In fact, it seemed like the Republicans were about ready to fracture (despite their successes) when it's actually the Democrats that had worse problems.
I fail to see how Trump's success is the Republican parties success. They are entirely separate entities. What this will mean in practice is unclear, but we will see in the future.
Dammit, I wish we had a Democrat slate as vibrant with choices as the Republicans were.
....
I can't see anyone looking back at the primary season that produced Donald Trump and reasonably thinking "That was how democracy should work, we need more of that" unless they thought Donald Trump is the greatest thing since sliced bread. Hell, even the Trump supporters have more than their fair share of complaints about the process, so what the hell? That was terrible. That was a nine-month national nightmare.
If both the Republicans and the Democrats had had a primary season like the democrats had had, the worst possible outcome would be President Jeb(!). I am not amused by the idea of a Trump of the left. The last thing we need is a modern-day Huey Long (who would probably be some celebrity instead of a career politician, seeing how successful they are) declaring his candidacy in 2020 and cutting through a divisive field.
Speaking of Huey, he is also associated (albeit indirectly) with a party named "America First". Take that for what you will.
I meant more 'I wish we had as many and as diverse choices for Dems as there were for the Republicans'. Though obviously not THAT many. I'm just bemoaning the whole pre-crowning of Clinton and forcing out most would-be contenders. Can't change that now obviously, but it's a lession for next time.
Two things. One: Tell me, precisely, how the expanded Republican field benefited the Republican party. Explain how it was a good thing. Because you are taking it for granted that "more is better," but when I look at that I fail to see why, precisely, you want more of that and less of this. If you had just said "in general" I wouldn't be bugging you, but you specifically singled out the worst possible example, so I am going to nag you: why, precisely, do we want to emulate the Republican primary that produced Donald J. Trump?
A reasonable answer here is "Because they won". That is a very reasonable answer. It speaks for itself, really. My response to that would be that winning isn't everything and that a "Trump of the left" is worse than losing. I can't yet imagine a Trump of the left (I don't think there is exactly a Trump of the left waiting in the wings, and if there is I can't imagine who it could be right now), but I couldn't imagine Trump period up until two years ago so my imagination is nothing to rely upon. I'm sure we can all imagine the worst excesses of the left (read: all your least favorite parts) in a single individual and make that person wildly popular among certain people, and bam.
Two: Pre-crowning is the most bullshit answer I've heard all election, because
I've been hearing it all election. Bush was pre-crowned the presumptive winner of the GOP by literally everyone. Was it not this very forum that once bemoaned a Bush/Clinton "Dynasty" fight, like this was a freaking monarchy or something? I recall very well that it was, indeed, this very forum that so bemoaned the
inevitable degradation into pseudo-monarchy and aristocracy. Well, the inevitable didn't happen. We got literally the weirdest result possible, "pre-crowning" be damned.