World
R Jagannathan
Aug 09, 2016, 12:37 PM | Updated 12:37 PM IST
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It is still too early to
call the US Presidential campaign, but the huge lead garnered by Democratic nominee
Hillary Clinton over grudging Republican nominee Donald Trump is now wide
enough for observers to start conceding the fight to Clinton. The bookies are
betting 76:24 in favour of Clinton.
Real Clear Politics (RCP),
a website which tracks opinion poll trends, gives Clinton a seven-point lead
over Trump (47.3 : 40.1), and the latter’s showing in the electoral college –
which is what decides the winner – is worse. Clinton is almost there, just 24
electoral college votes short of the magic number of 270 out of 538, which will
get her to the White House. Trump is far behind, with just 154 votes.
If he has
to win, he has to clean up in almost all of the 11 toss-up states, which hold
the remaining 138 electoral votes. Among
these are Florida, Ohio, Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, Arizona, Missouri
and Wisconsin, which collectively hold 115 states. This seems unlikely right
now, and many previously Republican states seem to be shifting to neutral
territory.
RCP’s figures reflect
polling averages on a rolling basis, and thus get updated every day, and Trump
seems to be losing it – both the public’s indulgence and his own balance. His
decline can probably be traced to a moment in the Democratic National
Convention last month, when a Muslim couple, whose son Captain Humayun Khan was
killed in a 2004 suicide bomb attack in Iraq, blamed Trump for rising Islamophobia
in America. Among other things, Trump has said that, if elected, he will build
a wall to keep immigrants , especially Muslims out.
At the convention, Khan’s
parents, Khizr and his wife Ghazala, castigated Trump for his bigotry and asked
him: “Have you even read the US Constitution?” To which an angry Trump
responded with his usual aggression, saying Khizr had “no right” to criticise
him, and pointedly referred to Ghazala as someone banned from speaking in
public. “She had nothing to say. Maybe she wasn’t allowed to have
anything to say.”
From then onwards, Teflon
Trump, who could get away with saying any obnoxious thing, has been on a
downward spiral. His fall from grace started the moment he showed disrespect to
a US war hero who happened to be a Muslim.
Perhaps, Trump may still
see a recovery, but this can happen only if he shows a sharp change in his
personal demeanour. Americans know that candidates say all kinds of things in
primaries, when local frustrations and narrow interest groups have to be tapped
to obtain a party nomination. But once this is done, Americans expect their
nominees to behave presidentially, and not like a street thug or foul-mouthed scrapper.
The issues Trump has
raised – about immigration, job losses, terrorism, etc – have a lot of resonance
in America today, especially in the rust-belt states where job losses are high,
and which are in a position to swing the vote one way or the other.
But what got him so far
will not get him closer to the White House. By alienating women, immigrants,
Muslims and the WASP establishment, Trump has effectively become too much of a
renegade candidate to win. America is a nation of immigrants, and even though
Islamophobia is an important undercurrent in American politics, any overt form
of bigotry holds a mirror to a society that would not like to acknowledge the
truth.
Trump is not what
Americans believe they are about, even though there is a Trump streak in every
red-neck American or Christian evangelist in America.
Maybe Trump will avoid
unnecessary gaffes and extreme political incorrectness in the remaining three
months of the campaign. But so far he has not shown the ability to rein in his
unruly self.
If he loses to Clinton
this November, it will be because Trump seems capable of defeating himself.
Jagannathan is Editorial Director, Swarajya. He tweets at @TheJaggi.