Isaac Chotiner:
“You heard Donald Trump tonight sounding … more presidential,” Megyn Kelly noted playfully on Fox News. You could tell he was presidential in his New York victory speech, she felt, because he did not refer to Ted Cruz as “Lyin’ Ted.” Everyone seemed to agree on this count. “I think one of the things that’s most significant,” GOP strategist Steve Schmidt was saying over on MSNBC, was that “it wasn’t ‘Lying Ted.’ ”
“Exactly,” said his co-panelist Nicole Wallace, also a Republican.
“It was ‘Senator Cruz.’ ”
“Yes,” Wallace said. “Yes.”
Among a great many other things, this election has given us a good measure of just how far we’ve defined down presidential. Trump may indeed have been restrained on Tuesday night in celebrating his predictable but impressive win in the New York Republican primary, but he was certainly not presidential. He did his usual shtick (albeit at shorter length), mentioned the great businessmen in the room with him, told a story about a developer friend (undermining him at the same time), and inflated the night’s actual primary results. His speech focused on, yes, our lost greatness. “We are going to be, legitimately, so great again, and I just can’t wait,” he said. Trump was Trump, give or take.
But it was clear Tuesday night that, with Bernie all but cooked and Hillary in need of a new foil, the narrative now demanded that Trump be a candidate transformed. There was nothing Trump could’ve done to change the story. He could’ve swallowed his tie on stage, and Chris Matthews would still have acted as if he’d seen the ghost of John Lindsay sitting in his green room. “And I think,” Matthews exulted, “that that’s going to be one hell of a general election campaign—with Trump starting out very behind and perhaps catching up to a very exciting conclusion.”
Schmidt said Trump’s speech showed a willingness “to address the temperament criticism. … You see a potent general election message.” On Twitter, the New York Times’s Maggie Haberman, who has done extensive reporting on the Trump campaign, also noticed a new side to Trump, ascribing it to the influence of Paul Manafort, the GOP operative who has seemingly taken control of the ship.
Will any of this nonsense about the newly presidential Trump have an effect? Perhaps he will claw back a few wayward moderate voters in upcoming states, thanks to the friendly turn in media coverage, but the coverage isn’t going to help him beat Hillary Clinton in November. If he wants to do that, he is going to have to change his strategy entirely. Given that his strategy is an extension of his personality—given that his strategy is his personality–don’t count on it.
As it stands, should Trump get the nomination, Hillary Clinton would have the easiest path to the presidency imaginable: All she’d have to do is sit back and let Trump soak up the limelight. The problem for Trump isn’t simply that his policies are unpopular; it’s that people do not like him. His personality may appeal to certain segments of the electorate, but those groups combined don’t constitute a majority of Republican voters, let alone the general population. He is a fringe figure in every sense.
He made 1 speech where he didn’t say lion Ted and the gushing at Fox began ooo so presidential, today right back at it.
And Hillary IS presidential? Wow, what an imagination. Trump has done what he had to do to get the nomination. He will be the Republican nominee. Hillary will be the Dimocrat.
Then the people will have to make a decision, a successful business man or an lying scheming crooked political woman with a whole bunch of serious skeletons in the closets, beginning with Vince Foster’s.
@kitt: “lion”–lol try lyin
Trump is the only American pol more disliked than HRC—-He’ll make some effort to change that—think it’s too embedded.
@Rich Wheeler: I keep asking for proof of all these lies that Trump has lied about, got sucked in did ya?
Trump has a habit of projecting.
Cruz takes it second or 3rd vote. And a conservative takes the White House.
@kitt: Trump’s brought in a veteran political lobbyist to manage him–smooth him out–teach him how to act Presidetial.
This guy tells the RNC that Trump’s been acting–only playing the role of a self absorbed A-Hole. Woulda fooled me.
@Rich Wheeler:
Yeah, Paul Metafort, just plain lobbyist, who just happens to be John Kasich’s campaign manager’s partner in the lobbying firm. Metafort is not a nice guy. Just check out his record. If he is one of the “best” people Trump’s always blathering about hiring, obviously Trump recruits from the bottom of the barrel.
Yeah, Trump is obviously just trying to build an image that he can sell, much like Ford did with the Edsel. Only problem is that with people who have not been sucked into Trump’s Pied Piper act, we remember him from days past and Trump has done nothing to prove he is actually a conservative. Giving ten of thousands of dollars to Kevin Jackson’s GLSEN (which promotes homosexuality in grades K-12) sure ain’t gonna do the trick.
Opposition research is about to land on Trump and he ain’t gonna like it. And it’s all going to come from the Hillary Camp.
Acting if its an act (I dont believe)he should get some type of award. How many things did he walk back, and when presented with his own record even on film, he denied it and accused people of lying.
@Rich Wheeler:
Trump is a politician? then what are Hillary, bernie and lyin Ted?
@Rich Wheeler:
This is PRICELESS!
Don’t miss Matt Walsh’s “TRUMP FANS” piece.
I usually don’t agree with Matt, but I can’t fault him this time.