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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, June 7, 2016
The Republican candidate continues to dominate the presidential contest.


See who supports Donald Trump.Paul D. RyanThe House speaker endorsed Trump’s bid for president on June 2. Joshua Roberts/Reuters
By Sean Sullivan and Jenna Johnson-June 5 A growing number of Republican lawmakers and strategists fear that Donald Trump’s hostile remarks about minorities and his unorthodox strategy have imperiled his campaign at the end of a five-week head start on Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton that they hoped would fortify him heading into the general election.
Their concerns increased again Sunday after Trump said he thought a
Muslim judge might treat him unfairly because he wants to temporarily
ban most foreign Muslims from entering the country. The remark was
an expansion on repeated assertions over the past week that an
American-born judge overseeing a fraud case against him should recuse
himself because of his “Mexican heritage.”
“If it were a Muslim judge, would you also feel like they wouldn’t be
able to treat you fairly because of that policy of yours?” host John
Dickerson asked on CBS’s “Face the Nation.”
“It’s possible, yes. Yeah. That would be possible, absolutely,” Trump replied.
While Republicans credit Trump for making some strides after vanquishing
his final GOP opponents last month, many are concerned about repeated
comments singling out people for criticism on the basis of race,
ethnicity or religion. The attacks in the Trump University case also
underscore the extent to which Trump, who is traveling overseas later
this month to visit some of his golf courses, commingles his private
business interests with his presidential campaign.
Finally, many Republicans are also unnerved by Trump’s decision to
continue picking fights with fellow Republicans and to spend time and
resources campaigning in Californiaand other Democratic-leaning states that he is extremely unlikely to win in November.
The prevailing view among prominent Republicans is that Trump still has
the time and ability to make the necessary course corrections,
especially given Clinton’s vulnerabilities. But they see some acute
problems in the way he has conducted himself in recent days.
Republican strategist Brian Walsh, a former spokesman for the National
Republican Senatorial Committee, quickly took to social media after
Trump’s remarks on Muslims on Sunday: “I don’t care if he’s the nominee — Republicans should loudly condemn this racist, nonsensical rhetoric by Trump,” Walsh tweeted.
Walsh, who does not support Trump at the moment, said in an interview
that Republican leaders should not hesitate to condemn comments that are
“the definition of racism.”
“It’s very toxic for other Republican campaigns and for the party as a whole,” he said. “It’s very concerning.”
In the latest sign of the separation down-ballot Republicans are seeking
from Trump, Sen. Kelly Ayotte (N.H.) responded to Trump’s latest
comments with a strongly worded statement to The Washington Post.
“His comments are offensive and wrong and he should retract them,” said Ayotte, who is in a challenging reelection campaign.
Trump’s remark on a theoretical Muslim judge followed his repeated comments arguing
that U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel, who is presiding over fraud
lawsuits against his Trump University education business, should have
recused himself because “he’s a Mexican.” Trump says his desire to build
a wall on the border with Mexico was in conflict with the judge’s
ethnic background; Curiel was born in Indiana to Mexican immigrant
parents.
Republican leaders, including House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (Wis.) and
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.), who both support Trump,
have criticized those statements.
“I couldn’t disagree more with a statement like that,” McConnell said on
NBC’s “Meet the Press,” though he repeatedly refused to say whether the
comments were by definition racist.
Former House speaker Newt Gingrich, another Trump booster, also criticized him on “Fox News Sunday.”
“This is one of the worst mistakes Trump has made, and I think it’s
inexcusable,” said Gingrich. He added: “If a liberal were to attack
Justice Clarence Thomas on the grounds that he’s black, we would all go
crazy.”
Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.), a longtime party strategist and Trump
supporter, said in an interview that the real estate mogul needs to
“move from a primary message to more of a general-election message” and
“to start trying to find ways to reach out to groups he doesn’t need to
win, but he needs to make sure he’s not annihilated among,” such as
African Americans and Hispanics.
Trump has consistently struggled throughout his campaign with both his
rhetoric and policies relating to minorities. At a rally in Redding,
Calif., on Friday, Trump pointed to a black man in the crowd and exclaimed, “Oh, look at my African American over here — look at him.”
“It seems the campaign has been a tad slow to a full transition to a
general-election strategy,” said Greg Mueller, who has worked on several
presidential campaigns and backs Trump. “But they have time and a bully
pulpit like few other Republican candidates in recent times.”
