Why Donald Trump Surged in the Polls (And Why It Matters)

Submitted by Robert W. Merry via The National Interest,

Donald Trump is not a pleasant man. He is egotistical, vain, bombastic, often mean-spirited. He revels in his financial superiority, which he conflates with human goodness. When he contorts his mouth into a kind of tube as he talks, you brace yourself for something outrageous—and it nearly always emerges as expected. His likability quotient, at least in terms of his public persona, is down somewhere in single digits.

And yet he has just taken hold of the American political system by the neck and doesn’t seem inclined to let go anytime soon. The political elites don’t know what to do or say about his sudden rise in the polls. The elite media default to their favorite hobby horse of political analysis—that any backlash to the current wave of immigration will simply destroy the Republican Party earlier than it would otherwise be destroyed, which is inevitable anyway so why bother?

The latest poll [4], by The Economist and YouGov, has Trump leading the field of GOP presidential candidates with 15 percent, four percentage points ahead of former Florida governor Jeb Bush. Though the YouGov polling methodology is sometimes criticized, this result matches other polls, including a recent North Carolina survey that has Trump at 16 percent, again four percentage points ahead of Bush. There is widespread speculation that Trump ultimately will initiate an independent presidential candidacy and shake up the country’s politics in the general election.

So here we have a hard-working, conventional Republican candidate in Jeb Bush, who has amassed a strong record as a serious politician over many years and has the benefit of a hallowed political name. And suddenly he finds himself second fiddle to an upstart industrialist with an acid tongue, no political record, and a penchant for offensive remarks.

What’s going on here?

First, let’s stipulate that Donald Trump is not going to be president. Neither is he going to get the Republican nomination. But he has a capacity to be a serious political spoiler in the looming presidential campaign, and he seems bent on spoiling as much of the political establishment as he can. And that explains his current standing. Large sectors of the American electorate are disgusted with the political establishment and will welcome any force that takes it on.

This disgust stems from one highly emotional issue and a cluster of other issues that add up to a crisis of the old order. And yet the political establishment doesn’t want to address the highly emotional issue in any serious way and operates as if there is no gathering crisis of the American system.

The highly emotional issue is, of course, immigration. Consider the state of play on this issue as the presidential campaign looms: Americans have nearly 12 million illegal immigrants in their midst, people who violated our laws to come here and violate them further every day that they stay. We have a president who granted many illegals legal status through a contorted series of executive actions, considered by many to have been unconstitutional. The governmental elite has been intermittently hapless and complacent in the face of this crisis, and large segments of the cultural elite welcome with great enthusiasm this turn of events, either because of humanitarian impulses or because they cherish the idea of a major political realignment in the country (or both).

And, quite aside from illegal immigration, many Americans see large waves of legal immigration as a threat to the country’s capacity of absorption and to its cultural heritage, since most of the immigrants come from regions far removed from the European homeland that spawned the American political and cultural identity.

The issue has four components.

First, there are the economic implications—the impact of such widespread immigration on jobs and salaries.

 

Second, there is the question of sovereignty—whether a nation that can’t control its borders is truly a self-respecting nation.

 

Then there are the political implications—the growing concept that white Americans, declining in relative terms as a population segment, are going to be overwhelmed by people of color, who are expanding inexorably, in large measure because of immigration but also because of differential birthrates.

 

Finally, there are the cultural implications—the idea, shared by many Americans, that the country’s cultural identity will erode progressively in the face of the immigration inundation.

Of these components, the economic implications get most of the attention. Sovereignty is largely ignored or pooh-poohed by the cultural and journalistic elites. But many Americans feel that a country that can’t control its borders is, to that extent, a diminished country; and that citizenship in such a country is of diminished value. As for the political implications, most of the media and the country’s political elites, including growing numbers of Republicans, view the outcome as now determined. Republicans will have to soften their immigration stance, they are told, if they want a sufficient share of the Hispanic vote to win elections. But of course this will simply result in growing numbers of people in the electorate with a disinclination to vote Republican.

But the most significant component—and the most emotional—is the cultural issue. For many Americans, the fate of America’s cultural identity is not a matter of mere frivolous concern, as many liberals argue. It is fundamental, which is why it unleashes strong emotions in many part of the country. And these emotions are heightened by the phenomenon of more recent immigrants being increasingly reluctant to shed their own distinctive elements of heritage and increasingly inclined to shun the concept of assimilation.

