The Iowa strategy employed by Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) seems to be paying off. He sat quietly on the sidelines and let Donald Trump and Ben Carson suck up all the oxygen, figuring, correctly as it appears, that when they started to collapse, he would pick up their support. According to new CBS/YouGov polls, Cruz is now #2 in Iowa and he is tied with Carson for #3 in New Hampshire. In South Carolina he is #4. Here are the numbers:
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While Trump hasn't lost much, Carson is dropping in Iowa and New Hampshire. He is largely supported by evangelicals, who are much more numerous in Iowa than in New Hampshire, and as they begin to desert him as a result of all the outrageous things he has been saying, they are gravitating to Cruz, just as Cruz had expected. (V)
Nationally, evangelicals are not as numerous as they are in Iowa, so their defection from Carson to Cruz is not so noticeable. In a WaPo/ABC poll Trump and Carson are still #1 and #2 as they were last month. Here are the results.
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| Rank | Candidate | Pct |
| 1 | Donald Trump | 32% |
| 2 | Ben Carson | 22% |
| 3 | Marco Rubio | 11% |
| 4 | Ted Cruz | 8% |
| 5 | Jeb Bush | 6% |
| 6 | Carly Fiorina | 4% |
| 7 | Rand Paul | 3% |
| 7 | Mike Huckabee | 3% |
| 7 | John Kasich | 3% |
| 10 | Chris Christie | 2% |
| 11 | Rick Santorum | 1% |
| 12 | Lindsey Graham | 1% |
| George Pataki | <1% | |
| Jim Gilmore | <1% | |
What is fairly consistent across the four polls above is that the key players are Trump, Carson, Rubio, Cruz, and Bush. Also noteworthy here is that nowhere does Trump top 35%. That seems to be his ceiling as he is unlikely to pick up much support when the likes of George Pataki and Jim Gilmore finally give up. He is not a typical second choice. Either you love him or you hate him. You don't settle for him. Despite the Fox poll cited below, you don't win general elections with 1/3 of the Republican vote.
Chris Cillizza, a respected political analyst at the Washington Post, published his list of likely Republican nominees today. From most likely to least likely it is: Rubio, Trump, Cruz, Carson, Bush, Kasich, and Christie. Our list has Cruz and Trump switched and Carson much further down—and that was before he began saying things that completely disqualified him. We think Cillizza is taking Carson's polling much too seriously and discounting how much the Republican establishment will do to take him down if he begins to get close to the nomination. (V)
Fox News has released a new poll in which they reveal that six members of the Republican field—Donald Trump, Ben Carson, Jeb Bush, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX), and Gov. Chris Christie—would defeat Hillary Clinton in a head-to-head matchup, while a seventh—Carly Fiorina—is in a statistical tie.
Who does Fox think it is fooling? Well, based on the Nielsens, we know who they think they're fooling. But does the network really believe that a candidate who cannot even make the main stage at the GOP debates would handily defeat Hillary Clinton? Probably it does not. In the end, the poll is only useful for one purpose: As a reminder of how to think about general election polls at this point in the process (and, in many ways, throughout the process). A few points worth remembering:
Put another way: It is instructive that the map at the top of this page will not switch to the presidential horse race until after the nominees are known. And for good reasons. (Z)
Donald Trump launched his presidential campaign with a screed against Mexican immigrants, and continues to return to that well. This weekend's target was black people. On Saturday, he tweeted a graphic that "reveals"—among other things—that most murders of white people in America are at the hands of black people. The problem is that the graphic, the work of the obviously-fake "Crime Statistics Bureau," is a fabrication (the Washington Post article has the correct numbers, to the extent that they are known). This follows on the heels of an incident where Trump supporters assaulted a black protestor at a Trump rally. The Donald's response: "Maybe he should have been roughed up. It was disgusting what he was doing."
Trump also found time for some anti-Muslim rhetoric this weekend. Several times, including in an interview with George Stephanopoulos, he insisted that he saw thousands of American Muslims cheering on their rooftops after the 9/11 attacks. As Stephanopoulos pointed out, and as several media outlets have since verified, that simply did not happen. Indeed, Trump's certainty that he is right says less about what actually happened, and more about the manner in which he perceives Muslims and imagines their behavior. As anyone who studies memory will affirm, recollections like this are constructed and re-constructed over and over by the human mind until the memory is not "as it was" but instead "how I think it should have been."
