War Room
Donald Trump’s ego has a dilemma
If he rewards Newt for kissing his ring, there’ll be egg on his face when Romney wins
Donald Trump and Republican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (Credit: AP/Seth Wenig) Donald Trump has scheduled a “major announcement” for 3:30 EST this afternoon in Las Vegas. There are conflicting reports on whether he’ll be endorsing Mitt Romney or Newt Gingrich. And, of course, it’s always possible that the buildup is a sham and that he’ll just talk about “Celebrity Apprentice” or one of his golf courses. Understanding Trump’s massive ego is generally a good guide to understanding his actions, but in this case there’d be some ego-based logic to his endorsing either candidate.
Gingrich makes the most sense when you consider that Trump’s public image as a man of unrivaled wealth, power and influence depends on other Important People treating him as one, thereby cementing the impression in the minds of common folk. So you can imagine how humiliating it must have been for Trump back in December when his plan to play the starring role (as moderator) in what would have been the final GOP debate before the Iowa caucuses blew up in his face, with most of the candidates refusing to take part. Some of them openly mocked Trump, but the real blow came when Romney ginned up a transparently phony excuse and said he couldn’t make it; without the national front-runner and most of the supporting cast, there was really no point in going forward, and the debate was canceled.
According to the image Trump has cultivated, every presidential candidate should have come running at the snap of his finger; that they all didn’t was, in a way, an emperor-has-no-clothes moment. But Gingrich was the exception. He immediately and enthusiastically accepted the invitation and ridiculed Romney for dragging his feet. In other words, he did his part to affirm the Trump image. (Rick Santorum also said yes to the invitation, but he had yet to surge into contention and was barely receiving any attention at the time.)
Gingrich has also distinguished himself as the Republican candidate most willing to channel the sort of sneering contempt toward Barack Obama that Trump so freely expresses. Not only did Trump spend months fanning the flames of birtherism, he also regularly disparages the president’s intellect, suggesting (for instance) that Obama was a “terrible student” who only got into Harvard because of affirmative action:
“How does a bad student go to Columbia and then to Harvard? I’m thinking about it, I’m certainly looking into it. Let him show his records,” he said, without providing backup for his claim.
Trump added, “I have friends who have smart sons with great marks, great boards, great everything and they can’t get into Harvard.”
This is the same game that Gingrich plays when he tells Republican audiences about his plan to challenge Obama to seven three-hour debates this fall. “I’d let him use a TelePrompTer,” Gingrich will say. “I’ll just rely on knowledge.” And while Gingrich doesn’t embrace birtherism, he’s had no trouble arguing that Obama exhibits “Kenyan, anti-colonial behavior.” The idea that Obama is essentially an unintelligent foreign-born or foreign-influenced radical is central to both the Trump and Gingrich messages.
But Romney seems a better bet for Trump when you consider that Gingrich is probably going to lose. More specifically, Gingrich is poised to lose badly in Nevada on Saturday — and Nevada is where Trump is making his announcement. And his prospects after the Silver State aren’t much better. So even if Trump is peeved with Romney over his debate excuse-making and even if he prefers Gingrich’s brand of Obama-bashing, there’s a strong ego-based case for endorsing Romney: It will be easy for Trump to take credit when he wins.
Steve Kornacki writes about politics for Salon. Reach him by email at SKornacki@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @SteveKornacki More Steve Kornacki.
It’s looking grim for Wisconsin Dems
A tough new poll undermines Democrats’ claim that they’re closing in on Scott Walker
Scott Walker (Credit: AP) The most telling sign about where the Wisconsin recall race stands is probably this: The only encouraging polling news for Democrats these past few weeks has come from Democratic polls.
Last week, a Greenberg Quinlan Rosner survey purported to show Democratic Tom Barrett breathing down Gov. Scott Walker’s neck, trailing by just three points, while today Democratic pollster Celinda Lake is claiming the race is tied at 49 percent. Generally, there’s good reason to be skeptical about partisan and internal polls, and sure enough, just hours after Lake’s numbers leaked came a new independent poll – this one from Marquette Law School — showing a very different result: Walker 52, Barrett 45.
