Donald Trump’s Impact on 2018 Votes

No matter how voters plan to cast their ballots in the 2018 election, the majority of voters polled say that their vote is, to some degree, a referendum on Donald Trump. In a recent NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll, about two-thirds of voters said that Trump would be an influence in how they will vote this year.

Most voters who responded said they will vote Democrat. In fact, Democrats now have 10-point lead over Republicans when it comes to the question of how people are responding to Trump with their votes. Women (especially suburban women and white women with college degrees), non-white voters, and Independent voters, are driving the disparity.

It appears that the 2018 election will be driven largely by women. Fifty-one percent of women overall, and 54 percent of suburban women say their impressions of Trump will impact how they vote. Of those women who responded to the poll, 64 percent said that they were more likely to vote Democratic. Thirty-two percent said they planned to vote Republican.

Of those who say that Donald Trump has influenced their motivation to vote Republican, as expected, the group looks similar to Trump’s base: white evangelical Christians, white people (especially men) without college degrees, married men, and rural voters.

Health care and climate change are the top voting issues for those voting Democrat. Jobs, the economy, and immigration were the top issues for those who plan to vote Republican.

As it turns out, the GOP tax cuts may not have helped the Republicans in the 2018 elections. Forty -five percent say that the tax cuts have made them more likely to vote for a Democrat in a 2018 Congressional election. Only thirty-nine percent of those polled are more likely to vote Republican as a result of the tax cuts.

Though Donald Trump has said he would deny any responsibility if the Democrats take the House in 2018, he has, on the other hand, frequently told his base on the campaign trail that a vote for a Republican is a vote for him.

“I’m not on the ballot,” Trump told a crowd in Southhaven, Miss. “But in a certain way, I’m on the ballot. So, please go out and vote.”

So, as Trump and his supporters see it, voting for a Republican in any race is a vote for Donald Trump. On the other hand, for them, voting for a Democrat doesn’t equate to voting against Donald Trump.

At the end of Election Day 2018, Donald Trump and his supporters will note a clear winner if they keep the House. But if the Democrats take the House, it seems likely that they will consider trying to bury the idea of Donald Trump’s impact on the elections.

Trump viewed as important factor in Americans’ vote: poll | Fox Business [2018-11-01]

Donald Trump On Midterms: A Vote For [Insert Name Here] Is A Vote For Me | The 11th Hour | MSNBC [2018-1015]

Trump Says Media Partly Responsible for Package Bombs

Chris Cuomo takes on Sarah Sanders over bomb response | CNN [2018-10-25]

White House on suspicious packages: Media has role to play | Fox News [2018-10-25]

After package bombs were discovered to have been mailed to at least 12 high-profile Democrats, Donald Trump wasted no time in declaring that the media and its “fake news” – not his divisive rhetoric – were at least partly responsible.

The package bombs were all uncovered within a span of 48 hours, and all of the intended recipients are outspoken critics of Donald Trump. The list included former President Barack Obama, Former Vice President Joe Biden, Bill and Hillary Clinton, billionaire donor George Soros, congresswomen Maxine Waters, Former CIA Director John Brennan (via CNN), Former Attorney General Eric Holder, Senator Kamala Harris, Senator Cory Booker, Former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, Actor Robert De Niro, and billionaire Tom Steyer. The devices were mailed using former Democratic National Committee Chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz’ address as the return address. Included with the package bomb mailed to CNN was an envelope containing a white powder substance.

Regarding the package bomb mailings, Trump tweeted on October 25, “A very big part of the Anger we see today in our society is caused by the purposely false and inaccurate reporting of the Mainstream Media that I refer to as Fake News. It has gotten so bad and hateful that it is beyond description. Mainstream Media must clean up its act, FAST!”

In response to Trump’s statement, CNN Worldwide president Jeff Zucker, stated, “There is a total and complete lack of understanding at the White House about the seriousness of their continued attacks on the media. The President, and especially the White House Press Secretary, should understand their words matter. Thus far, they have shown no comprehension of that.”

Some Trump supporters continue to find it impossible to believe that their president’s continual inflammatory rhetoric and actions could be a factor in the current level of animosity and division among Americans. In fact, they appear to find more feasible the idea that maybe the package bombs were part of an elaborate Democrat “false flag” scheme to gain support in the upcoming midterm elections.

The FBI has, however, linked Trump supporter Cesar Altieri Sayoc to the creation and mailing of the package bombs. A latent fingerprint on one of the packages, and DNA evidence from at least two of them point to Sayoc as a suspect.

It’s true that one Trump supporter’s possible attempts to do harm to prominent Democrats with package bombs does not make Donald Trump directly responsible. But Trump’s constant stirring of the malignant anti-Democrat pot does place some of the responsibility on him, for encouraging behavior toward his critics that is divisive at best, and potentially lethal at worst.

Donald Trump’s attempts to drop part of the blame for the package bombs at the feet of the Democrats – and his supporters’ willingness to go along with that assessment – demonstrate a notion that willful blindness and continual gaslighting are what will Make America Great Again.