Trump is doing very well with his demagoguery thus far, and so it is not surprising that he continues to double down on it. However, he might take note of an incident that took place at the Latin Grammys last week. Several artists took advantage of the spotlight the event afforded in order to exhort the audience "don't vote for the racists." Trump surely doesn't care what happens at the Latin Grammys, but he should. To be elected president, it is not enough to capture the white vote—a bare minimum of 40% of the Latino vote is also necessary. Failing that, he will need a much larger percentage of Asian-Americans and blacks than Romney got, which is unlikely. These communities are not going to forget what he has said in the next 11 months. So that 40% is looking pretty tenuous. And if a Trump candidacy motivates otherwise apathetic voters to go to the polls in order to defeat him, then the math gets even worse, both in terms of the presidency, and downticket. Indeed, the damage could easily linger beyond this election—if the Republican Party acquires a "party of racists" label, it could be generational. It should not surprise us, then, that the Republican establishment is now mobilizing to defeat Trump. Beyond being an almost certain loser, he is an absolute disaster for their brand. (Z)
Despite his having signed a piece of paper saying that if he lost the Republican nomination he would not run as an independent, Donald Trump is once again talking about running as an independent if he fails to get the Republican nomination. Why the change of heart? As we reported here Saturday, a group has been formed with the specific goal of taking down Trump. It is collecting money from anonymous donors and will run attack ads against Trump as soon as it has the funds. Trump's announcement is pushback on that project. He is basically saying: "Don't play with fire. If you use dirty tricks to get rid of me, I'll run as an independent and elect Hillary."
Actually, there are two Super PACs that are going to go after Trump, the neutral one run by Liz Mair and New Day for America, which is run by friends of Gov. John Kasich (R-OH) (which we mentioned on Friday). The latter group picked up 10 new donors in the past two days and seems to be getting off the ground first. While Super PACs may not coordinate with candidates, they may coordinate with each other, and may well yet do that. (V)
Much of Donald Trump's support comes from people who feel the country is not doing well and getting worse, but is that objectively true? A study from the OECD shows that on some metrics, the U.S. is definitely number one. These include GDP, per-capita income, and having the five biggest companies in the world. But in overall well-being, the U.S. doesn't even make the top 10. It is 15th. Some of the factors that pull the U.S. down include:
While most people don't know the global statistics, they feel all these problems and it generates a sense of anxiety. Trump has been able to exploit that feeling brilliantly so far. (V)
Politics, as they say, makes strange bedfellows. In some ways, that is the defining characteristic of the American electoral system: Because a presidential victory requires an absolute majority in the Electoral College, the Republicans and Democrats (and the Whigs, Federalists, and Democratic-Republicans before them) are/were compelled to squeeze many different competing factions into the same tent. Sometimes a coalition becomes unworkable, and a party is forced to slowly (or quickly) reinvent itself. When this happens, scholars call it a "realigning election."
The current splintered Republican field, with different groups of candidates drawing support from very different factions, suggests that the party's coalition may no longer be tenable. So will 2016 be a realigning election for the GOP? Stanley B. Greenberg, writing in the Washington Post, thinks so. The money quote:
It is easy to imagine, then, that after the coming shattering election, some Republican leaders will repudiate this campaign's anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim appeals and actively embrace the United States as an immigrant nation. Other leaders might accept the sexual revolution and the new gender roles and work to help the modern working family. Others might embrace again the need for national investment in education and modern infrastructure.
It is an interesting piece, though of course it assumes information not yet in evidence, most obviously that the Republicans suffer a major defeat in 2016. If they win, or even if it is close, the election will be seen as an affirmation of the GOP's status quo. It is also worth noting that many analysts wrote similar pieces in 2012, and realignment did not come to pass. Heck, in the Gilded Age (1870s-1900s), analysts were writing articles like this about the Democratic Party for decades. If the Republicans ultimately nominate someone like Rubio and he wins or comes close, there won't be a realignment, but if they nominate Trump or Carson and he is crushed, all hell will break loose. (Z)