Cause, on 22 January 2016 - 08:47 AM, said:
Surely every non-white person in the states while part of a minority is still a large enough voting block to keep trump Out. He has alienated blacks, Hispanics, Muslims, all immigrants I would think.
In the general election, probably. It probably depends on turnout; some polls show he has a chance against either Hillary or Bernie, but that can easily change as time goes on. In the primary, those people don't generally vote GOP at all, so it's entirely possible (as the right coalesces more and more around him) that he'll get the nomination. Likely? Still don't think so, though Nate Silver makes a good point that donors going for Trump over Cruz is surprising and changes the calculus. But at this point I have to wonder if it's some kind of reverse psychology and/or long-term strategy. The GOP Establishment is getting desperate.
Andorion, on 22 January 2016 - 08:07 AM, said:
Ok, so its a lot more complicated. I did not know much about Caucuses. So clearly popularity is not enough, but a hardcore, dedicated, organized support base is also required.
In caucus states, definitely. In primary states, still yes, to a lesser extent. There's a turnout hierarchy; caucuses are at the bottom and primaries higher up, but primaries still get nowhere near the turnout of presidential general elections. (PS: part of the reason why presidential primaries have low turnout in general is that there's no big Election Day where everyone in the country votes on the same day; it can be confusing, and also, lots of states in the latter half of the season are not accustomed to having any real say in the matter, and they therefore don't get motivated to find out what day they're supposed to vote.)
Andorion, on 22 January 2016 - 08:07 AM, said:
I suppose letting those 3-4 culturally and geographically diverse states have their say first helps form and change opinion in other states?
Exactly. As we've discussed previously, they're bellwether states. If a surprise candidate shows well in the Iowa caucuses, that can give them momentum going into following states. Or it can make weak candidates think they have a chance and stay in longer than they probably should. (See Santorum and also Huckabee, who still hasn't given up.) Iowa in particular is known for boosting minor candidates because the caucuses have such low turnout, and low turnout always makes things unpredictable.
Andorion, on 22 January 2016 - 08:07 AM, said:
Given all these complications, do you think there is any chance for candidates like Jeb Bush, as they are of the 'establishment'?
There is a small chance for Jeb, or he would have dropped out already, but the writing is on the wall for him in particular: the only Republicans who want another Bush are donors, and the donors are already starting to give up. The best scenario for the Establishment at this point is for Jeb and Christie to drop out early and give Rubio a boost.
Andorion, on 22 January 2016 - 08:07 AM, said:
Also what happened to Rand Paul? I thought after the hacking and privacy violation fiasco a Libertarian would be more popular.
You would think, but the Paul family and the Libertarian wing of the GOP have always been fringe. In Real America we don't really like the fringe much, and everyone knows libertarians masturbate to anime.
This post has been edited by Terez: 22 January 2016 - 09:09 AM