“It may be that he may make more insensitive statements because he’s not a polished politician.”
— Rudy Giulini, quoted by The Hill, defending Donald Trump.
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“It may be that he may make more insensitive statements because he’s not a polished politician.”
— Rudy Giulini, quoted by The Hill, defending Donald Trump.
“Publicly, Republican Party officials continue to stand by Donald Trump. Privately, at the highest levels, party leaders have started talking about cutting off support to Trump in October and redirecting cash to saving endangered congressional majorities,” Politico reports.
“Since the Cleveland convention, top party officials have been quietly making the case to political journalists, donors and GOP operatives that the Republican National Committee has done more to help Trump than it did to support its 2012 nominee Mitt Romney and that, therefore, Trump has only himself and his campaign to blame for his precipitous slide in the polls.”

A telling anecdote on how the Washington Post came to write a book on Donald Trump:
Hicks cut him off, calling the decision to write a book “incredibly disingenuous… You are profiteering off Mr. Trump. This isn’t something we’re participating in; you all are making money on this.”
Fisher pointed out that in every election year, The Post publishes a comprehensive series of articles tracing the candidates’ lives. This would be no different, except that the same reporting that was going toward newspaper articles was also being used to tell the story in one narrative, in book form. The Post planned a similar examination of the life and record of the Democratic nominee. Hicks was unimpressed. She reiterated icily that no cooperation would be forthcoming and she ended the call.
After the weekend, Hicks called back, her tone now bright and friendly. “I told Mr. Trump about your project, and he loves it,” she said. “He’s happy to meet with you.”
Award winning actor Robert De Niro compared Donald Trump to his mentally unstable character Travis Bickle in the 1976 movie Taxi Driver, calling the Republican nominee “totally nuts,” The Hill reports.
Said De Niro: “What he has been saying is totally crazy, ridiculous, stuff that shouldn’t be even… he is totally nuts.”
He added: “I don’t know, it’s crazy that people like Donald Trump… he shouldn’t even be where he is, so God help us.”
Dan Balz: “The unraveling of Donald Trump’s candidacy continues apace, a long and steady decline since the high point three months ago. If he were deliberately trying to avoid winning the election, he could hardly be doing a better job.”
“The hole he has dug for himself is wide and deep. National polls and battleground state polls all tell a similar story. Hillary Clinton has opened up a small-to-significant lead over Trump almost everywhere it counts. Unless Trump can reverse course, Clinton, despite persistent questions about her honesty, is on track to win a handsome electoral college majority. The lone bright spot for Trump: It’s August not October. But that comes with a caveat.”
“Republicans hope Trump is bottoming out. They are waiting for a pivot that could and should have happened before Memorial Day. They wonder whether it will happen by the end of the month or at all… The general election is already half over, and Trump has lost the first half decisively.”
For members: Only an Epic Comeback Can Save Trump Now
New York Times: “Advisers who once hoped a Pygmalion-like transformation would refashion a crudely effective political showman into a plausible American president now increasingly concede that Mr. Trump may be beyond coaching. He has ignored their pleas and counsel as his poll numbers have dropped, boasting to friends about the size of his crowds and maintaining that he can read surveys better than the professionals.”
“In private, Mr. Trump’s mood is often sullen and erratic, his associates say. He veers from barking at members of his staff to grumbling about how he was better off following his own instincts during the primaries and suggesting he should not have heeded their calls for change.”
“But in interviews with more than 20 Republicans who are close to Mr. Trump or in communication with his campaign… they described their nominee as exhausted, frustrated and still bewildered by fine points of the political process and why his incendiary approach seems to be sputtering.”
New York Times: “Blocked for most of his presidency by Congress, Mr. Obama has sought to act however he could. In the process he created the kind of government neither he nor the Republicans wanted — one that depended on bureaucratic bulldozing rather than legislative transparency. But once Mr. Obama got the taste for it, he pursued his executive power without apology, and in ways that will shape the presidency for decades to come.”
“The Obama administration in its first seven years finalized 560 major regulations… An army of lawyers working under Mr. Obama’s authority has sought to restructure the nation’s health care and financial industries, limit pollution, bolster workplace protections and extend equal rights to minorities. Under Mr. Obama, the government has literally placed a higher value on human life.”

