So we seem to have entered the "revolving-door" phase of the campaign, where every few weeks another candidate bubbles near the top of the frothy mass of santorum that is the Republican field (though it's highly unlikely Santorum himself will). Weirdly, this is sort of a mirror universe version of the 2012 race, where Mitt chugged along as
The Big Establishment Train That Could, while a host of "insurgent" candidates rotated being the anti-Romney. Now you have Trump as
The Big Mouth That Totally Could, Way Better Than You Losers and a host of mostly establishment candidates vying to be the anti-Trump.
Newest CNN poll has Trump still in first place by 9 points, though his overall number was down to 24 from the low 30's he had been enjoying. The winners? Ben Carson (14%) and Carly Fiorina (15%). Carson has since had his "a Muslim should not be President" flap, and Fiorina is starting to look a bit unhinged to many because of this focus on the Planned Parenthood thing that has already been mostly debunked.
So who's next on the carousel? Well, Marco Rubio came in 4th in that poll with 11%, and his numbers have seen a steady increase since the beginning of this month. Mike Huckabee is back up to 6%, double where he was at at the beginning of the month, so maybe he's got some second wind. Even Jeb Bush is back up to 9% (fifth place) and his favorability ratings have gone back up by 10 points in the last month (though still negative). It's probably going to take some kind of external event to push him back up into the top-3 at this point.
Interestingly, this poll came out over the weekend, before Walker dropped out. The poll itself may have provided impetus to pull the plug. Walker was netting less than 1%, with a net favorability rating of -12, the same as Jeb Bush. The only ones with worse favorability ratings are Rand Paul (-13) and The Trump (-28). Impressively, only 1% of respondents had never heard of Donald Trump. The media is now trying to track down that 1% so they can do a story on "People who never pay attention to anything the media says".
Among Republicans, obviously all candidates have better favorability ratings than among the general poll population, but even then Walker was only +14, as compared to Carson's +55, Rubio's +41, and Huckabee's +25. Even Trump is at +12 and Bush at +11.
The most interesting bit would be if this does start to coalesce into a 3-way race, I could see Trump "buying out" the biggest rival by offering him the VP slot (and possibly money under the table -- I assume that's illegal, right?).