Trump Surrogates Continue Their Apologist Tour to Election Day
Trump Surrogates Continue Their Apologist Tour to Election Day · The Fiscal Times

It’s a thankless job being a Donald Trump surrogate these days. One of the requirements is making appearances on the Sunday talk shows and, on a day like today, when new polls show your candidate trailing in national opinion polls by double digits and behind in almost every swing state, pretend that he is still winning.

The job fell to campaign manager Kellyanne Conway and Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus this weekend, and both twisted themselves in verbal knots casting the Trump campaign as something other than a foundering ship that’s headed to the bottom.

Related: Dems' Dirty Tricks Tapes Give Trump’s ‘Rigged Election’ Claim a Boost

After promising to deliver a “closing argument” in a speech on Saturday in Gettysburg, PA, Trump instead dedicated part of his remarks to promising to sue each of the dozen or so women who have accused him of sexual assault. He also continued to complain that the entire election is somehow “rigged” against him.

He did eventually get to his “closing argument,” but it turned out to be a restatement of things Trump has already promised, put in the form of a list and relabeled as a “contract” with American voters for Trump’s first 100 days.

The reaction from the political press was largely negative, and the headlines from that speech were soon joined by others citing new and dismal poll numbers for the GOP candidate. A new tracking poll from ABC News shows Clinton at 50 percent nationwide, with Trump pulling in only 38 percent.

Trump now trails badly in key demographic groups, including women, minorities, college educated whites, and more. Even more damaging to the Republican Party as a whole is that the percentage of registered voters who told pollsters that they were likely to vote has fallen by 7 percent in the past two weeks.

Related: Trump’s Terrible, Horrible, No-Good, Very Bad Electoral Map

(To be fair, the poll released today by ABC is the first of a series, so comparisons with earlier polls where the methodology might have been slightly different are somewhat imprecise.)

At the same time, CBS News released new battleground polling that shows Clinton leading Trump 46 percent to 43 percent in Florida. That leaves Trump within the 3.5 percent margin of error, but not by much.

CBS also released a poll of Texas -- take a moment to adjust to the fact that Texas is a battleground state at all -- showing Trump ahead 46-43, leaving Clinton well within the 4.5 percent margin of error.

The idea that Texas, of all places, should even be in doubt would probably have been enough to leave most Trump surrogates home in bed with the covers pulled up over their heads, but to their credit, Conway and Priebus did show up on Sunday. But their arguments are wearing thin.