MrFliop
Thinker
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2012
- Messages
- 212
63 million voted for Trump in 2016 and 74 million did in 2020. Wow, all of them must be Trump supporters right? Yeah, no. General elections are really bad indicators of public opinion. I wouldn’t be surprised if over 90% of those votes were from people who would have voted for the Republican nominee regardless of who it was. There are currently 35 million registered with the Republican Party, plus nearly double that number who aren’t registered but still vote Republican.
A clearer picture emerges when we look at the Republican primaries of 2016, where(before Trump became the presumptive nominee) over 10 million voters chose him over his GOP opponents. Yet of those 10 million, most likely weren’t Trump supporters either.
We have to also consider the snowball effect. Many voters in the later primaries probably chose him because they saw him as the most electable candidate due to his string of victories in the early primary contests, and thus jumped on the bandwagon. It’s worth noting that before late April 2016, Trump never won a majority in any contest, he just won a plurality of the votes.
However, even with that in mind, it’s still wrong to consider those who voted for him in the early primaries as “Trump Supporters”. How do we know they didn’t just choose him because he was the best option of the remaining viable candidates (Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, John Kasich) to choose from once primary season officially began in February 2016?
Trump’s only voter strongholds during the early primaries was two regions of the US: the Northeast and the South(or rather the rural areas of the South if you wanna be specific). Let’s break them down, his Northeast voters likely chose him simply because he WAS from there, a native New Yorker. The same thing happened to Mitt Romney in the 2012 primaries. He won all the northeastern states simply because he was governor of Massachusetts 6 years prior. That’s just how primary voters are, they vote in people who are like them personally, including where they live.
As for the rural South, beating Kasich and Rubio would’ve been too easy. And to beat the only one who was a threat in that region, Trump needed to come off as slightly more to the right than Ted Cruz. For example: Ted Cruz says ban Muslim refugees, Trump says ban all Muslims. And with GOP primary contests in the South being nothing more than a “who can go furthest to the right” competition, it’s no wonder Trump won those states with a plurality of votes.
So…. when going through all those factors: snowball effect, doing best in home region, pivoting farther to the right than Cruz….. Out of the 10 million who chose Donald Trump in the 2016 primaries, it’s safe to say about 1/10 or 1 million people are actually die hard Trump supporters and truly believe in what he stands for.
A clearer picture emerges when we look at the Republican primaries of 2016, where(before Trump became the presumptive nominee) over 10 million voters chose him over his GOP opponents. Yet of those 10 million, most likely weren’t Trump supporters either.
We have to also consider the snowball effect. Many voters in the later primaries probably chose him because they saw him as the most electable candidate due to his string of victories in the early primary contests, and thus jumped on the bandwagon. It’s worth noting that before late April 2016, Trump never won a majority in any contest, he just won a plurality of the votes.
However, even with that in mind, it’s still wrong to consider those who voted for him in the early primaries as “Trump Supporters”. How do we know they didn’t just choose him because he was the best option of the remaining viable candidates (Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, John Kasich) to choose from once primary season officially began in February 2016?
Trump’s only voter strongholds during the early primaries was two regions of the US: the Northeast and the South(or rather the rural areas of the South if you wanna be specific). Let’s break them down, his Northeast voters likely chose him simply because he WAS from there, a native New Yorker. The same thing happened to Mitt Romney in the 2012 primaries. He won all the northeastern states simply because he was governor of Massachusetts 6 years prior. That’s just how primary voters are, they vote in people who are like them personally, including where they live.
As for the rural South, beating Kasich and Rubio would’ve been too easy. And to beat the only one who was a threat in that region, Trump needed to come off as slightly more to the right than Ted Cruz. For example: Ted Cruz says ban Muslim refugees, Trump says ban all Muslims. And with GOP primary contests in the South being nothing more than a “who can go furthest to the right” competition, it’s no wonder Trump won those states with a plurality of votes.
So…. when going through all those factors: snowball effect, doing best in home region, pivoting farther to the right than Cruz….. Out of the 10 million who chose Donald Trump in the 2016 primaries, it’s safe to say about 1/10 or 1 million people are actually die hard Trump supporters and truly believe in what he stands for.