Senior Republicans are resigned to President Trump losing the popular vote in 2020, conceding the limits of the flamboyant incumbent’s political appeal and revealing just how central the Electoral College has become to the party’s White House prospects.
Some Republicans say the problem is Trump's populist brand of partisan grievance. It's an attitude tailor-made for the Electoral College in the current era of regionally Balkanized politics, but anathema to attracting a broad, national coalition that can win the most votes, as past presidents did when seeking re-election amid a booming economy. Others argue that neither Trump, nor possibly any Republican, could win the popular vote when most big states are overwhelmingly liberal.
“California, Illinois, and New York, make it very, very difficult for anybody on our side to ever again to win the popular vote,” said David Carney, a Republican strategist in New Hampshire. Asked if he expects Trump to defy the odds next year, Carney said flatly, “No,” but added, “the president shouldn’t worry about it. Two hundred seventy — that’s what people remember.”
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I'm a Republican and I am confident that Trump will win the popular vote as well as the Electoral college as long as illegals and felons and dead people votes will not be counted.
ReplyDeleteElectoral vote was put in place by our founders....because all States wanted a vote in for the President
ReplyDeleteotherwise Mexifornia, New Yoke, and Texas determines the election
those idiot States need to put a Admendent in to change the Constitution.....
if 12 states say NO....than the Electoral votes stay in place
we have way more than 12 States that will say no
The Dems are doing everything except paying people to move to Red states to vote.
ReplyDeletedittos 7:13
ReplyDelete