Dan Rather analyzed Trump’s primary wins and spots signs that he is vulnerable because his well-defined base is limited. Due to his extremism, he is not able to have a big tent that would attract independents and even dissident Democrats. Even more telling is that Trump is not unifying the Republican Party. As soon as Trump won the South Carolina, he proclaimed that he had never seen the Republican Party more united. As Rather explains, that’s not really true.
He writes:
NBC’s “Meet The Press” this morning characterized Donald Trump’s South Carolina primary victory as “delivering a crushing blow to [Nikki] Haley in her home state on Saturday, trouncing her by 20 points with nearly 60 percent of the vote. The former president dominated nearly every key group.”
While he did indeed win handily, a deep dive into the numbers provides some interesting context.
The part of the story missing from many news reports is that Trump is slipping from his 2020 numbers. His support is strongest among his MAGA base, which pollsters put at no more than 33% of the electorate. Clearly, he will need more than MAGA to win the White House again.
President Biden won the South Carolina Democratic primary with 96.2% of the vote. Trump, who is essentially an incumbent up against a novice at running for national office, could not muster even 60% of his party’s vote. Exit polls from Saturday night should have GOP leaders nervous.
The makeup of South Carolina’s Republican voters does not mirror the country. They are heavily weighted with hard-right “conservatives,” older, white, male, evangelical election deniers. Trump won overwhelmingly among them. But Haley won among independents, moderates, and those who care about foreign policy. And that’s the crux of it.
To win the presidency again, Trump will need to bring all Republicans into the tent. Gallop estimates that 41% of the electorate identifies as Republican. Then it gets really tough. He has to convince a large number of independents and Democrats to vote for him. But how?
- Not by favoring a 16-week national abortion ban
- Not by threatening to pull out of NATO
- Not by defunding Ukraine and supporting Putin’s invasion
- Not by promising “ultimate and absolute revenge” against his political opponents
- Not by refusing to accept the results of elections he’s lost
- Not by promising to be a dictator on day one of his second term
Not by saying things like: “These are the stakes of this election. Our country is being destroyed, and the only thing standing between you and its obliteration is me.”
Trump is winning primaries while underperforming. Dan Pfeiffer, a former adviser to President Obama and current host of “Pod Save America,” writes: “You cannot win the White House with the coalition that Trump is getting in these primaries. He must expand his coalition, persuade people who aren’t already on board and get beyond the Big Lie-believing MAGA base. Through three primary contests, Trump has gained no ground.”
Polls also indicate a majority of voters in swing states would be unwilling to vote for Trump if he’s convicted of a crime. That could happen as soon as April or May.
As Axios writes: “If America were dominated by old, white, election-denying Christians who didn’t go to college, former President Trump would win the general election in as big of a landslide as his sweep of the first four GOP contests.” Fortunately, it is not. America is a rich tapestry of heritages, races, and creeds. Immigrants have long been one of our strengths.
But the likely GOP nominee continues to feed fears about immigration using language tailored to his MAGA base. “They’re coming from Asia, they’re coming from the Middle East, coming from all over the world, coming from Africa, and we’re not going to stand for it … They’re destroying our country,” Trump said Saturday at CPAC, a conference of extreme-right Trump supporters.
“No, Mr. Trump, they’re not,” is the answer of many Americans. There is strong public opinion that what is tearing our country apart is the divisiveness and rancor that comes from Trump, the Republican Party, and their right-wing media machine.
The mainstream press may begin to offer more of this context and perspective as we get deeper into the presidential campaign. One of the things Steady was created to do was offer reasoned context and perspective to news stories. This writing is an example.
Trump remains a real and present threat to win the presidency again in November. But that is not assured. Not nearly, as a deep analysis of early primary results indicates.
There is still a long way to go and many rivers to cross for both major candidates.

“He has to convince a large number of independents and Democrats to vote for him. But how?
“Not by saying things like: “These are the stakes of this election. Our country is being destroyed, and the only thing standing between you and its obliteration is me.”
All due respect, Mr. Rather, he WILL continue to talk like that.
He will continue with over the top superlatives in nuclear terms.
He will continue to characterizing in gross and demeaning terms everyone else from his own former cabinet to a reporter with a disability to a female judge to… and only he can save America from them.
He will continue to campaign as the reality tv game show host where he is abusive to participants and victim of “the system” (remember, he said he is just like black persons in America and they should relate with him).
And most significant to his magnetism (not charisma for sure) with supporters, billionaires, the guy ticked off at a red light on a no-traffic Sunday or a too-long too-slow grocery line and sorry, many in the media —
… … … he WILL CONTINUE TO HOWL AT THE MOON – BE THE VICTIM THEY CAN RELATE TO —- convince the millions who respond with “THAT’S the guy I want calling the shots against all the government regulations and the long wait at the DMV.”
Mr. Rather
He will convince people by “not saying… x, y, and z”
No, he WILL CONTINUE TO SNOOKER and convince people if NO ONE (reporters and challengers) ASKS FOLLOW UP QUESTIONS, MAKE HIM ANSWER WITH DETAILS, not generalizations and characterizations, and ASK “How does this help independent and uncertain Democrat voter – specifically – in detail”
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You are correct. However, expecting the so-called liberal media to ask follow-up questions is like expecting the Republicans to show us their fantastic (but super secret) plan to replace Obamacare. The media is absolutely not going to ask follow-up questions, since the typical political reporter has the journalistic skills of Maggie Haberman, stenographer to Trump. And like Maggie Haberman, those reporters benefit when they act as useful idiots to the Republicans who give them “leaks” that just happen to support the right wing narrative they want to appear in mainstream newspapers.
NYT: Today former president Trump offered to sell the Brooklyn Bridge to his supporters. Trump’s supporters went wild with delight, knowing they would soon own the Brooklyn Bridge. “Just another great thing Trump is doing, letting each of us own this great American symbol”, said 45 year old mom and regular churchgoer Mary Smith, who like the many other real Americans who adore Trump, was thrilled at this news. Partisan Democrats claimed that the Brooklyn Bridge wasn’t for sale.
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Trump is so incredibly beloved and his rallies are so popular that you had to find a skit on Italian television to support your point?
Just saying, if I said that everyone in the country except for the people who got their degree at Trump University knows that Trump is a con man who stole money from his supporters who enrolled at Trump University, and then linked to a French television skit making fun of Trump to prove my point, maybe Trump supporters would find it very convincing, but no one with a brain would do so, “Laura”.
Are Trump trolls so desperate they are now resorting to using skits on foreign tv?
I hear Russian tv had a skit making fun of Biden, too.
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I do not think Traitor Trump is capable of changing his tune. He is trapped in the head of a sociopathic malignant narcissist.
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