What we see here is a huge gap in the sensibilities of large numbers of voters and the sensibilities of the elites charged with setting the direction of the country. When the people no longer trust their elites, you can bet that serious political and societal disruption is on the horizon. In a democratic system such as ours, that will translate into rebel candidates connecting with populist voters.

And that’s what we see in the emergence of Donald Trump, coming forth in all his bombast and crudity to slam the elites for having allowed this immigration crisis to gain ever greater force in the American polity and drive a wedge through the nation. It may seems surprising that such a man could have any kind of impact on the early presidential race, for however brief a time, but viewed in the context of the broader immigration crisis it isn’t surprising at all.

But Trump is getting further traction with his vicious attacks on our era’s conventional politicians, particularly Bush and Hillary Clinton, as representing elites that are entirely vested in the nation’s current political and economic system and who will never break down the structures contributing so powerfully to the country’s current intertwined problems.

The slow-growth economy, the burgeoning inequality crisis, the growing global threat of Islamist extremism, America’s declining position in the world, expanding public debt, the looming threat of governmental unfunded liabilities—all these are products of the country’s current elites on Wall Street, in Washington, in public employee unions, in the mainstream media. They arose on the watch of the country’s post-Cold War politicians, most notably Hillary Clinton’s husband and Jeb Bush’s brother. Are these the people, many Americans are asking, to lead us out of the current political morass?

Trump says no. He says no with his usual crude rhetoric and with copious uses of words such as “stupid” and “stupidity” to bring home his point. But he’s getting his point across nonetheless because of the perceived failures of the nation’s elites.

He will fade in the primaries eventually, of course, though he will generate a lot of political pyrotechnics in the process. If he runs as an independent candidate in the general election, he will pull perhaps 12 percent of the vote, well below Ross Perot’s 19 percent in 1992 and even below George Wallace’s 14 percent in 1968. But in the meantime he will be speaking what many Americans will see as truth to entrenched power. And it is that entrenched power that is generating the concerns and angers that are fueling this unanticipated political whirlwind.  

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39 Comments
kokoda
kokoda
July 12, 2015 2:55 pm

“o here we have a hard-working, conventional Republican candidate in Jeb Bush, who has amassed a strong record as a serious politician over many years and has the benefit of a hallowed political name.”

What a bunch of trash. All we need is another Bush or Clinton. Any non-career politician individual is the only choice to at least give U.S. a chance. Jeb Bush will suck Corporatist dick, like the rest of the political scum.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
July 12, 2015 3:32 pm

You have a sharp eye, Koko. I almost felt sorry for poor Jeb left in the shadows with a cheap bouquet of handpicked daisies.

Southern Sage
Southern Sage
July 12, 2015 3:38 pm

Good article but it understates the situation. We are one financial crisis away from all out chaos. as for the so-called “conventional” politicians, more and more Americans have stopped merely loathing them. Now they hate them and all they stand for. The day will come when this is turned into killing rage.

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
July 12, 2015 3:42 pm

Beg your pardon but you’re missing one of the major components of what would otherwise have been a great article, and that is border security in light of the “war on terror”.

If we are in such grave danger from terrorists around the world that we would spend literally Trillions of dollars guarding against them, then why the fuck is our Southern border wide open to anyone who wants to illegally enter?

Another facet is Hispanics who are here legally generally aren’t in favor of illegal immigration. Even they differentiate between the legals and illegals. I know this to be true because that’s what my Hispanic friends tell me.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
July 12, 2015 4:01 pm

Trump has surged in the polls for one reason and one reason only – because he’s the only candidate who has given voice to the blindingly obvious fact that we need to seal the US-Mexico border with an unbroken virtually impenetrable fence.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
July 12, 2015 4:06 pm

Ps, as long as no other candidate pledges to build The Fence, I’ll be for Trump. If that means some RINO gets the nomination and Hillary wins the general, well that’s just too fucking bad. Because Walker and the rest will have had their chance to come out for sealing the border with the fence. Choosing instead weasel words like “enhanced border security” just means they want the border left wide open – which, as Westcoaster said, is stupid from a security point of view as well as assisting turning what’s left of the US into a banana republic.

NickelthroweR
NickelthroweR
July 12, 2015 4:07 pm

Greetings,

I agree with Westcoaster. I’ve been telling people for years that the absolute best way to know that the war on terror is nothing but a hoax is the fact that our Southern border is wide open. It just doesn’t make sense.

