Monday, April 11, 2016

Why Donald Trump is Lying Low




And Trump on Sunday -- for the first time in more than four months -- did not appear on or call into any news program, leaving a vacuum that allowed the political narrative to shift from that of a campaign in disarray to one getting its act together.
"Lying low for a few days might play to his advantage to get his campaign organized and focused," Republican strategist Ron Bonjean said.

Home-state advantage

And while his GOP rivals in New York are scrambling to pick at Trump's massive home state advantage, Bonjean said the real estate mogul "can only go down."
"If he were just to stop talking right now until the New York primary, he would probably win it hands down. The danger for Trump is he could talk himself out of delegates," Bonjean said.
A string of surveys of New York Republicans have shown Trump above the 50% threshold needed to clinch all of New York's statewide delegates. Trump could pick up the full slate of New York's 95 GOP delegates if he matches that support in each of New York's 27 congressional districts -- where a total of 81 delegates are at stake.

Campaign pivot

Ed Brookover, a senior adviser to the Trump campaign, said Trump is on the cusp of becoming presumptive nominee and is preparing to pivot to a general election -- a new chapter in the campaign that calls for adjusting the playbook.
"You don't necessarily call the same plays in the fourth quarter of a football game that you do in the first quarter," Brookover said.
Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski did not respond to a request for comment.
Trump's double-digit loss in Wisconsin — once a primary contest many believed to be within his grasp -- came after a damaging set of mishaps that began with his campaign manager being charged with simple battery and ended with Trump twice flip-flopping on hn

The brash billionaire's uncharacteristically quiet week came as his campaign is shifting gears and building out a more delegate-focused strategy under the direction of newly minted convention manager Paul Manafort, a veteran Republican operative.
It's a new phase that Manafort -- who has given several interviews this week -- repeatedly described as a "natural transition" to "a more traditional campaign."
And while Manafort's title might give the impression he has just been charged with crafting the campaign's delegate-wrangling strategy, he is also working to set up the campaign's first Washington office, which will function both as a policy shop and an outreach outfit to normalize relations between the convention-bucking campaign and power players.
Some shifts are already underway.

Focus on policy

Breaking from his unscripted style, Trump will soon begin delivering a series of policy speeches aimed at quelling concerns that Trump is an insufficiently presidential or polished candidate.
Trump's boisterous, signature rallies will remain on the slate. But Brookover said the campaign plans to continue switching up the style of events. He floated the idea of factory tours in New York and -- in a general election -- more intimate settings to listen to voters' concerns.
"What you're going to see more and more of is Mr. Trump taking advantage of local situations when he's there," and tailoring his campaign message to the region, Brookover said. "It's a national message which has local impact, be that trade or job training or immigration"
And former GOP presidential candidate and Trump supporter Ben Carson said Friday that Trump also knows that his prolific and often controversy-stoking Twitter presence is "a problem."
"You know, the first part of solving the problem is recognizing that it exists," Carson said Friday on a conservative talk radio program.
Trump himself, in a rare moment of contrition, acknowledged last week that tweeting an unflattering picture of Heidi Cruz, the Texas senator's wife, was a "mistake."

Message discipline

And this week Trump put his newfound attention to message discipline on rare display.
After hitting Ted Cruz in New York on Wednesday over the Texas senator's "New York values" comments and invoking the bravery of New Yorkers after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Trump disappeared.
He didn't hammer his points by appearing on morning TV shows the next day or by calling into prime-time programming. Instead, he let his comments marinate and watched as the New York tabloid press machine -- which was already gunning for Cruz -- run rabid.
Trump's recent show of discipline is not the first time the billionaire -- known more for his bombast than his tact -- has managed to shed his over-the-top persona.
Trump surprised pundits and political observers in several of the last debates when he adopted a more restrained and less confrontational style, showing millions that he could give a presidential performance.
Trump repeatedly insists he could be "the most presidential candidate in history other than honest Abe Lincoln," but that he is loathe to do away with his brass-knuckle style of political fighting while he is still fending off primary challenges.
"The American dream is dead, but I'm going to make it bigger and better and stronger than ever before, we are going to make America great again," Trump said Sunday at his rally in Rochester, New York

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