Re: 2016 Election Thread (My God Kill Me Now)
Posted: January 27 16, 9:29 am
Ha, I didn't realize Bloomberg was only 5'8". That's a candidate I can relate to.Jocephus wrote:bloomberg with calf implants ?
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Ha, I didn't realize Bloomberg was only 5'8". That's a candidate I can relate to.Jocephus wrote:bloomberg with calf implants ?
I'm really curious to see if Trump supporters actually show up on election day or change their support in the booth. I simply cannot wrap my brain around the large amount of support he's getting.pioneer98 wrote:I know. I don't get it either. I also work with a ton and they either fall into the Evangelical wing (who won't vote for Trump since he's so non-religious) or the more traditional wing, who are more behind people like Rubio or Bush. When you look at his rallies I think Trump is getting the "people of Walmart" vote. I don't work with people like that. And also don't forget: Trump might be getting 30% of the Republican vote but that's probably more like 15% of all voters being polled....or less if the poll doesn't count undecideds. It shows you how utterly terrible the field of candidates is this year.Popeye_Card wrote:It is a complete mystery to me how 30% or whatever of Republican voters actually think voting for this guy is a good idea. I work daily with a large number of Republican voters. I cannot fathom even 2% of them voting for Trump, unless it is a joke.
Yet, inexplicably, he is getting evangelical endorsements. And this is from September.pioneer98 wrote:I know. I don't get it either. I also work with a ton and they either fall into the Evangelical wing (who won't vote for Trump since he's so non-religious) or the more traditional wing, who are more behind people like Rubio or Bush. When you look at his rallies I think Trump is getting the "people of Walmart" vote. I don't work with people like that. And also don't forget: Trump might be getting 30% of the Republican vote but that's probably more like 15% of all voters being polled....or less if the poll doesn't count undecideds. It shows you how utterly terrible the field of candidates is this year.Popeye_Card wrote:It is a complete mystery to me how 30% or whatever of Republican voters actually think voting for this guy is a good idea. I work daily with a large number of Republican voters. I cannot fathom even 2% of them voting for Trump, unless it is a joke.
Donald Trump is immodest, arrogant, foul-mouthed, money-obsessed, thrice-married, and until recently, pro-choice. By conventional standards, evangelical Christians should despise him. Yet somehow, the Manhattan billionaire has attracted their support.
According to the most recent polls, Trump is one of the top picks for president among evangelical Christians. One Washington Post poll even had him as the group’s favorite by a margin of six points. His first major rally in the Bible-Belt fortress town of Mobile, Alabama, drew an estimated 18,000 attendees. And on September 28, prominent televangelist Paula White will reportedly lead a delegation of evangelical leaders to meet with the mogul in Trump Tower.
“Why do they love me?” Trump replied when asked about the trend. “You’ll have to ask them. But they do. They do love me.”
Trump’s support among evangelicals is substantial, but it isn’t, well, yuuuuge. It’s too early to say whether Trump can grow his support among conservative Christians and continue to expand it to the broader Republican base. He’ll need to do both in order to win the primary, much less contend in the general election. For now, evangelicals need to ask themselves whether Trump’s brashness is enough to make them overlook many of the values they hold most dear.
If they don’t choose carefully, then after the Republican National Convention, they may find that they got what they wanted but no longer want what they’ve got.