Nevyn has a great point about the initial impression being enough to jump start some campaigns.
However, look at the fundraising patterns for the 2008 presidential campaign (the last time the nominees were really uncertain). The good candidates got into the double digit millions fairly quickly (within 1 or 2 quarters of 2007).
https://en.wikipedia...ential_election
There is one quasi-parallel to a Trump-like figure in American state/national politics: Nelson Rockefeller.
The Imperial Nelson was one of the grandsons of John D. Rockefeller - one of the richest industrialists ever on the planet - and he actually had a decent set of skills for learning complex things fairly well and quickly - banking, Spanish language/culture/art, politics etc. Today, he'd probably be a Democrat, but back then he was a liberal Republican and plugged very well into that scene.
He became New York's governor in 1959 and stayed there until 1973 as a very, very powerful governor with huge, far-reaching remakings of political, social, urban and legal landscapes. In 1974, he became a Vice President for Gerald Ford.
However, in the time after 1959, Rockefeller really wanted to be President. He lost the 1960 primary handily to Nixon, who then lost to Kennedy. He was doing extremely well in the 1964 primary run-up, but his divorce, remarriage to a divorcee with 4 kids and subsequent birth of one more kid ruined him in the eyes of conservative Republican voters. He lost the primary bitterly to Goldwater, who ran a terrible campaign vs. Lyndon Johnson. In 1968, he waffled too long and Nixon beat him and Reagan (who would eventually be president) handily.
https://en.wikipedia...tional_politics
These are fascinating stories behind why Nelson never became the #1 Republican despite huge generational wealth, very high popularity (besides the divorce thing) and perhaps the best understanding of large scale politics in the Republican leadership at the time. He was also a dickhead Vice President in the sense that he pushed Ford to do things Ford didn't want to do bc Nelson felt they were better things to do than what Ford was doing. Ford, btw, has a post-presidency rep of being a whistle-clean idiot, but still an average-performing President.
Trump has none of what Rockefeller had or even what Kennedy, the filthy rich grandson of a bootlegger, had. None of the governing experience and none of the policy understandings.
This post has been edited by amphibian: 18 June 2015 - 04:42 AM
I survived the Permian and all I got was this t-shirt.