Clyde_Style wrote:Stannis wrote:I'm still not feeling confident Trump will lose in 2020.
Like mentioned before, Biden is getting little to no media coverage. I myself almost forget that he is running for president in the midst of all this chaos.
I also think this race will come down to Pennsylvania which will be a red.
It's going to be a pretty damn close race, but I think Trump wins barely. My predication:
https://www.270towin.com/maps/Axjkm
I see some potentially flawed assumptions with some states in that map, but instead of dissecting it, I'd note that the most recent GOP primaries have had significant signs of protest votes either for other candidates or non-commits.
In NM, Trump was the only one of the ballot, 8.7% voted uncommitted. That's 13,741 Republicans making the time to show their disapproval.
In Indiana, Bill Weld got 8.2% of the vote and 11.8% in Maryland. That is 87,000 Republicans saying they are not down with Trump even though Weld dropped out a long time ago.
In PA, the numbers were Bill Weld got 5.2% from 52,132 voters and Roque De La Fuente got 1.6% from 16,166 GOP primary voters.
There were a few other states, but those are all from June 2 this past week.
Trump's support is eroding. Yes, the law and order thing will work for a small swath of voters on the fence, but the trends are towards defections he can't afford regardless of the response to looting.
I'm very anti-violence as a response and am concerned about it being used against us, but I still see lots of cracks in Trump's support.
The anti-Trump stance by senior military officials this past week was unprecedented. Now Colin Powell is voting for Biden too. This will definitely pick off some more Trump voters. This has never happened and many of these men are esteemed by military and ex-military that may have voted for Trump before.
Professional fence sitters in the GOP Senate known for speaking out both sides of their mouth are now hedging their bets by saying they don't know if they will be able to back Trump in November.
I want Trump to be the GOP nominee, because one of my biggest concerns is they may try to replace him and put a coherent human being in his place and use their delegates to nominate a bastard like Tom Cotton for president.
I think Trump's base amongst civilians and his power base within the establishment are two entirely different things.
Trump will not lose the support of his rabid base in the general population. They're not going anywhere.
But Trump is now in danger of losing his power base in DC and if that crumbles it will likely play out in real time. That collapse in support will manifest in days or a week, not months.
And Trump can't win without the GOP establishment and his army of gun toting fanatics alone.
So the story this Summer is whether or not Trump is pushed out. There is clearly a scenario where Mitch goes to Trump and says resign, otherwise we'll all embarrass you by publicly disavowing you. It's a power move that could blow up in Mitch's face and he knows it, because he also can't afford to alienate Trump's Q Nation.
But Trump will probably flip them all off because he knows indictments are waiting for him as soon as he leaves the safety of the presidency and he probably figures it is better to roll the dice and maybe win. The only way I see him agreeing to a resignation is if the GOP can convince any state attorney generals ready to indict Trump to drop most pending charges against him. And I think that is also a no go.
But there is definitely a weakening of the power base of Trump unfolding in real time now. And he can't win if the GOP fractures and abandons him. There are already too many Republicans rebelling individually and the Q fanatics are not enough for him to win.
trump strike team has taken Ls in recent elections. including the 2019 1st congressional district in SC that went to D joe cunningham over katie arrington, who thought she had it locked.






















Companies downsize all the time. Things change.