I think the GOP sold the sole of the party to this guy for a chance to retake the White House. And, I think the Party leaders thought they could control him, eventually, and that when Trump fell in line, or more likely when he got bored of “ruling”, they could make hay on the party’s platform on Health care, immigration, regulatory reform, court appointments, etc. and other key issues. But, he is not and never was a Republican and they cannot and never will control him. He’s a usurper. The GOP leaders must now regret that the primary process was so crowded that the cream never rose to the top. At he end you had three unlikely candidates in Trump, along with Cruz and Kasich, niether of whom could gain traction. Couple this with the mainstream media fascination in covering Trump as the novelty item he was, niether MSM or the GOP took him as a serious candidate, until it was too late. MSM allowed him to suck up all the oxygen during the debates and on the campaign trail to the detriment of all of the candidates. The GOP never slapped him down when he made outrages comments or showed his despicable real self. Key Republicans tried to cast him out, such as Romney, McCain, the Bushes, Rubio and Cruz, but those efforts came far too late and/ or far too little. Truth be told, as you and Red pointed out, he resonated with the disenfranchised, many of whom were not Republicans, but chose to vote that way because of Trump.
Just as you said, I agree that both parties are pretty broken. This is particularly true of the GOP. I think it was Ronald Reagan who once said about his changing from Democrat to Republican, “I didn’t leave the party, the party left me.“ I think many of us former Republicans are feeling this way right about now. I am. I think the Republican Party has morphed into the party of Trump already, much to the dismay of Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell, and the old guard. I wonder if this will create some legitimate movement towards the formation of a real centrist third-party. This party could bring together disenfranchised Democrats and Republicans who see things more moderately. Obviously, a splintered GOP or a legit third would not be comparable in size to a unified Democratic or GOP Party, and there would be a heavy cost to pay in national elections, at least for a while. But they would be forced to work together and maybe coalition governments would be better for everyone.
I read the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times and the Washington Post. For work I have access to digital subscriptions for the first two, and I have just signed up personally for a digital subscription to the Post. All three are excellent papers. Obviously the Wall Street Journal is a right-leaning business focused paper, and being a Banker this is where I find myself most days. The Times and the Post are anything but right leaning but I don’t find them to be outlandishly left either. They are both pretty fair IMO. I believe they both cover stories and do investigative reporting exceptionally well, at least until the writers express their personal opinions, which happens in the WSJ as well.
Sadly, for TV, I’m kind of struggling with that lately. Historically, I’ve been a CNN watcher. But I find their coverage of Trump exasperating, not because Trump is exasperating (which he is), but because it appears to me that they feel so guilty about their role in the Trump election that they have to go to such extremes in their criticism of him. I have never watched Fox news and I have no interest in doing so. I’ve always been fascinated by the number of the liberals that seemingly watch Fox news. It’s sort of like the mental version of self abuse or cutting but to each their own. I had occasionally watched MSNBC, but they've spun themselves into being the Fox News of the liberals and I have lost interest.
Never listened to Rush or any of the right mouth pieces. I hate being told what I should think or feel. However, I’m a Milwaukee guy, and although I live in Chicago, I’m still close enough to get Milwaukee AM radio stations. There was a guy from Milwaukee has become kind of a national celebrity recently by the name of Charlie Sykes who I enjoyed listening to as he was a moderate Republican. You’ve probably seen him on any of the MSN news-shows, as he was one of the first “talkers” to go along with the “Never Trump“ movement.
Just as you said, I agree that both parties are pretty broken. This is particularly true of the GOP. I think it was Ronald Reagan who once said about his changing from Democrat to Republican, “I didn’t leave the party, the party left me.“ I think many of us former Republicans are feeling this way right about now. I am. I think the Republican Party has morphed into the party of Trump already, much to the dismay of Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell, and the old guard. I wonder if this will create some legitimate movement towards the formation of a real centrist third-party. This party could bring together disenfranchised Democrats and Republicans who see things more moderately. Obviously, a splintered GOP or a legit third would not be comparable in size to a unified Democratic or GOP Party, and there would be a heavy cost to pay in national elections, at least for a while. But they would be forced to work together and maybe coalition governments would be better for everyone.
I read the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times and the Washington Post. For work I have access to digital subscriptions for the first two, and I have just signed up personally for a digital subscription to the Post. All three are excellent papers. Obviously the Wall Street Journal is a right-leaning business focused paper, and being a Banker this is where I find myself most days. The Times and the Post are anything but right leaning but I don’t find them to be outlandishly left either. They are both pretty fair IMO. I believe they both cover stories and do investigative reporting exceptionally well, at least until the writers express their personal opinions, which happens in the WSJ as well.
Sadly, for TV, I’m kind of struggling with that lately. Historically, I’ve been a CNN watcher. But I find their coverage of Trump exasperating, not because Trump is exasperating (which he is), but because it appears to me that they feel so guilty about their role in the Trump election that they have to go to such extremes in their criticism of him. I have never watched Fox news and I have no interest in doing so. I’ve always been fascinated by the number of the liberals that seemingly watch Fox news. It’s sort of like the mental version of self abuse or cutting but to each their own. I had occasionally watched MSNBC, but they've spun themselves into being the Fox News of the liberals and I have lost interest.
Never listened to Rush or any of the right mouth pieces. I hate being told what I should think or feel. However, I’m a Milwaukee guy, and although I live in Chicago, I’m still close enough to get Milwaukee AM radio stations. There was a guy from Milwaukee has become kind of a national celebrity recently by the name of Charlie Sykes who I enjoyed listening to as he was a moderate Republican. You’ve probably seen him on any of the MSN news-shows, as he was one of the first “talkers” to go along with the “Never Trump“ movement.
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