To ride public transit you must submit to radiation and a naked body scan – border is wide open.
Our entire digital footprint is monitored by the government – border is wide open.
The State can seize our assets without probable cause – border is wide open.
The MIC is spending as much as the rest of the world combined – border is wide open.
The USA has 22 different intelligence agencies – border is wide open.

Humans and drugs seem to be flowing over our borders but how can this be? If the dangers of terrorism or lone wolf hate crimes are so great that we must give up most of our civil liberties then how is it possible to have a wide open border? Wouldn’t that have been the very first thing that should have been locked down?

Clearly these open borders benefit TPTB otherwise we wouldn’t have ’em and it shows that the GWOT is a silly hoax.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
July 12, 2015 4:18 pm

It was Cesar Chavez’ contention that immigrant labor allowed the exploitation of both legal and illegal field workers. While he is a national hero to older Hispanics, he does not put tortillas on the table for new immigrants working in the fields in Texas, Arizona and California.

Keeping the Tortilla Curtain porous insures the flow of cheap labor. Gangsters have taken advantage of this flow of traffic northward to collect ‘quotas’ or fees for passage and to smuggle drugs into the USA.

Many American consumers who enjoy cheap marijuana or heroin from Mexico will rejoice that their patron saint of weed has escaped once more. If he is ever killed, El Chapo Guzman will be canonized as the patron saint of illegal drugs – San Chapo perhaps.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
July 12, 2015 4:21 pm

Coyote, I believe that in the past you’d advocated an open border. Are you coming around to see reason?

flash
flash
July 12, 2015 4:29 pm

I stopped reading here:

“So here we have a hard-working, conventional Republican candidate in Jeb Bush, who has amassed a strong record as a serious politician over many years and has the benefit of a hallowed political name.”

Spoil it Donald spoil it..go third party all the way…..the steel toed boot to to political insignificance is exactly what the party of liars , frauds and thieve needs and wholly deserves.

JBES! & RES!

As Florida Governor, Jeb Bush Bought Land From Timber Company That Later Paid Him $1 Million

http://www.ibtimes.com/florida-governor-jeb-bush-bought-land-timber-company-later-paid-him-1-million-1974360

Anonymous
Anonymous
July 12, 2015 4:33 pm

“…………. we need to seal the US-Mexico border with an unbroken virtually impenetrable fence”

Iska,

A fence is too expensive.

Landmines are cheaper and more effective.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
July 12, 2015 4:42 pm

Define open border. I might have said that I wanted an immigration reform bill passed. I mentioned that 1 in 6 Hispanics knows of an illegal or has an illegal relative. I related that living on the border, we viewed the other side with suspicion, they had slurs for us and we had slurs for them. We got drafted, they didn’t. Yet after the war, they came in and grabbed the same jobs available to us. They snapped up the chicks because they were more aggresive, seeing an instant ticket to a green card or collecting on the food stamps. We are Americans of Mexican descent but they see us as privileged, snooty, uppity gringos who were spawned by losers – wetbacks. While they remained loyal sons of Mexico.

My nephew relates: I agree with the “Hispanic Americans” part of comment.
The one good memory (eye opener) I have about claiming to be Megzican is when i went to Megzigo as a teen and was “robbed” by the police. I remember the cop saying to us after taking our money…”ahora si pinche Gringos larguense con su papa ( alright now [fucking Gringos] get the hell going to your daddy..”)
So long story short…Megzigo doesn’t recognize us “Hispanic Americans” of Megzican descent because they have no documents regarding our birth nor immigration status. So for those that say “i’m Megzican…prove it”..

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
July 12, 2015 5:05 pm

Iska, I didn’t come here as an infant, I came here as a grown man full of political cynicism and a desire to see the lying Democrats come through on their promise to pass an immigration bill. Along the way I came to accept Billy’s position regarding blacks with reluctance but hey, he’s a good old boy. I grew up with a suspicion of fast talking Yankees, most of my teachers were from the South.

Billy’s not the only person I’ve learned from, like Stucky, I like all individuals on their own merit and really don’t dislike any general group of folks. I learned from my old boss to side with the underdog whenever possible. And I learned from my old boss Phil to be careful who’s toes you step on, you could be working for that person next.

And my favorite teacher here is, of course, LLPOH who taught me to go for the jugular in any fight and never ever quit. I love that guy.

