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Saturday, August 27, 2016

What if Donald Trump decides to fire himself?




What if Donald Trump decides to fire himself?


By
LeRoy Goldman
Guest Columnist
Asheville Citizen-Times 
 August 26, 2016



What if Donald Trump’s most startling surprise of his candidacy is yet to come, and soon? What if he simply throws in the towel? What if he turns his role on “The Apprentice” upside down and fires himself? Ridiculous, you say. Will never happen. Impossible. Perhaps, but let’s think about what might evoke such a thunderbolt from Trump, and what the implications of it would be for the presidential election.

I’ve been intrigued with presidential elections since 1948. All of the 17 presidential elections since then have had something in common that is absent in this year’s contest. All of them presented the American people with a choice between one or two qualified nominees. Sadly, that is not the case this year. You don’t have to take my word for that depressing reality. Polling data makes it abundantly clear that an overwhelming majority of Americans are opposed to both Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton.

Most Americans don’t think Trump is adequately prepared to discharge the duties of the presidency and are deeply troubled that he demonstrates little interest in modifying his penchant for shooting from the hip or the lip. At the same time most Americans don’t trust Hillary Clinton. They see her as secretive, manipulative, and obsessed with her ambition to become president of the United States. Her persona disturbingly conjures up memories of Richard Nixon who, like Hillary Clinton, had impressive political credentials, experience, and moxie, but who also had disqualifying and fatal character flaws that led America to the brink of a constitutional crisis.

Now there’s no chance that Clinton will step aside, if for no other reason than the fact that it’s clear she’s on her way to an overwhelming victory on Nov. 8. But there’s a chance that same reality might lead Trump to declare political bankruptcy and bow out.

Let’s talk about bankruptcy, a redemptive tool that has benefited the nation in general and Donald Trump in particular. Bankruptcy laws in America date back to the 19th century. They allow businesses and individuals to put bad decisions behind them and make a fresh start.

Donald Trump knows this process and its benefits well. Over the past quarter century he has benefited from the bankruptcy process at least six times. Five of the six bankruptcies involved Trump properties in the hard-hit gaming industry, the other was the Plaza Hotel in Midtown Manhattan. Bankruptcy is a way of cutting one’s losses, avoiding permanent stigma, and moving on.

Assume that over the Labor Day weekend Trump sits down with his trusted inner sanctum of advisers, meaning that he sits down with himself, and says, “How do I turn this campaign around and win in November”? And then assume his answer is that it can’t be done. It can’t be done because he’s got no chance of winning any of the normally Democratic states, no chance of winning any of the eight swing states like North Carolina, and is in real jeopardy of losing several traditionally Republican states such as Georgia, Arizona, and/or Utah. He’s on an irreversible trajectory to becoming the Alf Landon of the 21st century.

At that point there are only two options, suffer an historic and humiliating defeat or get out. Were he to get out, then what?

For openers, vice presidential nominee Mike Pence does not automatically become the GOP’s standard bearer. In fact the process of selecting another nominee is governed by Rule 9 of the Republican National Committee. Rule 9 provides that either of two alternatives exist for filling such a vacancy. Either another Republican National Convention would have to occur or the Republican National Committee itself could select a new nominee.

It’s obvious that time would not permit the convening of another National Convention. Thus, the RNC would select a new nominee with RNC members from each state being entitled to cast the same number of votes that their state cast at the GOP Convention last July. The winner must receive a majority of the votes cast.

That process, if triggered, will be a brawl among Ted Cruz, Mitt Romney, Paul Ryan, and John Kasich. Any of them, excepting Cruz, would give the GOP a chance for victory in November, and, more importantly, would give the American people an opportunity to vote for someone qualified to be president.

But you’re sure this is impossible, right? Weren’t you just as sure six months ago that Donald Trump’s bid for the nomination was certain to fail?

LeRoy Goldman lives in Flat Rock and can be reached at:






Sunday, August 21, 2016

Electing a president-by-default


Electing a president-by-default



By LeRoy Goldman

Columnist
BlueRidgeNow.com
Times-News Online
Published: Sunday, August 21, 2016


Can you hear the fat lady singing? I can. It’s all 
over for The Donald.

