Political journalist, Fred Barnes, in his journal, “Trump Gains When He Stays in the Background”, analyzes Trump’s pattern to gaining in the polls. Barnes’ purpose is to indicate what causes Trump to fall behind Clinton in the polls and then how he redeems himself to get ahead of her again. He adopts an unbiased tone in order to appeal to both sides in his adult readers. Barnes’ uses dashes, talks about how Trump falls behind and gets back up again in each paragraph in order to illustrate what pattern could help Trump win the presidency over Clinton, and uses syntax. Barnes begins his writing by acknowledging that when Trump is in the spotlight of the media, he falls behind in the polls and it’s when he stays in the background that he pulls through it.…
The Pros of a Donald Trump Presidency American politics have always fascinated me. Where else can you find a medium that discusses some of the world's most pressing issues, while at the same time giving you an opportunity to analyze American behavior as it unfolds upon a political system that has influenced many other countries, including the Dominican Republic. But let’s be honest, politics can also be very dull, with its insipid candidates, anticlimactic voting system, and laws worded in such a way that would confuse even Joyce. Thank god for Donald Trump!…
The general argument made by author Michael Finnegan in his work, Republican Party disruption in Trump’s Nevada victory”, is that Donald Trump persuades his audience with his speeches and the cruel words he uses to get voters to vote for him in order to become President of the United States. More specifically, Finnegan argues that Trump has the necessary power to become the ruler of the United States. He writes quotes Trump when he stated, “We might not even need the two months, folks, to be honest.” This line reveal the confidence that Trump has for himself for winning the elections and Finnegan agrees with him when he stated “Trump might be right.”…
Lisa McGirr’s book Suburban Warriors: The origins of the New American Right, published in 2001, examines the history of the conservative grassroots movement in Orange County, California during the 1960s and 1970s. With a “bottom up” lens, McGirr focused on ordinary people behind the grass-roots conservatism rather than the intellectual and political leaders. Historian Richard Hofstadter believed right-wing activists acted purely on their “psychological distress” rather than being motivated by a set of beliefs or “rational politics” (7). In response, McGirr argues that the ordinary people who created conservative grassroots were usually already involved with modernity. Many of them were mobile migrants who welcomed entrepreneurialism and already…
I remember when Donald Trump first announced his political run for office. He built his campaign on the slogan: We’re going to Make America Great Again, “reinforced” by his bold claim of “building a wall”. When Trump got down into the weeds with Megyn Kelly during the first Fox News Republican debate, I sensed Donald Trump was a proud and arrogant man. I went on my own campaign against him; making phone calls, writing emails, calling news agencies and talk shows, posting madly to Facebook — whatever I could do to try to stop a really bad person from wrecking the Republican Party and damaging the nation. NeverTrump was my obsession, but it was, at that time, merely political for me.…
The most interesting detail I learned from the books is that a candidate being able to connect with voters is one of the most important things a candidate must do to win the presidency. It can be seen in the 1992 election as Clinton was able to connect with people and make them believe that change was possible. Bush in this election was unable to connect and so even though he was president when the Berlin Wall and the Soviet Union fell, he was unable to win the presidency. I believe this connects quite perfectly with the current election. Donald Trump was able to maybe not necessarily connect with voters, but he able to connect more than Hillary Clinton was able to.…
The 2016 presidential election will go down in history as one of the most controversial elections in American history. During the campaigning our lives revolved around news jam-packed with predictions and contentious headlines about both the Republican and Democratic candidates. Most of us were fed up and could not wait until November 8th when the incessant character assignations would finally come to an end. All the while many of us had high hopes for the future mixed with the fear that polls are not always accurate and dreams do not always come true. Finally, on November 8th, the presidential race entered its final lap and it was obvious that the Democratic candidate was trailing in the numbers.…
Trump wanted to win everything in his life. Trump succeeded in both academic and sports field. He received various award in most of his classes. On the sports field he excelled in every sports and was considered star of the field. He graduated from New York Military Academy in 1964.…
Donald Trump came back from many bankruptcies. He also been very successful throughout his life. he is a child of a imagrant parent. He had good parent who became very successful. Donald trump had it made since he was a kid.…
Donald Trump went from being a billionaire businessman to the 45th President of the United States of America. He is unlike any leader the US has seen before and he has the whole world on its toes waiting to see what he does or says next. He is not the normal, clique politician that does things by the book. He is creating policies that are shocking and disrupting to other countries, with the well being of the US in mind and he is reaching out and forming relationships and connections with countries that had not been popular in the past. He is changing the way politics are normally view and making them his own, thus earning him the title of the most influential person in world politics…
Max McCarty English 1030 Professor Quigley 8 February, 2017 “Make America Great Again” This past political season, Donald Trump took the United States election by storm. First by even running for president. After defeating multiple Republicans in the primary, Trump ended up winning the Republican nomination for president.…
Personally I am finding it difficult to answer this question simply because I think as a country we love rooting for the underdog. Just the idea of the candidate who is viewed as less than emerging as victor is exciting. However there is no denying the bandwagon effect. Just look at Donald Trump for example at first his statements were seen as racist, tyrannical, us vs. them hate speech but simply looking at the polls you can see he is gaining more popularity with every speech.…
I think a lot of businesses are getting worried that the current presidential election would affect the economy in a negative way. I think the main thing many of them are worried about is how possible new taxes are going to affect their business depending on which political party take control of the White House, along with Congress. There are other concerns about things such as healthcare costs, minimum wage laws, income inequality, etc. They are very uncertain about what the future may hold for them and not sure which side they want to lean on, especially since the current president is not running for reelection. I think it makes it very hard for them to focus long-term about growing or expanding their…
In a period of an election, people look around and about for a candidate that has policies that will favor them. Most candidates, unfortunately, use this as a leverage to raise false hopes and promises. The people of America deserves better than that. A candidate should be realistic and not just for the sake of power, throw dust into the eyes of the people. William Jefferson "Bill" Clinton was the 42nd present of the UnitedStates and the first democrat to serve two terms in office since FDR.…
The Trump campaign voiced the idea that so many people had throughout the United States, there needs to be change. Bernie Sanders had already shown that this feeling was there in the Democratic Party, by almost grabbing away the election from Hillary Clinton, but Donald Trump fully tapped into this feeling at the Republican side. It also helped that on the other side there was a candidate who people thought of as the same old and as a Washington insider. The voters were looking for change and something new and the candidate who had been around in the political arena for three decades did not support that idea Philip Elliott, Sam Frizell, and Charlotte Alter, “How She Lost.,” Article, Time 188, no. 21 (November 21, 2016),…