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		<title>Why Republican voters are warming to Donald Trump for 2012</title>
		<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2011/4/why-republican-voters-are-warming-to-donald-t.htm</link>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: Why Republican voters are warming to Donald Trump for 2012</title>
			<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2011/4/why-republican-voters-are-warming-to-donald-t.htm</link>
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			<pubDate>Sat, 09 Apr 2011 17:46:57 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>truesee</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>The Christian Science Monitor<br /><br />Why Republican voters are warming to Donald Trump for 2012<br /><br />&#x27;The Donald&#x27; has a 52 percent favorable rating among Republicans, a new poll shows. Because Donald Trump acts like the boss, voters may be inclined to think of him that way.<br /><br />Peter Grier<br /><br />Staff writer<br /><br />April 8, 2011 at 12:27 pm EDT<br /><br />Developer/reality show star Donald Trump appears to be pretty popular with Republican voters right now, in case you haven t heard. He tied for second with Mike Huckabee, behind Mitt Romney, in a recent Wall Street Journal/NBC poll that measured the presidential nomination preferences of GOP voters. And he s got a 52 percent favorable rating among Republicans in a just-released Gallup survey.<br /><br />Why is he doing so well among adherents of the GOP? Perhaps because he s running as if he were already the party s boss, as opposed to the other candidates, who may seem like applicants for the job, comparatively speaking.<br /><br />Mr. Trump s CEO-like forcefulness has been on full display in his recent spate of television interviews. What do we do in Iraq? Stay and keep the oil! How do we handle China s rise? Slap a 25 percent tariff on Chinese goods! Was President Obama born in America? There s no proof and I m sending investigators to Hawaii to check into the story!<br /><br />IN PICTURES: Will these Republicans run in 2012?<br /><br />It s all about leadership. You have to be able to make deals, Trump said Thursday on CNN.<br /><br />Trump doesn t back down when challenged. In the face of tough questions from interviewers, he s doubled down on the whole where-was-Obama-born question, for instance. He waves away evidence such as Obama s certificate of live birth from a hospital in Hawaii and contemporaneous birth announcements placed in Hawaiian newspapers.<br /><br />He could ve been born in Kenya and gone over to the United States, Trump said on CNN.<br /><br />He s even summoned an Arizona state lawmaker who s the author of a so-called birther bill to meet him at Trump HQ in New York. Republican state Rep. Carl Seel s legislation would require presidential candidates to prove that they were born in the United States to be eligible for the state s electoral votes.<br /><br />All evidence is that a big segment of GOP voters like this.<br /><br />The fact is that Donald Trump is doing a better job when he s in front of the camera articulating a message against Barack Obama s second term in office. He doesn t pull punches, and he just speaks very plainly, said a recent post on the conservative Red State blog.<br /><br />Of course, some of that plain speaking is against GOP orthodoxy. Trump has criticized the House Republican long-term budget issued this week by Rep. Paul Ryan (R) of Wisconsin, for instance.<br /><br />I think what Paul has done is very dangerous for the Republican Party, Trump said Thursday.<br /><br />The electorate as a whole has much more mixed feelings about Trump than does the subset of Republicans. The just-released Gallup survey notes that if Democrats and independents are taken into account Trump s favorability rating drops to 43 percent, with 47 percent holding an unfavorable view of the Celebrity Apprentice star.<br /><br />Given that polls show no dominant front-runner in the GOP nomination race, Trump could still do well, notes Gallup. (Trump himself says he ll decide whether to run in June.)<br /><br />Trump does enjoy what many candidates strive hard to develop 90 percent name recognition among all Americans ... [but] whether Trump could parlay that familiarity into voter support in primaries and caucuses is an open question, writes Gallup analyst Frank Newport.<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2011/4/why-republican-voters-are-warming-to-donald-t.htm">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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