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USANews版 - Trump fights breaking out across college campuses
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话题: trump话题: college话题: republican话题: yale
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Michael Straw, a senior at Penn State University, returned to campus this
week, put on a crisp blue suit, and walked into a Trump buzzsaw.
The president of the school’s chapter of College Republicans had a sense of
what he was in for. Less than two weeks before, the group had announced in
a Facebook post that they would not endorse Donald Trump after holding an
online vote — a move that sparked outrage, including a call from the
chairman of the Pennsylvania Federation of College Republicans for Straw to
resign.
So when Straw gaveled in the chapter’s first meeting of the school year on
Monday, it wasn’t altogether surprising that he was confronted by angry
college Trump supporters — some wearing the signature “Make America Great
Again” hats — demanding a re-vote of the non-endorsement and chanting
Trump’s name throughout the meeting.
Straw ultimately made it through the hostile meeting without budging on the
endorsement, or his own tenure as president of the group. And he says the
tensions that have bubbled up on his campus were inevitable.
“I don’t think it’s extraordinary because obviously young voters are
having a hard time supporting Donald Trump,” Straw said about his chapter’
s decision not to endorse Trump. “I think it was bound to happen.”
Still, Penn State’s chapter is wading into unprecedented territory of
declining to endorse the party’s nominee for president, and they are joined
by a growing number of College Republicans chapters nationwide that are
steering clear of Trump.
As students head back to campus for the start of the new school year,
College Republicans are going through the same soul-searching that
Republicans across the country have been wrestling with for months over what
the future of their party will look like and what lasting impact Trump’s
unorthodox campaign will have on the GOP.
“Look at various different conservative activist groups, the conservative
media, there’s been a fracturing in how to deal with Trump, with some sites
getting on board, other sites being strongly against,” said Tim Miller,
who served as the top spokesman for Jeb Bush’s campaign before becoming a
leader of the Never Trump movement that failed to derail his nomination. “
So absolutely, this is a reflection about what’s happening in the party at
large.”
At Harvard University, the oldest College Republicans club in the nation did
not endorse the party’s nominee for president for the first time in 128
years, and at Yale University, more than half of Yale College Republicans’
executive board left the club and created Yale New Republicans after their
former organization endorsed Trump earlier this month.
Credit Politico Illustration/Wellesley College Archives
THE FRIDAY COVER
The First Time Hillary Clinton Was President
By MICHAEL KRUSE
Ben Rasmussen, a Yale junior who had served as the Yale College Republicans
vice president, said the group had talked about how to handle Trump’s
nomination after Harvard’s club decided not to endorse him. Rasmussen said
he wanted to stay silent on the nomination, and the group initially agreed
to do so.
Then, a fake Twitter account in the group’s name tweeted that the club was
not endorsing Trump. Leaders quickly rebuked the tweet, but were split over
how to proceed. Rasmussen was still in the camp of not making a statement in
support or against Trump. Then, he boarded the train for work one morning
and had no service for about an hour. When he got off, the club’s
presidents decided to endorse Trump, posting a statement on Facebook.
“It came as a shock to me,” he said. “It all happened so fast.”
Rasmussen, who is now the co-director of Yale New Republicans, said he and
others defected from the group because they felt the Trump endorsement
marginalized conservative Yale students who do not support Trump, and he
feels it’s a sentiment rippling across college campuses.
“What’s happening at Yale right now is the perfect foreshadowing of what
we will see in the Republican Party in the years to come,” he said. “The
Republican Party is at a point now where it needs to either adapt or it will
die.”
Trump’s nomination has torn the Republican Party apart at its seams,
alienating key parts of the base and threatening to fundamentally change the
electoral map. Hillary Clinton has commanding leads in many of the swing
states and she’s threatening to win historically red states, making strides
that could result in a big win. Also alarming for Republicans: Trump’s
outreach to young voters has been minimal at best.
