The Trump campaign’s male-dominated culture is losing women votes
Soon after Donald Trump’s campaign team took over the Republican National Committee earlier this year, a senior Trump aide was asked how to combat news stories that the campaign had an insufficient get-out-the-vote operation.
“We are going to beat the reporters into retardation!”
shouted #James #Blair, one of the two men now leading the operation, on a call with other advisers,
according to two people with direct knowledge of the conversation.
Such #pugnacity has come to define much of the tone and image of Trump’s 2024 campaign,
reflecting the personalities of many of the men leading it as well as the candidate.
Trump has long valued being viewed as an alpha male who never apologizes or shows weakness.
In many ways, that campaign culture mirrors some of its strategies.
Trump and his advisers are calculating that, at a time when polls show voters dissatisfied with the direction of the country, and with turmoil abroad revealing the limitations of America’s global influence,
they can win the White House by projecting a particular kind of strength
— with a distinctly #aggressive vibe not seen in presidential campaigns before