Billy
Billy
July 12, 2015 5:16 pm

Americans have nearly 12 million illegal immigrants in their midst, people who violated our laws to come here and violate them further every day that they stay

Bullshit.

They’ve been batting this “more than 11 million” shit around for more than 15 years. Are we supposed to believe that the numbers have stayed the same for more than 15 years?

It’s more like 30+ million. But they can’t admit that, so they go with the eternally-lower “more or less 11 million”….

The rest of this shit is just the OP sucking Bush dick.

Going back to my life of not caring… enjoy driving what’s left of the country into the ground…

Anonymous
Anonymous
July 12, 2015 5:16 pm

So far Donald Trump has not lied to America, he has told the truth.Hillary,does not know how to tell the truth,?.Hillary had Journalists roped off recently.Students locked in class rooms for appearances. This is shameful.Hillary needs a slice of humble pie , I think ‘The Donald “is just the man to serve it to her.

Bea Lever
Bea Lever
July 12, 2015 5:18 pm

Flash- If Donald Chump runs as third party candidate , it is guaranteed to put Cankles Clinton and the her spawn of satan husband back in the WH. You will be electing Hitlery if you cast a third party vote…….period.

Anonymous
Anonymous
July 12, 2015 5:24 pm

Bea,

If Hillary gets elected at least there will be Republican opposition to the liberal agenda, if Jeb gets elected there won’t.

Forgotten the Bush era already?

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
July 12, 2015 5:28 pm

Trump is just showing the cowed Republicans that Hispanics are not as sensitive to criticism as blacks are. They must girdle their loins and attack Hillary before Bill becomes president for a third term.

flash
flash
July 12, 2015 6:17 pm

Bea Lever says:
Flash- If Donald Chump runs as third party candidate , it is guaranteed to put Cankles Clinton and the her spawn of satan husband back in the WH. You will be electing Hitlery if you cast a third party vote…….period.

Exactly…and the end of the pseudo conservative party is all but guaranteed. The remnant can move from there..

Llpoh
Llpoh
July 12, 2015 6:18 pm

EC – jugular blood is the best tasting, as you have experienced yourself.

Mexicans are not stupid, unlike well, you know who.

kokoda
kokoda
July 12, 2015 7:41 pm

If Donald runs on a 3rd party ticket, yes, the Dem’s will win. But this is necessary for the career Rep politicians (Bonehead, McConnell, etc.) to leave and become extinct. Whether or not you like the Tea Party, they at least they are trying to set the Rep Party in a Conservative form.

A thought for all: Bonehead got rid of a Tea Party members on any influential committee, cuz they wouldn’t toe the elite establishment line.

As much as I despise Obama and the Dem’s, the country is lost with the current Rep Party leaders.

DRUD
DRUD
July 12, 2015 7:46 pm

I don’t know Mr Merry’s work but he is obviously a msm hack…the whole tone of the article is that Jeb and Hillary are the “real” candidates but stupid Americans are fed up with politicals as usual. Of course, one of the “real” candidates will win but Trump might cause quite the stir. No No No NO…the truth is that a few people have woken up, they are pissed and Trump seems like a slightly better option than a boight-and-sold party hack.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
July 12, 2015 8:36 pm

kokoda says: If Donald runs on a 3rd party ticket, yes, the Dem’s will win.

With this much interest on the Republican side, you know the Democrats are in a weak position.

Trump is wooing the black and Hispanic voters. If he succeeds, they will abandon the Democrats in droves. Lindsey Graham said the Democrats had a majority and didn’t lift a finger to pass an immigration bill that Harry Reid promised Nevada’s Hispanic voters in his reelection bid.

Then Obama’s leadership skills came into question when all he could do about race relations was to comment that, ‘he could have been my son’. Michelle appeared to protest more strongly when she held up a sign demanding the release of the African schoolgirls. This is exactly why real political leaders hone their skills starting in school board elections; waiting until you’re president is not the time to learn about leadership.

Overthecliff
Overthecliff
July 12, 2015 8:48 pm

Something to consider is that Trump has received endorsements from 2 powerful Republicans that I know of. Lucy Graham and John Boner. Both have been less than complimentary.

llpoh
llpoh
July 12, 2015 8:53 pm

EC – blacks will never leave the democratic side. Never. Free shit flows from that dem side of the force.

Anonymous
Anonymous
July 12, 2015 9:16 pm

The left seems absolutely terrified of Trump but not of the other Republicans.

That’s reason enough to support him.