Rick Wilson, a longtime GOP operative who has been one of the most aggressive critics of Trump, penned a column to fellow Republicans this
weekend warning that candidates up for election will be yoked to Trump:
“You own his politics. You own his policies, even the ones that only
last as long as the next contradiction. You own the racial animus that
started out as a bug, became a feature and is now the defining
characteristic of his campaign. You own every crazy, vile chunk of word
vomit that spews from his mouth.”
Wilson said in an interview Sunday that Trump’s comments about Curiel
and a hypothetical Muslim judge are “overtly racist” and contradict the
freedoms outlined in the Constitution. Wilson said that it is
“mortifying” that Trump would use a judge’s ethnic heritage as an excuse
for why Trump University has lost court decisions.
“For everyone who cries wolf on racism — and there are a lot of them on
the other side — they are now validated forever,” Wilson said.
Republican concerns over Trump’s campaign extend beyond his comments to
his strategy. After cementing his claim to the nomination after the May 3
Indiana primary, Trump has taken long stretches off the trail and, when
he is campaigning, has focused his time on blue states that still have
primaries to come but are virtually unwinnable for a Republican in the
general election. California, where Trump held rallies over the past two
weeks, was last won by a Republican nominee in 1988 by George H.W.
Bush; a recent survey showed Clinton with a double-digit lead over Trump there.
“By any stretch of the GOP imagination, as many as 18 other states that
Mitt Romney lost would probably be better targets for Donald Trump than
California,” said Neil Newhouse, who was GOP nominee Romney’s pollster
in 2012. “Recent polling indicates that it may not be far-fetched for
the Trump campaign to believe they can expand the electoral playing
field, but overreaching can expend scarce resources and divert them from
states that are more realistic targets.”
During a three-day swing through the Golden State last week, Trump
repeatedly told supporters he intends to contest the state in the fall.
“I’m going to play heavy in California,” Trump said in Redding on
Friday. “Right? I think we can win.”
Trump also said he harbors ambitions to wrest Oregon and Washington from
Democratic hands. Neither state has gone Republican since Ronald Reagan
won them in his 1984 landslide.
“We’re going to play in places where Republicans don’t traditionally
play in — that’s in addition to the Floridas of the world,” Trump
campaign manager Corey Lewandowski said in a recent interview.
Trump had been scheduled to meet with
Florida Gov. Rick Scott on Monday in New York to discuss strategy in
the Sunshine State, which is a quadrennial battleground. But Scott
decided to postpone the meeting Sunday to stay in Florida and monitor a storm.
There are also concerns about Trump’s continued targeting of fellow Republicans.
During an event in New Mexico last month, he criticized Gov. Susana
Martinez — the first Latina governor in the nation — only to reverse
course the following week by telling a local newspaper he would like her endorsement. In response, Martinez’s office said she would meet with the mogul.
Trump’s initial criticism of Martinez dominated news coverage, at least partly overshadowing events such as the release of a highly critical analysis of Clinton’s use of email as secretary of state.
“There have been a number of missed opportunities,” said Republican
strategist Kevin Madden, who worked for Romney. “They seem to be a
product of a campaign that is winging it from day to day.”
Even amid such criticism, some Republicans see upsides for Trump. Cole
said that according to polling he has conducted in his congressional
district, Trump’s favorability among Republicans is on the rise. Some
recent public polling has also showed Clinton and Trump in close
competition in key swing states.
Cole also pointed to Trump gaining the endorsement last week of Ryan,
the nation’s highest-ranking Republican. After refusing to back Trump
for weeks, Ryan wrote a guest column for his hometown newspaper Thursday explaining that he would vote for Trump while still voicing disagreements when necessary.
The next day, Ryan followed through — criticizing Trump’s comment about Curiel as “out of left field.”
“He clearly says and does things I don’t agree with, and I’ve had to
speak up on time to time when that has occurred, and I’ll continue to do
that if it’s necessary,” Ryan told a Wisconsin radio station. “I hope
it’s not.”
Trump shows little sign of changing course and continues to champion
policies that Ryan and other establishment Republicans oppose. At his
Redding rally last week, for example, Trump led one of his regular
chants on building a massive wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.
“Build that wall!” Trump said to the cheering crowd.
“The wall got 10 feet higher!” one man yelled out in response.