“The Republican Party could be nearing a breaking point with Donald Trump,” the AP reports.
“As he skips from one gaffe to the next, GOP leaders in Washington and in the most competitive states have begun openly contemplating turning their backs on their party’s presidential nominee to prevent what they fear will be wide-scale Republican losses on Election Day.”
“Back in 1996, the party largely gave up on nominee Bob Dole once it became clear he had little chance of winning, so it’s not without precedent. Nevertheless, it’s a jolting prospect now, with roughly three months still left before the Nov. 8 vote and weeks before the three presidential debates.”
“Frankly, a lot of stuff over the last week … it’s him being distorted. For the last week or so, he’s been very focused and very much on his game.”
— Trump adviser Paul Manafort, quoted by the AP.
Donald Trump’s campaign is now looking for “election observers” to prevent “Crooked Hillary Clinton” from “rigging the election” in November, the Weekly Standard reports.
However, Rick Hasen notes “there’s a longstanding consent decree that bars the RNC afrom engaging in such activities.”
“Bill Clinton says it was a mistake for Hillary Clinton to maintain a personal email server even though her predecessors and her successor at the State Department did it,” the AP reports.
“But the former president says his wife should have known that there would be a different set of rules applied to her if she ran for the presidency.”
“The last time Connecticut voted for a Republican presidential candidate, Americans were listening to music on cassette tapes and most cell phones were the size of shoe boxes. Yet Donald Trump’s campaign spokesman insists they believe he has a chance to turn Connecticut red for the first time since 1988, and that’s why he is holding weekend rally there on Saturday,” the CNN reports.
“Veteran Republicans, however, see Trump’s Fairfield, Connecticut, campaign stop as a fool’s errand — a prime example of what many worry is a political operation that takes Trump’s proclivity for defying convention a step too far.”
Politico: Trump’s run at true blue Connecticut
Donald Trump told a rally in Pennsylvania that the only way Hillary Clinton could win the state was if she cheated, the Washington Post reports.
Said Trump: “We have to have the sheriffs and the police chiefs and everybody watching. Because if we get cheated out of this election, if we get cheated out of a win in Pennsylvania, which is such a vital state, especially when I know what’s happening here, folks. I know. She can’t beat what’s happening here.”
He added: “The only way they can beat it in my opinion — and I mean this 100 percent — if in certain sections of the state they cheat, OK?”
“A hacker posted cellphone numbers and other personal information of nearly 200 current and former congressional Democrats on Friday, the latest public disclosure of sensitive records this election season,” the Wall Street Journal reports.
“The hacker, or group of hackers, going by the name ‘Guccifer 2.0’ said the records were stolen as part of a breach of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. A number of files were posted onto Guccifer 2.0’s website, including a spreadsheet that has information for 193 people, such as phone numbers and email addresses. The cellphone numbers of House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of California and Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer of Maryland were among the information posted.”
Dan Drezner suggests Donald Trump has stumbled into a campaign doom loop:
New York Times: “For a candidate who once seemed like an electoral phenomenon, with an unshakable following and a celebrity appeal that crossed party lines, Mr. Trump now faces the grave possibility that his missteps have erected a ceiling over his support among some demographic groups and in several swing states. He has been stuck under 45 percent of the vote in Ohio and Pennsylvania for weeks, polls show, while Mrs. Clinton has gained support.”
“Several Republican voters said they grow leery every time Mr. Trump speaks these days, for fear he will embarrass them, and feel increasingly repelled just when they hoped he might adjust his message to try to draw more people in.”
Taegan Goddard is the founder of Political Wire, one of the earliest and most influential political web sites. He also runs Political Job Hunt, Electoral Vote Map and the Political Dictionary.
Goddard spent more than a decade as managing director and chief operating officer of a prominent investment firm in New York City. Previously, he was a policy adviser to a U.S. Senator and Governor.
Goddard is also co-author of You Won - Now What? (Scribner, 1998), a political management book hailed by prominent journalists and politicians from both parties. In addition, Goddard's essays on politics and public policy have appeared in dozens of newspapers across the country.
Goddard earned degrees from Vassar College and Harvard University. He lives in New York with his wife and three sons.
Goddard is the owner of Goddard Media LLC.
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