Of course, I may be dead wrong. And, if so, I’ll have a lot of deserved egg on my face. But for what it’s worth, here’s my thinking on why I believe the race for the White House is over before it has been seriously engaged, before any debates between Trump and Hillary Clinton, and before the expenditure of north of a billion dollars on television advertising and the get-out-the-vote ground games by the two campaigns.

Remember, most Americans don’t usually begin to pay serious attention to the presidential election until after Labor Day. By then, the 2016 Olympics will be history, family vacations are over, and the kids are back in school.

The faceoff between Trump and Clinton breaks the mold in so many unprecedented ways that it renders conventional analysis almost useless. Let’s count the ways, saving the coup de grace for Trump’s ill-fated candidacy for last.

For openers, Trump is no Republican. In a CNN interview in 2015, he said, “I probably identify more as a Democrat.” And Trump has put his money where his mouth has been. He has contributed between $100,000-$250,000 to the Clinton Foundation, and he contributed to Clinton’s political campaigns in 2002, 2005, 2006 and 2007. At that time, he described Clinton as a “terrific woman” and went on to say, “I think Hillary would do a good job.”

Nonetheless, over the course of the past year, Trump has hijacked the Republican Party and become its presidential nominee. Understanding how and why are vital. The GOP has come apart at the seams. Its elected leaders and apparatchiks in Washington are despised by millions of rank-and-file Republicans.

And for good reason. In their arrogance, they have deluded themselves with the notion that they can do as they please, while thumbing their noses at those who sent them to Washington. Trump presented the GOP rank and file with an opportunity to vent their anger at their leadership by voting for him. And that’s just what they did.

The best way to grasp the gravity of the crisis facing the GOP is to understand that if the Republican Party had nominated Jeb Bush, Mitt Romney, Marco Rubio, John Kasich or Paul Ryan this year, they would have recaptured the White House this November. Any of those individuals would have painted an untrustworthy Clinton into a corner from which there would have been no escape.

Yet, had Trump not won the nomination, it is clear that the GOP would have nominated Ted Cruz. Against Clinton, he would have flamed out more spectacularly than will Trump. Let that bizarre reality sink it.

On the campaign trail, Trump has been nothing short of unhinged. Over the course of the past year, he has gone out of his way to deliberately and deeply offend women, Hispanics, Muslims and African-Americans. In addition to being morally reprehensible, such a strategy is politically suicidal.

The white vote in presidential elections has been declining since 1992. Then it was 87 percent. In 2012, it had plummeted to 72 percent, and this year it’s projected to be 70 percent. Moreover, the Hispanic population in America is growing rapidly because it is younger than the white population. The GOP can’t survive if it permanently alienates Hispanics, which is exactly what it is doing.

About two weeks ago, a group of 50 former national security officials who served Republican presidents co-signed an open letter saying Trump is unfit to have control of the nation’s nuclear arsenal. They stated that “we are convinced that he would be a dangerous president and would put at risk our country’s national security and well-being.” They also stated, “Most fundamentally, Mr. Trump lacks the character, values, and experience to be president.” This from Republicans!

Since President Dwight Eisenhower was elected in 1952, six presidential elections have been blowouts: Adlai Stevenson was the sacrificial lamb in 1952 and 1956, Barry Goldwater in 1964, George McGovern in 1972, Walter Mondale in 1984, and Michael Dukakis in 1988. Each only received between 37 percent and 45 percent of the popular vote. The Electoral College results were even worse for all of them. And, unlike Trump, all of them were considered qualified to be president.

In a normal presidential election, each side attempts to demonize the other in the minds of the voters. This one’s not normal. It’s nuts. Trump has systematically demonized himself in the eyes of the voters. He’s half narcissist and half masochist. He will be demolished on Nov. 8.

And that will leave us with a president-by-default who in very different ways is also unfit to lead the nation. Hopefully, the fat lady will return for an encore performance in four years.

LeRoy Goldman is a Flat Rock resident. He can be reached at:









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