Gus Van Horn blog Posted June 23, 2016 Report Share Posted June 23, 2016 Doug Kass, who writes at RealClear Markets, and correctly predicted a Trump-Clinton presidential race back in December, has made the following interesting amendment to that same prediction: Surprise No. 16: Trump Bows OutDonald Trump bows out of the presidential race some time between the Republican National Convention and Election Day.This would be a welcome development in several ways, including making Trump far less credible in any future run and making it easy to contest claims that Clinton has some kind of "mandate." Furthermore, it might deter other, similar, militantly ignorant, anti-intellectual-and-proud-of-it politicians, at least for a time.But why does Kass think this will occur? I think his best argument is that Trump has a "ceiling" of support that even he will have to admit, at least to himself, when that ceiling starts impacting his net worth: t's easy to see Trump falling even further behind Clinton in the polls. Embarrassing defeats in the first two televised debates on Sept. 26 and Oct. 9 could then lead to a more than 10% polling deficit for The Donald.If that happens, we could foresee Trump's war chest failing to attract funds and dwindling rapidly. Let's also assume that he grows increasingly reluctant to self-fund. Kass goes on to predict at least the House remaining in Republican hands and, fortunately, more "gridlock" with Clinton in office.But Kass misses a further ramification of his prediction: a possible boon to the Libertarian candidate, ex-Republican Gary Johnson, whom a couple of fellow travelershave weighed supporting (with strong reservations, even as a protest vote). Johnson has been hovering around ten percent in the polls, siphons support from each major candidate, and would appear to be a logical choice to educated fiscal conservatives. It is also not hard to imagine a significant portion of Trump's voters -- especially those whose primary motivation is to stop Hillary Clinton from reaching office -- defecting to Johnson as the most viable alternative. Suddenly, the drawing-room debate about Johnson and the Libertarian Party (which I cannot support) may morph into one with electoral consequence. -- CAV Link to Original Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nicky Posted June 23, 2016 Report Share Posted June 23, 2016 Republicans are going to have trouble holding on to Congress no matter what, this fall. The Presidential elections cause higher turnout in congressional elections. In a Hillary landslide, Dem congressional candidates benefit, as many Republican voters stay home because they don't support Trump. And if Trump were to drop out, then it would be even worse. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.