This actually makes sense because Trump is a world wide embarrassment to the U.S. sort of like how Hitler started out in Germany. They were embarrassed by him too. But then it went beyond embarrassment and 100 million people died as a result by 1945.
However, if he actually does what he says about ending all trade agreements with other countries so people can actually get jobs here once again he likely would be viewed as a hero. (At least for that) (if he doesn't get us all killed first). But, is that realistic or even possible? Hard to say at this point?
begin quote from:
Donald
Trump during a news conference at the construction site of the Trump
International Hotel at the Old Post Office Building in Washington on
Monday.
Alarmed
by the harsh attacks and negative tone of their presidential contest,
broad majorities of Republican primary voters view their party as
divided and a source of embarrassment and think that the campaign is
more negative than in the past, according to a New York Times/CBS News
national poll released on Monday.
The dismay has not set back their leading candidate, however. While about four in 10 Republican voters disapprove of how Donald J. Trump
has handled the violence at some of his rallies, Mr. Trump has also
picked up the most support recently as several rivals have left the
race. Forty-six percent of primary voters said they would like to see
Mr. Trump as the party’s nominee, more than at any point since he
declared his candidacy in June. Twenty-six percent favored Senator Ted
Cruz of Texas, and 20 percent backed Gov. John Kasich of Ohio.
Fully three-quarters of Republican primary voters expect Mr. Trump to be their party’s nominee.
Compared
with Republicans, far more Democratic primary voters see their side as
unified and say the campaign has made them feel mostly proud of their
party.
Yet Democrats are more sharply divided over their candidates. Hillary Clinton
has only a slight edge over Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, and
growing numbers of Democratic primary voters are more excited about Mr.
Sanders as their possible nominee. In the past month, the level of
enthusiasm for Mrs. Clinton among Democratic voters has fallen eight
percentage points to 40 percent, while it has grown for Mr. Sanders by
12 percentage points to 56 percent. Still, more than seven in 10
Democratic voters expect Mrs. Clinton to win the nomination.
Mr.
Sanders performs slightly better than Mrs. Clinton in hypothetical
general-election matchups against Mr. Trump: The senator beats the real
estate developer by 15 percentage points, while Mrs. Clinton prevails by
10 points. Mrs. Clinton holds a narrow edge over Mr. Cruz, while Mr.
Kasich is the only Republican who has an advantage over Mrs. Clinton in
November.
With
the state-by-state nominating contests about half over, Mr. Trump and
Mrs. Clinton have pulled solidly ahead of their opponents in delegates.
Yet they have also emerged as the cause of the most skepticism and
negativity from the electorate nationwide as well as in their parties.
Half
of all voters said they would be scared if Mr. Trump were elected
president, and another 19 percent said they would be concerned. Mrs.
Clinton does not fare much better: Thirty-five percent of all voters
said they would be scared if Mrs. Clinton won in November, and 21
percent said they would be concerned.
Continue reading the main story
Charles
Shank, 65, a Kasich supporter, said in a follow-up interview that he
was disconcerted by Mr. Trump’s personality and “childish games” and
feared that he would not be an effective commander in chief or
negotiator with Congress.
“He
scares me because he’s a loudmouthed bully,” Mr. Shank said. “He
doesn’t come across as presidential. He says ‘I will,’ and I got news
for him, he isn’t being elected king. He doesn’t have the ultimate
power.”
The
nationwide telephone poll was conducted March 17 to 20 on cellphones
and landlines with 1,252 adults, of which 1,058 said they were
registered voters, including 362 Republican primary voters and 388
Democratic primary voters. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus
three percentage points for all adults; four points for all voters; six
points for Republican primary voters; and six points for Democratic
primary voters.
Among
Democrats, doubts persist about Mrs. Clinton, with 40 percent of her
own party’s primary voters saying she is not honest and trustworthy. She
is viewed unfavorably by 52 percent of all voters, among the highest
percentage since the question was first asked during the 1992
presidential race.
“I
think she’ll say whatever she needs to to get elected, and what she
says may not be what she’s planning to do,” said Patricia Lawrence, 55, a
Philadelphia Democrat who is supporting Mr. Sanders. “I was concerned
already when she was first lady, though I don’t know what it is. I just
don’t know, and when we find out, it may be too late.”
Anxieties
run higher among Republicans in large part because of the ferocious and
at times juvenile nature of the insult-laden campaign, which has
featured taunts over character and even manhood as much as serious
policy debates. About six in 10 Republican primary voters say the
overall tone of their party’s nomination fight has been more negative
than in past campaigns, while only one in 10 Democratic primary voters
hold the same view of their party’s campaign. And 60 percent of
Republican primary voters said the campaign had made them feel mostly
embarrassed about their party, while only 13 percent of Democratic
primary voters expressed that opinion.
The
potential for political chaos on the Republican side is also
intensifying the unease among primary voters. Facing the possibility
that no candidate will win enough delegates to clinch the nomination by
the end of the primaries in June, two-thirds of Republican voters said
it would bad for the party if the nominee were chosen at a contested
Republican convention in July.
Mr.
Trump’s supporters were particularly apt to say so: Nearly nine in 10
said a contested convention would be bad for the party, far more than
Cruz and Kasich supporters.
“The will of the people has been Donald Trump,
and if the party won’t support him, they are not supporting the will of
the people,” said Bryan Ottalini, 59, a Trump supporter from Stone
Mountain, Ga. “I think it would be a definite deal killer for me as far
as being a Republican. I would never vote Republican again.”
Mr.
Trump has suggested that riots would break out among his supporters if
he went into the convention with a solid delegate lead but party leaders
denied him the nomination — one in a series of remarks tied to violence
that have worried Americans. Sixty-four percent of all voters said they
disapproved of how Mr. Trump had handled the physical clashes at some
of his rallies.
As
for who is to blame for the episodes, 29 percent of all voters blame
protesters at the rallies, 23 percent blame Trump supporters, and 43
percent blame both equally.
More
than eight in 10 Democratic primary voters have a favorable opinion of
their party, but they remain torn over their choices. While Mr. Sanders
is regarded as more honest and trustworthy, 78 percent of Democratic
voters say Mrs. Clinton’s policy proposals are realistic, compared with
56 percent who regard Mr. Sanders’s proposals as such.
Both parties have work to do with political independents. Seventy percent of them have a negative view of the Republican Party, and 55 percent are critical of the Democratic Party.
Mr. Trump, a political outsider, and Mr. Sanders, a self-described
democratic socialist who is not a registered Democrat, have performed
particularly well among these voters in the primaries so far.
Continue reading the main story
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