After Indiana
Election Analysis 2016
By Dan McDonald
I am
trying to adopt a new policy for those who are on Facebook and Twitter with me.
I may blog about the election but I will try not to post my thoughts about the
election or candidates on social media. I will likely say I have written a blog
and if you are interested in my thoughts see my blog. I will likely continue to
respond in comment sections with some people on Facebook. Sometimes as an old
bachelor I make the mistake of thinking there is nothing more important than
theology or politics. But the reality is that when we speak on these subjects
we are usually speaking about our opinions where what we believe is better
revealed in our habits when the two subjects are never mentioned at all.
I don’t imagine myself a gifted
analyst of elections. I’m a blogger with opinions and maybe a few people will
find them interesting. I hope everyone reading this blog can understand and
appreciate this. So here is how I look at things now that Indiana’s primary is
over.
For the Republicans, Ted Cruz had
pinned his hopes for stopping Trump from winning the nomination outright on a
victory in Indiana. Cruz may have even hummed one of the songs from when I was
young, “Indiana wants me”,
but after Indiana he is giving up. Trump has sewn up the Republican nomination.
The GOP establishment, for the most part is now falling in line. Neither Cruz
nor Trump represented the establishment, but the GOP including the
establishment is in a quandary. When I was a kid there were no Republicans in
the South, and now there are few anywhere else. Trump will actually run a
closer presidential election than Cruz could have. I was raised in the North
and have lived in Oklahoma which is sort of south, southwest, and lower
Midwest. Cruz connected to Republican
Evangelical voters which is a big plus in southern politics and mostly a
negative in northern politics. Trump will resonate with some independents in
places like Pennsylvania and Michigan, whereas Cruz would never have been
competitive in either state. No Republican candidate since Barry Goldwater has
had the negatives like Trump has. But Trump will play the Nixon campaign
strategy. Nixon ran to the right in Republican primaries, to the center in the
general election, and governed slightly to the left. How Trump will govern if
elected I haven’t a clue, but he will pull away from his tea party rhetoric
like a lawyer representing his client to the jury he wishes to impress. If
anything can be said about Trump he has few core values getting in his way to
sacrifice in his bid to win the presidency. That is actually his strength.
For all the talk of the GOP
Establishment being against Trump, mostly they are now publically falling in
line with him. But in reality the GOP is in a quandary. Nothing they do makes
sense anymore. Mitch McConnell has already guaranteed that hardly any northern
Republicans will be competitive in their Senate elections. He is the face of
the southern strategy gone awry. His determination to not hold hearings for
President Obama’s Supreme Court nominee has doomed most northern Republican
Senate and House candidates to defeat in November. Maybe with the nomination
determined, the Republicans will back away from their obstructionist policies
and cover for their northern allies. Otherwise the southern strategy that Nixon
and Reagan employed effectively will have reached its final end of seeing the
Republican Party become a sectionalized southern party with a few votes in
rural areas where large white majorities that have been voting Republican since
1854. My gut feeling is that if Trump faces Hillary Clinton in November, he
will be more competitive in his bid for the presidency than most Republicans
running for Senate or House seats in northern and far western states. Barring a
Mitch McConnell revelation or a northern rebellion against the party leaders,
this year will be a disaster for Republicans outside of the South, Montana,
Idaho, and Utah. The Republican establishment will likely support Trump in hopes he goes
down in the flames. The GOP is in 2016 where Canadian Prime-Minister Harper was
a couple of years ago. They are bracing for the reality of the nation they have
lost.
On the Democratic side, Bernie
Sanders has won another primary in Indiana. On the surface it looks like he has
little chance of winning the nomination. He will likely have a majority of
delegates outside of the super delegates, but the super delegates appear tied
to Clinton. But cracks are appearing. The Clinton use of super pacs to support
her presidential bid and downstream candidates within the Democratic Party had
won her the support of large numbers of super delegates. But reports are
beginning to build that very little of the shared wealth is making it outside
of the Clinton election campaign. Reports showing an easy Sanders victory in
West Virginia and perhaps a massive Sanders victory in California might lead to
cracks in Hillary’s support. At this point a Sanders victory seems unlikely but
that scenario might yet work out.
In my dreams for this election year
I had hoped for an election choice of Sanders v. Kasich, simply because both
men would have represented ideas about the size and mission of government. They
would likely have run somewhat positive campaigns appealing to differing
visions of our nation's future. I cannot imagine a Trump v. Clinton election to
be an election about substantial visions for the future of the nation. I try to speak little against Hillary Clinton, because
my views of her were largely formed in my days as a true believer in
Republicanism. Obviously my faith in Republicanism is at low ebb these days.
This is how I see things now that
Indiana’s votes have been counted.
4 comments:
A thoughtful article. I would like to comment but I don't feel qualified to do so.
When Obama was elected to a second term, I gave up on politics.
I vote because others before me paid a price so that I have that privilege .
I pray for our leaders because God has told me to pray for them.
I have to believe that God Almighty has a plan and it will be for our good and
Nothing can stop that plan. So I will vote my conscience.
Thank you Gale. In the end that is pretty much all we can do. Vote our conscience.
I'm personally looking forward to a third party rising. And evangelicals becoming less political and more Christian. ;)
Yes indeed. The Christian faith was never meant to be chained to a partisan political movement.
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