the race despite dismal support, has rejected overtures from the anti-Trump brigade to drop out and join them. He may tell the cameras he’s the best candidate to stop Trump, but he clearly does not want to irk the Republican front runner. It’s logical. The White House has been out of the hands of the Republicans for eight years, and many cannot ignore the will of the voter base, especially when Trump enjoys a significant lead. Any attempt to stall the nomination at the party convention will look like pure sabotage. Trump sparked moral outrage when he told CNN that such a move would cause riots, yet the Republican Party cannot undermine the backlash they may face.

The best line this week on the state of the Republicans comes from Hillary Clinton, who said, “With Trump, Republicans reap what they sow”. The statement is apt for a party that effectively prepared the platform for the rise of Donald Trump’s political narrative, granting him the recipe to which he added his flair and now dominates the right wing.

The Republicans have always said that the military and economy of the United States has been on the decline, a pitch used as a direct attack on social welfare spending under Democratic governments.

The Republicans have always said that the military and economy of the United States has been on the decline, a pitch used as a direct attack on social welfare spending under Democratic governments. The sentiment can be traced back to the Reagan years and is vehemently championed by Trump who repeatedly says, “We don’t win anymore” along with his
infamous campaign slogan ‘Make America Great Again’. In their campaign against the welfare state, Republicans have always touted the bogie of ‘Washington insiders’ playing vote bank politics and the need to run the country like a business. Trump oozes that very idea, highlighted in an interview to the New York Times in 1999 where he said,

“My entire life, I’ve watched politicians bragging about how poor they are, how they came from nothing, how poor their parents and grandparents were. And I said to myself, if they can stay so poor for so many generations, maybe this isn’t the kind of person we want to be electing to higher office. How smart can they be? They’re morons.”

Most significantly, Republican leaders have always called for an end to political correctness, as a tactic to prop up their controversial arguments on same-sex rights, minorities, gun control, abortion and racial violence. Trump is anything but politically correct. It is his most endearing quality as a reality TV star and not surprisingly a
Presidential candidate. Ask Trump supporters, and their first line of praise is – ‘He speaks his mind’.

In Trump, the Republicans see the monstrosity of their political stance, shed of all filters – their voters rallying around a Republican leader who is not the run-of the-mill silver-tongued preacher but an audacious self-styled Godman. Trump has just stepped up the outrage, sharpened and prejudiced the Republican plot. The party may feel his manner is ‘brazen’ and ‘unpresidential’ yet for all intensive purposes it is the original Republican message. They must realise that Donald Trump is the man of their dreams. His ascension to the nomination is nothing short of destiny.

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Trump soars, but Republicans lose

Donald Trump is on a roll, stumping political pundits at every polling booth. New Hampshire, Nevada and the coveted primary of South Carolina have been clinched by the real estate magnate, who has blown away his political opponents.

Donald Trump is on a roll, stumping political pundits at every polling booth.

In Nevada, Donald Trump won 46 percent of the vote, followed by Marco Rubio at a distant 24 percent. In South Carolina, the hallowed primary of Republican leader and former President Ronald Reagan, Trump won the primary by 10 percent of the vote over Marco Rubio, despite the young Republican gets the endorsement of South Carolina governor Nikki Haley. In New Hampshire, Trump won by almost 20 percent of the vote, the runner up being Ohio governor John Kasich. Trump’s marginal 3% loss in the first primary in Iowa to Ted Cruz has now been reduced to a footnote in the presidential race, with him now gaining the endorsement of New Jersey governor and former Republican Presidential candidate Chris Christie.

Trump has become a lightning rod for extreme right-wing Republican voters. His controversial views on the Muslim community, immigrants and gun control have given him that power. The Republican right wing also possesses a disdain for Washington insiders, which grants Trump significant influence. His TV flair also gives him an edge over his opponents, where audiences relish how he tears them down with witty one-liners and comebacks.

The race for the Republican nomination is no longer a regionally divisive issue as well, with Trump sweeping primaries with different voter demographics, local issues and shifting political loyalties.

Donald Trump’s dominance is also bolstered by the inability of other party candidates to consolidate moderate Republican votes. As Trump delivers win after win, no Republican candidate has consistently held second place, if not given him a close fight. The title for the challenger to Trump for the Republican nomination is still up for grabs. Till the very end, more than two Republican candidates may likely stay in the race to counter Trump, and so the moderate Republican votes will continue to be divided to his advantage.

The race for the Republican nomination is no longer a regionally divisive issue as well, with Trump sweeping primaries with different voter demographics, local issues and shifting political loyalties.

Trump’s ascent is good news for the Democrat party. In a dual political battle across America, where both Democrat and Republican voters will choose their next Commander-in-chief, Trump will fail to match the socio-political acumen and the track records of Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders. This fact will become painfully clear to the Republican Party and voters if Trump ever faces off with Clinton or Sanders in the Presidential debates. As he wins the primaries alienating moderate Republicans, their votes may just shift to the Democrat party in favour of keeping Trump out of the White House.

Trump’s strategy is apt for him to clinch the Republican nomination. However, in a face off with Democrats across America, he will fail to gain the necessary traction as his own party’s machinery won’t fully endorse him. While the Republicans may be forced to hand Trump the nomination, they will do so with the understanding that the White House will be out of their grasp for another 4 years.

