Win or lose, Trump’s movement stronger and bigger than ever

Supporters of US President Donald Trump gather in front of the Maricopa County Tabulation and Election Center to protest against the early results of the 2020 presidential election, in Phoenix.
Supporters of US President Donald Trump gather in front of the Maricopa County Tabulation and Election Center to protest against the early results of the 2020 presidential election, in Phoenix.
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AFP :
The US presidential election is still up in the air, but one thing is for certain: the movement created by Donald Trump is alive and well, and more solid than pundits expected.
No matter if he wins or loses, Trumpism looks set to live on.
Republican political pundit Sophia A Nelson summed it up quickly: “The Trump movement is real. And it’s here to stay.”
Despite being repeatedly-and wrongly-described as only older, white and rural, Trump’s base will help deliver the third highest vote total in American political history-behind only Joe Biden, and Barack Obama in 2008.
Hispanic voters, often expected to lean left, turned to Trump this time around-their turnout in Florida helped him easily defeat Biden in the Sunshine State in Tuesday’s nailbiter of an election.
“Ahead of the election, a lot of pundits talked about how Trump wasn’t bringing new voters to his camp,” said Abraham Gutman, who is on the editorial board at The Philadelphia Inquirer.
But he will have, at a minimum, won about five million more votes this time around then he did in 2016 against Hillary Clinton.
“Regardless of the eventual outcome-in the state contests for electors or in the popular vote margin-the media needs a serious post mortem to explore how, despite so much ink spilled on Trump voters, the story of the growth of the Trump movement was totally missed,” Gutman said.
Trump staged dozens of campaign rallies in the run-up to Tuesday’s showdown at the polls with the Democratic former vice president. He was regularly greeted by sizeable crowds.
Truck parades for the Republican incumbent rolled through town after American town, as did boat processions in waterfront communities.
All were evidence of a wide base of support.
“His supporters love him. They love him for this fact that he keeps America first and Americans first,” Jim Worthington, the founder of People4Trump, told AFP in a phone interview.
“They realize that he’s fighting for them. We broadened our coalition,” added Worthington, who owns two gyms.
Trump’s controversial handling of the coronavirus pandemic, which has so far claimed the lives of more than 233,000 Americans, his tough immigration policies and his brash style of speaking have not dissuaded his fans.
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