
As we
point out in our new bestseller "Armageddon: How Trump Can Beat Hillary,"
there is a fundamental flaw in Hillary Clinton's campaign approach and the
debate coming up on Monday should make it evident.
Hillary
and the Democrats have based their campaign on demonizing Donald Trump, calling
him dangerous, unpredictable, racist, Islamophobic, demagogic, sexist, lacking
in temperament and judgement, bombastic, jingoistic and a litany of other
names.
His
supporters belong in a "basket of deplorables."
It is a
campaign conducted by a speechwriter with a well-thumbed thesaurus.
Against
Barry Goldwater in 1964 and George McGovern in 1972, such a strategy of name
calling could and did work. But now we have televised debates. (There were none
in '64 or '72).
We will
meet Donald and will see that he is none of the things Hillary says he is.
Before he takes a single stand on a single issue, it will be evident that he is
not the diabolic candidate Hillary paints.
In some
cases, the road is coming up to meet him. The problems he has focused on have
become so serious that his formerly extreme rhetoric now makes sense. How can
we look at the mayhem caused by an Afghani immigrant without thinking about
stopping more from coming in?
In other
cases, his rhetoric has toned down. He still wants to build a wall, just like
Bill Clinton did in 1993. Bill stretched one 300 miles along the
California/Mexico border — and it still stands. Trump's would be longer. But he
no longer calls Mexicans drug dealers and criminals and has abandoned the idea
of a Gestapo-style roundup of illegals for deportation.
All Trump
needs to do is to lay out positive proposals and avoid ratifying Hillary's
accusations. Donald's constructive programs on taxes, national security,
immigration, the economy, and child care form a basis for projecting a national
image that will simply sweep aside Hillary's campaign.
For her
part, Hillary has to look healthy and energetic. A modulated, laid-back
performance will destroy her claim that she is well enough to be president.
Tactically,
we would suggest (as we do in our book):
- He should attack Bill's record on bank regulation, making clear that his decision to deregulate banks as he left office opened the door to the '07 and '08 crash.
- He should challenge her to close down the Clinton Foundation so there can be no pay-for-play deals involving a president.
- In his outreach to African-Americans, he has stressed school choice — a chapter in our book. He can outflank Hillary on education and make strong inroads into the ranks of black women.
- He needs to show a balanced approach to the recent police shootings and make clear that he will be sure that police violence against unarmed minority boys has to end.
- Trump should hang Obamacare around Hillary's neck. The issue has been almost absent from the campaign so far and it represents Obama's and Hillary's biggest failure on the national stage.
Everything
is trending Trump's way as he enters the debate. A strong performance will
catapult Trump ahead of Hillary, perhaps to stay.
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