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Bernie vs Trump: Conviction vs Politics

As the US Presidential race heats up, two key ideological poles have emerged in the form of Senator Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump. Both candidates have framed an unconventional narrative on opposite ends of the political spectrum – one seemingly driven by conviction and the other by pure politics, but both challenging the status quo.

As the US Presidential race heats up, two key ideological poles have emerged in the form of Senator Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump.

Bernie Sanders is the longest serving independent senator in Congress and one of the few politicians actively aligned with the core base of American Democrats, who are disgruntled with the ‘Hope and Change’ promise of the Obama administration. He has been in public life for decades and has championed multiple social issues. Sanders was an activist during the civil rights struggle in the 1960s; as a student at the University of Chicago, he was an organiser for the Congress of Racial Equality and campaigned against segregation in public schools. He was part of the legendary March on Washington and one of the earliest champions of same sex rights at a time when the issue was political suicide. Sanders has a consistent progressive voting record, defending the manufacturing sector, campaigning for climate change awareness and supporting legislation to address income inequality.

Sanders supports the concept of universal healthcare; declaring it a fundamental human right, he is in favour of a ‘single payer system’, and aims to replicate the healthcare infrastructure of Australia and Canada in the United States. He was also one of the architects of the Veterans Access, Choice and Accountability Act of 2014, a bill which sanctioned $5 billion for better healthcare for armed forces personnel returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. Sanders is also one of the architects of the Climate Protection Act of 2013, a bill which levies a carbon pollution fee on manufacturers, polluters and importers, diverting funds into green power technology. The senator is an ardent advocate of affordable higher education for American students, millions of whom face crippling debt from student loans. In fact, his most popular policy promise is increasing taxes for Wall Street and corporate America to fund higher education.

On the policy front, Sanders is the poster boy for Democratic voters, especially the younger demographic. A radical approach is the key difference between him and Hillary Clinton, the current front-runner, who has adopted a more calculating approach in the Presidential race. For Sanders, the policies he has championed for decades are the central issues in American politics today. His no-nonsense demeanour and rustic Brooklyn persona set him apart from Clinton, whose public image seems continuously ‘touched up’.

Sanders supports the concept of universal healthcare; declaring it a fundamental human right, he is in favour of a ‘single payer system’, and aims to replicate the healthcare infrastructure of Australia and Canada in the United States

On campaign financing, Hillary Clinton has received millions from Wall Street via Super PACs while the majority of Sanders’ campaign is funded through public donations and support from multiple labour unions; Sanders has raised over $2 million through public donations and is closing in on Obama’s record from the 2012 elections. His appeal among Democratic voters is also driven by his effective use of social media to promote his policies and track record, in a nation where internet penetration is almost 90%. Consider the first Democratic debate: while the mainstream media gave the win to Hillary, social media gave the edge to Sanders, and he continues to dominate the political space on the web.

With Hillary Clinton there is the temptation of electing the first female US President, but Sanders is more of an activist than a politician. It seems the Democratic party’s mind is with Hillary, but its heart is with Sanders. Their national approval ratings are still neck to neck, but Sanders is ahead of Clinton according to the pre-poll survey of the first primary in New Hampshire, which goes to
the ballot in February. The result will be a crucial indicator of where the two leaders actually stand.

Then there’s Donald Trump, the front runner for the Republican nomination. He speaks his mind and has alienated multiple vote banks via his controversial statements. However, he has become a lightning rod for extreme-right Republican voters. Trump has called for a ban on Muslims entering the United States, he has called illegal immigrants from Mexico drug smugglers, criminals and rapists, and even said that tough gun laws contributed to the recent attacks in Paris. Trump seems to have come as a welcome relief to those Republican voters who have been aching to shed political correctness. His words seem to have empowered those who believe that immorality and savagery are rooted in certain cultures and that social security is only for ‘true Americans’. A Public Policy Polling survey of Trump supporters found that 66% of them believe that Obama is a Muslim, 61% believe he was not born in the United States and 63% favour amending the Constitution to end birth right citizenship. As Trump galvanises the far-right he remains far ahead of his competitors, as none of them have succeeded in consolidating the support of moderate Republicans.

Trump has emerged bigger than the Republican Party, but he has damaged the party’s image as well. No matter how many times his competitors for the Republican nomination denounce him for his views, they are still unable to break his support base.

Trump is a businessman and his approach to the elections is the same; it is how anyone who wants to storm into the national scene approaches politics. Trump has tailored a product after studying consumers and he is marketing it effectively. He doesn’t really believe that Muslims should be banned from the United States. He has extensive business ties in Muslim nations including Indonesia, UAE, Dubai, Qatar and Turkey, and even his business partners in these nations understand his strategy. The objective is simple: to win by any means possible. Just like the tagline of his show The Apprentice, ‘It’s nothing personal, it’s just business’

Trump has emerged bigger than the Republican Party, but he has damaged the party’s image as well. No matter how many times his competitors for the Republican nomination denounce him for his views, they are still unable to break his support base. The real estate magnate has pledged to spend around $1 billion on his Presidential campaign. He believes he is the most powerful man in the world and now he wants the world to realise it too.

Sanders and Trump are not traditional politicians. They are wild cards in their respective political arenas, one driven by principle and the other by the ambition to win. Support for both candidates is only rising as this election is becoming a clash of extreme ideologies. Conviction vs politics, virtue vs pandering, what will emerge as the stronger political force? This Presidential election will reveal the soul of 21st century America.