The Trump children have tried to serve as their father’s surrogate to young
voters — Ivanka Trump attempted to woo millennials in her speech at the
Republican National Convention by characterizing herself as one — but
Donald Trump’s inflammatory comments about minorities and repeated missteps
have turned off many young voters who have ruled him out as a credible
candidate.
Trump is not completely bereft of college supporters, however, as Students
for Trump has dozens of chapters on campuses nationwide. Ryan Fournier, the
group's national chairman, said he’s confident Trump’s support among
millennials is increasing, but said he is disappointed that some College
Republicans chapters are not endorsing him.
“My word is to the College Republicans is that it’s time to unite,” said
Fournier, a sophomore at Campbell University. “It is very upsetting to see
that there are groups that are not endorsing the candidate.”
While the disarray on college campuses over Trump’s candidacy mirrors the
Republican Party at large, the dearth of support among young voters is
particularly problematic for a party that has long struggled to attract the
voting bloc.
“You don’t have to show me a poll to tell me that we’re in trouble with
young people,” said Alex Smith, the national chairman of the College
Republican National Committee. “The bottom line is anyone who runs with a
Republican label next to their name starts out at a deficit with young
people and it’s incumbent upon those candidates to fix that deficit.”
Clinton to Trump: 'Dream on'
Trump and Clinton hurl the R-word
By GABRIEL DEBENEDETTI and LOUIS NELSON
Smith, the first woman elected to her position, is taking a diplomatic
approach to the fractionalization threatening her organization. Although the
national group cannot formally endorse candidates, it supports all
Republican candidates up and down the ballot, and states and chapters are
free to govern themselves. The lack of universal support for Trump, she said
, shows the “party is big and diverse and there’s room for a lot of
conversations.”
The GOP’s deficit with young voters, however, only seems to be growing with
Trump. A poll from earlier this month found Trump polling at just 9 percent
among Americans under 30 years old, behind Clinton and third-party
candidates Jill Stein and Gary Johnson. For many Republicans, the lost
opportunity to make progress among young voters is particularly startling.
The Growth and Opportunity Project report — dubbed the autopsy report —
that was released after Mitt Romney lost the 2012 presidential election
identified increasing the youth vote as a core way the Republican Party
could make candidates more competitive in national elections. The College
Republican National Committee agreed and redrew an electoral map of the 2012
election that showed Romney would have defeated Barack Obama if Republicans
“hadn’t underperformed with young voters.”
It doesn’t seem the party’s nominee is slated to “perform” this time
around, however.
The spat in Pennsylvania between a state leader and a chapter president
continues, with little resolution in sight. Zachary Bartman, the chairman of
the Pennsylvania Federation of College Republicans and a junior at
Gettysburg College, said his organization is considering disciplinary
actions against Penn State’s chapter for denouncing Trump’s candidacy.
He said the public announcement condemning Trump’s incendiary statements as
contrary to “Republican, American or Penn State values” violated the
federation’s constitution, which states all chapters will support
Republicans up and down the ballot. The punishment could include removing
the chapter from the federation, he said.
“By refusing to support the legitimately nominated candidate, we would be
no better than the Democratic Party, of which their candidate is selected by
a corrupt system of superdelegates, which fails to consider the will of the
people,” Bartman wrote in a letter to Straw, the Penn State chapter
president.
07_hillary_clinton_19_gty_1160.jpg
Trump resurrects 2008 primary to brand Clinton as racist
By NICK GASS
Straw defended the decision not to endorse Trump, saying an overwhelmingly
majority of the group agreed with the decision. A survey conducted by email
of the club’s members showed 72 percent of members who answered the survey
— roughly 65 percent of the group’s total membership — were not in
support of Trump.
At Yale, the dynamic between the Yale College Republicans and Yale New
Republicans has yet to play out as students are just arriving on campus.
Rasmussen, the co-director of Yale New Republicans, is confident his group
will be successful given his assessment that most Yale students disapprove
of Trump because of his “hateful and divisive rhetoric.” Still, the
inherent competition between the groups for resources and members remains.
