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The Establishments war on Donald Trump Title: The Donald Vs. The Donors–He Doesn’t Need Their Money, But He Does Need America’s Votes In the modern Republican primary, you dont compete for voters, you compete for donors. Thus Marco Rubio, who is obviously massively vulnerable with voters because he won election by running against Amnesty and promptly became a major backer of the Gang of Eight Amnesty/ Immigration Surge bill, nevertheless took a step closer to consolidating the Republican Establishment around his candidacy by gaining the support of Open Borders billionaire Paul Singer. As Fortune noted: Singer, the 71-year-old founder of hedge fund Elliott Associates, is not only one of the Republican partys largest individual donors but is also regarded as especially influential among wealthy Republicansthe kind of campaign backer who can spur others to follow him. [Billionaire investor Paul Singer backs Marco Rubio, by Jack Dickey, October 31, 2015] As a kind of afterthought, we are told among Singers main causes are same- sex marriage and U.S. support for Israel. Rubios campaign welcomed its new plutocratic overlord: Alex Conant, a spokesman for Mr. Rubio, welcomed the endorsement, adding, We know we have a lot of work to do before Marco wins the nomination, but clearly this moves us in the right direction. [Paul Singer, Influential Billionaire, Throws Support to Marco Rubio for President, by Maggie Haberman and Nicholas Confessore, New York Times, October 30, 2015] Needless to say, publicly celebrating this news is self-discrediting if you are trying to combat the idea that GOP politicians are just errand boys for their donors. But the Beltway Right has never been known for self-awareness. Singers own background shows his passionate attachment to mass Third World immigration is unlikely to be driven by humanitarian concern. His holding company has been described as a vulture fund characterized by its ruthless tactics in forcing impoverished Third World countries to pay down their sovereign debt to Wall Street [This Vulture-Fund Billionaire Is the GOPs Go-To Guy on Wall Street, by Peter Stone, Mother Jones, September/October 2013]. Intentionally or unintentionally, hes actually helping drive mass immigration by making life worse for Africans and Latinos in their own countries. Yet even though this should seem unseemly, both the Main Stream Media and many candidates are now increasingly open about how the primary season has essentially been a complicated audition to convince a small circle of millionaires and billionaires to crack open their checkbooks. The candidates of the GOP Establishment are in fact nothing more than front men for a small groups of people capable of putting up multi-million dollar donations. Jeb Bush and his Right to Rise PAC had the initial advantage, as Jeb was able to tap the Bush familys already established network to raise an astonishing $103 million over the first six months of 2015 [Meet the Megadonors Bankrolling Jeb Bushs Campaign, by Russ Choma, Mother Jones, July 31, 2015] However, Bushs performance thus far has made his donors nervous, leading to the pathetic spectacle of Jeb having to personally reassure his donors that hes still a worthwhile investment [Jeb Bush tries to reassure jittery donors after lackluster debate, by Sahil Kapur and Michael C. Bender, Bloomberg, October 29, 2015] And Bush is even having to lay off staff and cut pay. [Jeb Bushs struggling campaign cuts pay, staff positions, by David Jackson, USA Today, October 23, 2015] Where could the money have possibly gone? Jeb was so easily caricatured as a creature of his donors that the trope emerged of Establishment and Outsider candidates. Though useful, the categories sometimes conceal more than they clarify. For example, Carly Fiorina has consistently been classified as an Outsider, even though her renegade status is due entirely to her inability to win a Senate election against Barbara Boxer. But it was her combination of Establishment and Outsider qualifications which made Carly Fiorina the next contender in the donor sweepstakes, as she drew the attention of T. Boone Pickens and the Koch Brothers after her strong performance in the second Republican debate [Koch brothers, other 2016 mega donors warm to Carly Fiorina, by Michelle Conlin, Reuters, October 4, 2015] However, shes since been reduced to picking a fight with the shrieking harpies of The View in order to stay relevant [Carly Fiorina to appear on The View Friday Amid Demented Face Controversy, by Alex Griswald, Mediaite, November 2, 2015] With Singer now backing Rubio, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, another early favorite, also loses much of his rationale for staying in the race, despite doing well in the third debate. Already hurting for cash, its hard to imagine the New Jersey