Stucky
Stucky
July 12, 2015 10:36 pm

Jeb Bush is hard working and a serious candidate with a great name? Bwaaaahahahaha! I’m surprised he didn’t say — “And his dick tastes great, too!”.

So he says Trump can’t win … but he’s popular because people are “disgusted with the political establishment ” … followed by blah blah blah blah “analysis” …….. and basically concluding that that’s EXACTLY who the people will elect … someone with who they are disgruntled!!

He’s probably correct, for the brains of most Amerikans are composed of 99% Dark Matter. Bunch of stupid motherfuckers.

Just think of will NEVER vote for Trump; 95% of blacks and 90% of Spanish speakers, 101% of fags, and the usual Demfuk zombies. That means a SIGNIFICANT number of White Traitors … you know, the Obama voters … will have to turn away from the Darkie Force. Good luck wif dat!!

Frodus
Frodus
July 12, 2015 11:18 pm

Please try to remember the upset of the Republicans taking over both houses and how the polls showed other wise, remember the look on Chris Mathews face.

Never under estimate the anger of general electorate, change always comes slow but come it does.

Bush a hard worker ..HA! what a joke, Clinton will never make it to White House. Trump running as a 3rd party never gonna happen, he is a business man and uses the system to his advantage not to is disadvantage.

The RNC many try to make Bush the king maker but thing are changing to fast and he is and the RNC are to slow to make the Bush King again.

The anger is over flowing and getting worse by the day and will have real time consequences.

change is inevitable, the economical number are mathematically imposable to sustain, much like the current political system we have now.

As the American wallet gets smaller so does goes the political system, history demands it.

BEA LEVER
BEA LEVER
July 13, 2015 3:26 am

Just sit back and savor the stench of 8 years of Bill and Hitlery……….. but, but, that will clean up the Republicunt party and then we will all be happy again, really fucktards.

Please let me slit my wrists now cuz the thought of looking at Cankles and Bill for 8 fucking years after just puking my way through 8 fucking years of his royal chocolate drop Oreo is just more than I can take………………death where is thy sting?

Loopey, I’m beginning to believe you might be the last asshole with a brain and a backbone left here on TBP (Admin. excluded).

flash
flash
July 13, 2015 7:42 am

BL, you can’t be serious.. there is no lesser leftwing cankle, party stamp notwithstanding. Did spike you scotch with THE koolaid?

overthecliff
overthecliff
July 13, 2015 9:33 am

Trump is just a distraction in the political theater of the USA . It is all a sham and tpb promote the sham so the sheep keep thinking they are free. TPB have captured the presidency and congress and the courts and pretty much everything else. If they didn’t want Trump in the limelight the media would just pretend he didn’t exist.

Bea Lever
Bea Lever
July 13, 2015 2:03 pm

In other news today…………………………….

Top seller in Mexico are the Donald Trump pinatas. Damn, why didn’t we think of that except substitute Oreo for Trump. Every YT birthday party in the south for sure would not be complete without one. We coulda made millions. Oh wait……..Hitlery pinatas, yeah.

dc.sunsets
dc.sunsets
July 13, 2015 2:37 pm

If political choice actually promised to CHANGE anything, it wouldn’t be allowed.

Monger
Monger
July 13, 2015 7:15 pm

One other component would be , respect for the rules or law. you cannot tell someone to obey the law while millions of others do not and are not expected to. No, that nullify’s a person’s respect for the law quicker than shit. The end result will be lawlessness or draconian measures by the leaders to enforce some of the laws. Which feeds right back into not respecting or following the law.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
July 13, 2015 9:50 pm

Beauford, you can make you own piñata. It’s simply paper mache’ on a balloon, then covered with colorful crepe paper. The clay pots proved to be too dangerous.
I sometimes feel like making one of my favorite TBPers but the kids would be frightened.

No, that’s not Bruce Jenner, that’s Stucky.

BEA LEVER
BEA LEVER
July 13, 2015 10:54 pm

EC

Even dumb gringos know how to make a pinata . I’m just the messenger, saw that posted on Drudge. I guess Donald Chump is not real popular with the beaners.

I can’t think of any candidate that is promising to continue the FSA handouts like good old Oreo, boy he really knows how to trash a country.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
July 14, 2015 12:49 am

Beaners are easy. Bring some beer, everything is forgiven. And if you have a beer truck parked by the voting place, we’ll make sure to show up early and vote as many times as you like or until the beer runs out.