Rasmussen said the groups have been cordial so far, but he has noticed a
condescending undertone in their limited communication.
“Once the semester gets into full swing and we really see which group is
pulling more new conservatives, I believe those hostilities will probably
flare up more,” he said.
Karl Notturno, a Yale senior who is a registered independent, disagrees with
Rasmussen’s assessment of Trump's support among Yale students. The self-
proclaimed most vocal Trump supporter on the New Haven campus, Notturno said
many students have approached him about their support for Trump, but they
are afraid of publicly endorsing the Republican nominee for fear of the
backlash that would follow.
Notturno said he supports Trump because of his business record, his national
security proposals including securing the border and his positive vision
for the country. “(Trump) has shown throughout the entire process how
effective of a politician he is,” he said. “He has dealt with the media
almost perfectly and spoken directly to the people.”
The presidents of Yale College Republicans declined an interview request,
but offered a clause of their group’s constitution to defend their
endorsement of Trump. The constitution says the purpose of the group is “to
aid in the election of Republican candidates at all levels of government,”
and the presidents said the group always supports Republicans up and down
the ballot.
Other chapters, meanwhile, are sticking their heads in the sand. At the
University of Colorado Boulder, the College Republicans club decided to stay
away from weighing in on the top of the ticket because the group is so
divided. Some members support Trump or Johnson, but others, including
Justine Sanders, the group’s vice president, are considering voting for
Clinton.
“We’ve just decided to focus all of our efforts on down-ballot Republicans
and just not touch the top of the ticket,” Sanders said. “We don’t want
to alienate members of our club.”
caucus 0826.jpg
THE POLITICO CAUCUS
GOP insiders: Moderating on immigration helps Trump
By STEVEN SHEPARD
Despite the turmoil in campus chapters, national GOP figures are quick to
defend the work of College Republicans. Kristen Soltis Anderson, a
Republican pollster and author of “The Selfie Vote: Where Millennials Are
Leading America,” has worked with the College Republican National Committee
and said Trump has made College Republicans’ task tougher than ever.
“Regardless of what they decide to do about the top of the ticket, even
focusing efforts down ballot, the road is hard for College Republicans in
this environment, in part because of the brand when people think about what
is a Republican, there are a lot of negative stereotypes that I think
sometimes Donald Trump reinforces,” she said.
Yet, Republican leaders say the conflicts brewing among College Republicans
are no different than what conservative groups are dealing with throughout
the country — it may just be more accentuated on college campuses because
of Trump’s historic unpopularity with young voters and his lack of
engagement with them.
“Look at pro-life organizations who are stuck with a nominee that has been
lifetime pro-choice and does not really seem to care about that issue,”
Miller, Jeb Bush’s former spokesman, said.
The lack of unity, though, is setting up a bruising fight for the future of
the party — one that Miller predicts will follow a Trump loss in November.
“As leaders in Washington we’re going to have to fight for the soul of the
party and hopefully we can win out and push for a more welcoming and
inclusive party and one that does a better job of engaging the College
Republicans,” he said. “The problem here is not with the College
Republicans. They are defending their principles and wanting to be engaged
by a national Republican Party that’s letting them down right now.”
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58%美国选民认为宁可忍受联邦政府部分关闭也要达成削减开支协议各位安心,下周二川普WI大胜!
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最后民掉:R: 49%; O: 48%据说今晚,川普要endorse小Ryan了。。。
民调:一半人认为希拉里被起诉后仍应继续竞选我感觉新的炸弹就要来了
抠米承认选前调查床铺彻底让克林顿的人疯了Breitbart 也挺热闹
National Black Republican Association Endorses Donald J. Trump左x也太能瞎high了cindy hyde-smith能赢的确是奇迹
IOWA最大报纸endorse Rubio and Clinton好文-Hey, Republicans, stop hating on Trump voters
强力推荐开除Trump的共和党身份Dump Trump
相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: trump话题: college话题: republican话题: yale