governor ever getting his desperately-needed funding [Stile: Deficit in fundraising raises doubts for Christie camp, by Charles Stile, NorthJersey.com, October 17, 2015] Thus, the GOP Establishment is moving towards consolidation as pressure increases on Jeb and other candidates to make way for Rubio. Not a moment too soon for the EstablishmentDonald Trump leads the polls even in Marco Rubio and Jeb Bushs home state of Florida. The only way Rubio can win is if Bush drops out. Without Bush in the race, Rubios support jumps 8 points and puts him just 3 points behind Trump, 24-27. Bush, though, doesnt benefit if Rubio exits the race. Without Rubio on the ballot, Trumps support moves up to 28 percent and Ben Carson and Ted Cruz vie for second place. Bush remains in fourth place, with 17 percent support. This is a death-knell for the Bush campaign. The Republican establishment gains nothing if Rubio drops out of the race. If Bush drops out, however, Rubio is in a strong position to win the state next March. Bush has ample resources in his Super PAC to challenge Rubio, though. He could mortally wound Rubio, but it isnt clear that he would benefit. [Trump leads Florida thanks to Rubio, Bush split, by Mike Flynn, Breitbart, November 2, 2015] This is dangerous for Trump, as he is competing for voters with Ben Carson and Ted Cruz (who is being backed by newly independent Tom Tancredo.) But luckily for Trump, Bush is not giving up. Even as this is written, Jebs new slogan, Jeb Can Fix It, is trending on Twitter. Despite much mockery, Bush is gamely trying to relaunch his campaign, targeting both Trump and Rubio in a speech in Tampa [Jeb Bush Vows Not to play angry agitator Amid Jeb Can Fix It Tour, by Candace Smith, ABC, November 2, 2015] Trump had better hope Jeb can pull it off, as a divided Establishment is precisely what he needs as he prepares to take the fight to Rubio. In yet another unforced error, a Super PAC supporting Trump was shut down after being accused of being too closely tied to the campaign. However, Trump has turned this setback into a possible advantage by crusading against Super PACs and challenging other candidates to close their own [Trump pushes his call to end super PACs at GOP debate, by Brent Johnson, NJ.com, October 28, 2015]. Trump is also making up for his blown opportunity to attack Rubio on H1-B visas during the third debate by trying to make Disneys replacement of its American workers an issue in the campaign. Though Trump is certainly not a polished politician, his ability to quickly recognize mistakes, recover, and go back on the offensive is proof he still knows The Art of the Comeback. But we can expect the H1-B visa issue will be explored in detail in the upcoming Fox Business debate on November 10 [Claws Out: Fox Business Promises Real Debate on November 10, by Christine Rousselle, Townhall, November 1, 2015] Trump cant afford another display of ignorance. If Trump is unable to draw blood, or, worse, loses an exchange, the GOP Establishment will continue its consolidation around Rubio. Meanwhile, Trump will be more vulnerable to defections to Carson or Cruz. As the hysteria from the consultant class and the Beltway Right makes clear, the Trump campaign is a formidable challenge to the control of Open Borders donors over the Republican Party. As the plutocrats already control the Republican Congress, Trump may represent the last chance for the Republican Party to actually be influenced by its voters, as opposed to directly run by Wall Street donors and their paid shills. Trumps stance on immigration and personal charisma may have driven him to the top of the polls. But to win, hell need to confront and displace the financial powers pushing for open borders. That confrontation might come as soon as next week. And when Trump directly confronts Rubio at a debate, well know whether the Trump campaign is really the movement that American patriots need, or just another false start. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 2.
#2. To: nativist nationalist (#0)
Uh-huh. For all Trump's bluster, I still haven't seen him spend any real money except on his aircraft costs. Heck, he even dumped his bus in Iowa (went on sale for $15K with the Trump campaign paint job on it). This reminds me a lot of Perot's campaign, another self-funding Kindly Tycoon who declared himself ready to spend his fortune on running for president and formed his own Reform Party. In the end, Perot only spent about $50 million, mostly on his voter registration and ballot access costs. It is naive to assume Trump really is going to spend $100M, $200M, $300M, $400M to secure the nomination and then go on to drop another $500M-$700M in the general election. The Dems big donor base is prepared to go as high as $2B or even $2.5B to back Hitlery, a far harder sell than Obama was.
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