Paul Singer, Influential Billionaire, Throws Support to Marco Rubio for PresidentSinger was a big donor to a Mitt Romney super PAC in 2012, and to the Swiftboat liars in 2004; he also gave a lot of money (and use of a private jet) to Rudy Giuliani in 2008. He's very conservative, but he's pro-gay marriage -- his support was instrumental in getting gay marriage through the New York state legislature, but his promise to provide enough money to shield vulnerable legislators didn't pan out: of four New York Republicans in the state senate who voted for gay marriage, three lost their seats anyway.
One of the wealthiest and most influential Republican donors in the country is throwing his support to Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, a decision that could swing millions of dollars in contributions behind Mr. Rubio at a critical point in the Republican nominating battle.
The decision by the donor, Paul Singer, a billionaire New York investor, is a signal victory for Mr. Rubio in his battle with his rival Jeb Bush for the affections of major Republican patrons and the party’s business wing.
So Singer's money is meaningful, but it doesn't guarantee Rubio the nomination, although it's one more nail in the coffin of the campaign of Bush, who was hoping for some of Singer's cash.
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Obviously, this is a sign that the GOP Establishment is closing ranks around Rubio -- but that doesn't mean the voters are going to follow suit:
After leading the crowded Republican field since July, Donald Trump finds Ben Carson pulling even with him in the latest national NBC News online poll conducted by SurveyMonkey, beginning Tuesday before the debate through Thursday.In fact, it's Carson and Cruz rather than Rubio who got the bumps in this poll, which was conducted before and after the debate.
Among Republican or Republican-leaning registered voters, Carson and Trump each have 26% support - taking up more than half of all the vote preference. Republican leaned voters who watched the debate gave highest marks to Ted Cruz....
While the top two candidates are head and shoulders above the rest of the field, Ted Cruz has climbed into third place with 10% support, the first time he has hit double-digits since after the first Republican debate this summer. His performance in the debate is likely boosting his standing in the poll; among those leaned Republican voters who watched or followed the debate coverage, Cruz gets 17% support, while Trump and Carson get 25% and 24%, respectively.Rubio's at 9%, in a statistical tie with Cruz -- but as you can see, his poll numbers are flat. (Jeb is at 5%.)
My sense of the sentiment among base voters is that they were much more exited by Cruz than by Rubio. Cruz has dominated Free Republic since the debate. And, of course, Cruz raised more than a million bucks in the day after the debate. (And don't forgot, he already had lots of billionaire support.)
And even though they had mediocre debates, Trump and Carson are still dominant -- and Carson seems to be on the ascent.
If you think this is just autumn craziness that will dissipate just the way Cain Mania did after the fall of 2011, let me just say this: Yes, Herman Cain, Michele Bachmann, Newt Gingrich, and Rick Santorum captivated a significant percentage of the GOP electorate in the 2012 race before ultimately losing to Romney -- but never all at the same time. In this poll, three of the most extreme candidates are 1-2-3. Combined, they have 62% of the vote. In 2012, there was never a time when fringe candidates combined for 60+% of the vote while the lead mainstream candidate languished in single digits. That's what we have now.
So, yes, I think Rubio will rise -- but I think the voters still want someone more like Trump, Carson, or Cruz. And I'm convinced that that may not change.
(Poll link via Bill Scher.)
You're making sense but there is one problem. The folk that are supporting Trump, Carson, or Cruz are, almost by nature, disinclined to coalesce. And that is what it is going to take. The tbaggers/evangelicals/etc. are splitters in almost every area of their lives. Why do you think there is no denomination called "Evangelical?" They can't get together long enough to develop an actual organized denomination or sect. They have mostly a bunch of little to mid-size churches who rarely socialize, or as they call it "fellowship," with one another. They simply can't get along -- even when they basically believe the same stuff. The big mega churches are also entities to themselves which rarely last once the charismatic leader leaves or falls from grace.
ReplyDeleteIn the political arena, there are umpteen Tea Party movements. Why not one? Because they can't get along. They are splitters. Given time, and free rein, they will split the GOP and then they will split the pieces that remain. It's no accident that the spirit of the old Confederacy is so apparent among them. One, of the many, fatal flaws of the Confederacy was its lack of unity. Had the South won the war, they would have fallen to fighting among themselves. That gestalt is alive and well today in the modern GOP.
For the record, I have given up on Jeb! (Should have been "Jeb?") But I still don't see how he steps away from his campaign before even one vote is cast. However, whoever is victorious, imo, may only ever be a plurality choice 'cause the key votes are in the hands of people who cannot agree with one another long enough to effectively advance one candidate.
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Carly, Carly, we hardly knew ye.
ReplyDeleteI'm largely in agreement with mlbxxxxxx. I do wish to add this: Say you've got a party that's going to nominate a candidate the donor class wants, but ONLY the donor class wants. How do you go about giving the impression that the selected candidate has a wider mandate? YOU BRING IN SOME CLOWNS! Everybody has a good time, and when the clowns leave, the candidate who stood up there in front the kiddies with the clowns becomes the recipient of the ambient good cheer. Yeah, the clowns are gone now, and I'd really like to pick a clown, but that guy up there, he was WITH the clowns. He's like a honorary clown! Imma vote for that guy who stood with clowns.
ReplyDeleteHow do the donor class ensure Hillary's, and previously Obama's, lock on the White House?
ReplyDeleteRun a bunch of clowns against her.