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Steve Kornacki writes about politics for Salon. Reach him by email at SKornacki@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @SteveKornacki More Steve Kornacki.
The Massachusetts assault
The Obama campaign wants to do to Mitt Romney what Republicans did to Michael Dukakis 24 years ago
Mitt Romney holds up a Boston newspaper announcing his victory in the Massachusetts Governor's race in 2002. (Credit: Reuters/Jim Bourg) Get ready to hear a lot about Massachusetts in the days and weeks ahead. It’s the next component of Mitt Romney’s resume that the Obama campaign plans to focus its attacks on, as ABC News reports:
Continue Reading CloseTeam Obama will point to Romney’s rhetoric on job creation, size of government, education, deficits and taxes during the 2002 gubernatorial campaign and draw parallels with his presidential stump speeches of 2012. The goal is to illustrate that Romney has made the same promises before with unimpressive results, officials say.
Steve Kornacki writes about politics for Salon. Reach him by email at SKornacki@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @SteveKornacki More Steve Kornacki.
The sad story of Thaddeus McCotter
The guitar-playing GOP congressman thought he was presidential material but can’t even make a House primary ballot
Thaddeus McCotter (Credit: Reuters/Rebecca Cook) Rep. Thaddeus McCotter, a four-term Republican from Michigan, just became the first incumbent congressman in seven decades not to qualify for his party’s primary ballot.
Of the 1,830 signatures that his campaign turned in, election officials have decreed that just 244 are valid – well short of the 1,000 needed for ballot access. So while the state attorney general’s office looks into whether there was any intentional fraud on his campaign’s part, McCotter will now run as a write-in candidate in the August 7 primary. He still might survive – he says party leaders are on-board with the effort, and the only candidate whose name will be on the ballot has little money or name recognition – but Michigan’s rules for write-in candidates are a bit stringent, and the use of ballot stickers is barred.
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Steve Kornacki writes about politics for Salon. Reach him by email at SKornacki@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @SteveKornacki More Steve Kornacki.
Mitt’s lucky breaks
So much for a brokered convention. Romney crosses the threshold tonight, making lots of punditry look foolish
Mitt Romney (Credit: AP) Nearly two months after he began sporting the title “presumptive Republican nominee,” Mitt Romney is poised to cross the magic 1,144-delegate threshold in Texas today. In terms of the current campaign, it’s a ho-hum milestone; the political world’s attention long ago shifted to the Romney/Obama general election fight. But take a step back, and the circumstances are a bit more remarkable.
After all, it was almost exactly one year ago that another development in Texas seemed to put Romney’s nomination prospects in grave danger: Rick Perry’s unexpected May 27, 2011, announcement that he was considering jumping into the race.
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Steve Kornacki writes about politics for Salon. Reach him by email at SKornacki@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @SteveKornacki More Steve Kornacki.
Obama’s Wis. harbinger
Is it panic time for the president if his party’s effort to recall Scott Walker fails next week?
Barack Obama(Credit: AP) There’s still a week left, but the prevailing expectation is that Scott Walker will survive Wisconsin’s June 5 recall election.
The Republican incumbent has led by a margin in the mid-single digits for the past few weeks, though Democrats insist their internal polls are closer. Tom Barrett, the Democratic candidate, turned in an aggressive and generally well-received performance in a Friday debate, the first of two head-to-head showdowns, and is now playing up the ongoing federal inquiry into Walker’s fundraising practices from his days as a county executive. The possibility of a late charge by Barrett can’t be dismissed, but he enters the campaign’s final days as a decided underdog.
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Steve Kornacki writes about politics for Salon. Reach him by email at SKornacki@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @SteveKornacki More Steve Kornacki.
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