Why Republican voters are warming to Donald Trump for 2012
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Developer/reality show star Donald Trump appears to be pretty popular with Republican voters right now, in case you haven鈥檛 heard. He tied for second with Mike Huckabee, behind Mitt Romney, in a recent Wall Street Journal/NBC poll that measured the presidential nomination preferences of GOP voters. And he鈥檚 got a 52 percent favorable rating among Republicans in a just-released .
Why is he doing so well among adherents of the GOP? Perhaps because he鈥檚 running as if he were already the party鈥檚 boss, as opposed to the other candidates, who may seem like applicants for the job, comparatively speaking.
Mr. Trump鈥檚 CEO-like forcefulness has been on full display in his recent spate of television interviews. What do we do in Iraq? Stay and keep the oil! How do we handle China鈥檚 rise? Slap a 25 percent tariff on Chinese goods! Was President Obama born in America? There鈥檚 no proof 鈥 and I鈥檓 sending investigators to Hawaii to check into the story!
IN PICTURES: Will these Republicans run in 2012?
鈥淚t鈥檚 all about leadership. You have to be able to make deals,鈥 Trump said Thursday on CNN.
Trump doesn鈥檛 back down when challenged. In the face of tough questions from interviewers, he鈥檚 doubled down on the whole where-was-Obama-born question, for instance. He waves away evidence such as Obama鈥檚 certificate of live birth from a hospital in Hawaii and contemporaneous birth announcements placed in Hawaiian newspapers.
鈥淗e could鈥檝e been born in Kenya and gone over to the United States,鈥 Trump said on CNN.
He鈥檚 even summoned an Arizona state lawmaker who鈥檚 the author of a so-called 鈥渂irther鈥 bill to meet him at Trump HQ in New York. Republican state Rep. Carl Seel鈥檚 legislation would require presidential candidates to prove that they were born in the United States to be eligible for the state鈥檚 electoral votes.
All evidence is that a big segment of GOP voters like this.
鈥淭he fact is that Donald Trump is doing a better job when he鈥檚 in front of the camera articulating a message against Barack Obama鈥檚 second term in office. He doesn鈥檛 pull punches, and he just speaks very plainly,鈥 said a recent post on the conservative .
Of course, some of that plain speaking is against GOP orthodoxy. Trump has criticized the House Republican long-term budget issued this week by Rep. Paul Ryan (R) of Wisconsin, for instance.
鈥淚 think what Paul has done is very dangerous for the Republican Party,鈥 Trump said Thursday.
The electorate as a whole has much more mixed feelings about Trump than does the subset of Republicans. The just-released Gallup survey notes that if Democrats and independents are taken into account Trump鈥檚 favorability rating drops to 43 percent, with 47 percent holding an unfavorable view of the 鈥Celebrity Apprentice鈥 star.
Given that polls show no dominant front-runner in the GOP nomination race, Trump could still do well, notes Gallup. (Trump himself says he鈥檒l decide whether to run in June.)
鈥淭rump does enjoy what many candidates strive hard to develop 鈥 90 percent name recognition among all Americans ... [but] whether Trump could parlay that familiarity into voter support in primaries and caucuses is an open question,鈥 writes Gallup analyst Frank Newport.