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Republicans cast into turmoil as Donald Trump rides the populist surge

_Donald-Trump

Republicans cast into turmoil as Donald Trump rides the populist surge
Donald Trump, the maverick billionaire businessman, has seen his following soar – despite calling Mexicans “rapists”

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For Donald Trump the entrepreneur, it was a damaging week. Two major television networks severed ties, Macy’s dropped his clothing line and Carlos Slim, the even richer Mexican tycoon, ended a joint venture with him.

But for Donald Trump the inveterate showman and Republican challenger for president, the week was a triumph as he climbed in the opinion polls and dominated media coverage, despite the backlash against his decision to condemn Mexican immigrants as rapists and drug traffickers.

“Wow, Huffington Post just stated that I am number one in the polls of Republican candidates,” the brash billionaire bragged as the week closed, citing the liberal media outlet that has been a platform for many of the strongest attacks on him. “Thank you, but the work has just begun!”

Mr Trump was touting his first place in an average of 105 polls. Of the 14 candidates who have declared, Trump topped the field with 13.6 per cent support to 13.3 per cent for Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor and son and brother of two past presidents.

The property mogul, reality television star and beauty pageant owner with the most flamboyant comb-over in public life may seem like a caricature and a political joke.

But the Republican hierarchy is not laughing as he rides an anti-establishment populist tide, shooting from the hip with his overheated rhetoric. They are concerned not because they think he has a chance of securing the nomination but because they fear he could influence the election by scarring the party’s reputation.

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“Donald Trump is like watching a roadside accident,” Ari Fleischer, a former spokesman for George W Bush, told Politico. “Everybody pulls over to see the mess. And Trump thinks that’s entertainment. But running for president is serious. And the risk for the party is that he tarnishes everybody.”

Mr Fleischer was a co-author of the party’s post-mortem into the 2012 presidential election defeat. That soul-searching concluded that the Republicans needed to broaden their appeal to younger voters, women and crucially the demographic of Hispanics.

Mr Fleischer’s old boss won 40 per cent of the Latino vote in 2004. Mitt Romney took just 27 per cent eight years later. The party fears efforts to reverse that trend will be set back by Mr Trump’s comments, especially if his poll rating secures him a place at the first televised debate next month.

There’s a danger that Trump will crowd out our message with his antics,” a senior Romney financial donor who is considering his 2016 options said.

“At first we all just thought he would crash and burn, but now the problem is who he takes down with him.”

Mr Trump has long revelled in controversy and was a champion of the “birther movement” that questioned whether Barack Obama was born in America. But it was his comments about Mexican immigrants when he declared his candidacy that have dominated attention.

“Mexico is sending people that have lots of problems, and they’re bringing those problems with them,” he said. “They’re bringing drugs. They’re bringing crime. They’re rapists.” And then he added as an afterthought: “And some, I assume, are good people.”

His solution is to build a wall along the border and make Mexico pay for it.

Mr Trump’s rivals in the race were at first unsure how to respond. Marco Rubio, the Florida senator and son of Cuban immigrants, finally on Thursday called the comments “not just offensive and inaccurate, but also divisive”.

Jeb Bush, whose wife is Mexican and who delivered his declaration speech in English and Spanish and supports creating a path for legalising the status of undocumented immigrants, said: “His remarks do not represent the values of the Republican party and they do not represent my values.”

Univision, the largest Spanish-language network in the US, and NBC said they were dropping their broadcasts of the Miss USA and Miss Universe pageants, which Mr Trump co-owns, while Macy’s axed his line of suits and ties.

The latest to distance itself from Mr Trump is Nascar, the motor racing body, which said it would no longer use one of his hotels for its end-of-season awards. Speaking to Fox News yesterday, Mr Trump, 69, said he was surprised by Nascar’s decision and at the strength of the backlash.

“I knew it was going to be bad because all my life I have been told: if you are successful you don’t run for office,” he said. “I didn’t know it was going to be this severe.”

But he defended his stance and said he had become a “whipping post” for speaking up on immigration and crime.The lone fellow candidate to speak up for Mr Trump was Ted Cruz, the Texas senator whose father is Cuban, saying he “speaks the truth”.

This is what attracts grassroots supporters such as Ken Crow, a leader of the Tea Party in the first-voting caucus of Iowa. He reeled off a list of reasons why he was backing Mr Trump. “Americans are sick and tired of corrupt government and career politicians,” he said. “He will straighten out the economy and defend our borders. Americans want a John Wayne right now, someone who’ll be a champion of our country.”

The Trump candidacy is playing up strains between Tea Party activists and senior party figures, with Mr Fleischer adding that his comments were irresponsible and “hurtful”.

And John Weaver, an adviser on John McCain’s 2008 presidential campaign, noted: “I remember growing up in Kermit [Texas], every time the carnival came to town it drew a big crowd. But nobody wanted the carnival barker to be mayor.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/republicans/11718563/Republicans-cast-into-turmoil-as-Donald-Trump-rides-the-populist-surge.html

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