Not that I like Hillary/Cruz/Sanders/Rubio/etc much more (again, it's rallies full of supporters, and they'd cheer their candidate if they did a poop onto a dollar bill, if stage-managed in the right way with the right build-up) and their language is carefully honed into the political form that Trump decries but at least stops the leap from 'boring' into 'batshit crazy'.
But it seems that "not your normal politician" does something for some people. For the EU Referendum, over here, Boris Johnson
and Donald Trump
1 were identified as two of the very few politicians whose message is on record as not actually having nudged more voters
away from their stance than towards it. Which conceivably counted for a lot, given the eventual underwhelming majority of the result in that.
I dislike politicians. Given a choice between a Clinton and most normal people I think I'd find even good ol' Bill a bit of a stretch, but I at least
trust Hillary to moderate her spoken opinions without serving the
very lowest common denominator. I have no problem with those who are against the politics of Hillary for actual good reasons, despite her best attempts to cover all those bases, but for some it seems sufficient to believe Batshit Trump's every little oft-repeated innuendo ("Crooked Hilary") without question (c.f. the "£350 million" referendum claim
2) because it panders to their hearts even though that means bypassing their heads.
And it cuts both ways. Hillary is picking up #NeverTrump support from the 'unintelligencia' who are somehow repelled by ("The") Donald, as well as those mugwumps who actually have a genuine grievence with Trump's slapdash approach. How that will balance out with the #NeverHillary deserters from the registered Democrats (of whatever degree and nature of (dis)motivation) and the swing amongst the neutrally-inclined
3 where they don't already intend to send their message in the form of the 'middle-ground' or 'off-to-one-side' party candidates.
I known my critique from outside the system is probably unwelcome, but as I am hardly witbout precedent I do feel I have a certain limited licence to do so. And it appears that of all the US citizens who I met last weekend (numbered well into double digits) and who expressed an opinion about Trump (I would certainly have had to have started to count on my toes, having exhausted my fingers and not started off
with finger-bones from the start) were very much not Trumpeters. But then they were self-selecting against being insular, and at least wise enough to consider avoiding Trumping out of context (whilst the vocal anti-Trumpers might have been gambing upon a sympathetic audience, and probably came up quids-in).
1 And if Trump actially complains about international commentaries against him/for his opponent(s), I hope somebody reminds him of his own views, freely given, on the various non-American affairs that he similarly has no direct involvement in.
2 Which incidentally has the same effect as the email server situation. Side A know that whilst it's nowhere near as bad as Side B is continuously claiming it to be, the only way they can head-on argue about it is by saying that it's really only a
little bit bad, which obviously they'd still prefer not to say too much. They'd much rather just not respond and hope that the outright lies from Side B get forgotten or buried under something else.
3 I still marvel at the US system. Being put on the electoral register with your originally intended party affiliation recorded, long before any opening hustings even occur (never mind pre-polling day hustle and bustle to react to topival issues) seems just one step away from stating that you'll "always vote $PARTY$, like my father always voted $PARTY$ and his father before him - and I'd disown in an instant any of my kids who didn't vote for $PARTY$!!!" Now, I
know that in many states the party college systems only allow their 'own' registered voters (or, slightly more sensibly, anybody not registered as a voter of another party) to vote in the Primaries, and this solves the problem of apathy of actual party subscription that we have by inbuilt into our nation's system (give or take the Corbyn Effect), but I think it's a system whose time (once useful) has passed, in this modern and highly news-responsive world with communication across the mighty American plains (and hills and waters) no longer restricted to the speed of horses of flesh or iron (or mules or ships, likewise). But this is by way of a meandering diversion from my original point, and I'm in no way accredited as an expert on US electoral reform...