With
still months to go before the Iowa caucuses, Donald Trump hopped in a
golf cart here at Iowa State University and took a victory lap.
Hundreds
of rowdy football fans swarmed the businessman-turned-presidential
candidate Saturday as he zipped around the football stadium -- each
extending a hand, hoping for a high-five, and maybe a selfie.
"Go get 'em Donald!" one man shouted as Trump worked the tailgating crowd before the day's Iowa-Iowa State game.
"I love you!" a woman cried out, rushing in for a picture.
All
the while, The Donald marveled, urging this reporter to take note of
the enthusiastic throngs of Iowans and asking if other candidates could
galvanize throngs of people in the same way.
"What
a crowd, huh?" Trump told CNN. "I'm honored by it. You see it, you've
been following me and it's been amazing and we just came out with a
great poll in Iowa where we're far and away in first place and you
understand why."
But
even as Trump veered off in his favorite direction toward the polling
that has consistently shown him leading the pack of now 16 Republican
candidates, he hinted at something just as new as the camo-colored
version of his now-iconic Make America Great Again cap that sat on his
head: a Donald Trump with softer edges.
After
weeks of slamming candidates for what he perceives as their low-energy
campaigning, Trump didn't jab when asked whether he would be facing off
with a bunch of sleepers on the stage of 11 at the second Republican
debate on Wednesday.
"No, no, no
sleepers. Everyone's capable, everyone's competent and you do what you
need to do. You know I've been doing this for a long time and I want to
make America great again I know how to do it," Trump said.
Competent
and capable are rarely words that leave Trump's mouth as he discusses
his rivals, whom he's invariably slammed as "weak," "boring," an "idiot"
and "spoiled brat."
Is a different Trump emerging?
"Well, I'm trying to be nice," he said.
But
as Trump works on sanding out his rougher edges, he isn't losing the
showmanship that has marked his business and political career, and makes
him a crowd favorite at every event he attends.
Disembarking
from his golf cart to walk to the state Republican Party's tent in a
parking lot strewn with beer cans and Solo cups, Trump engaged with one
not-so-sober college football fan after the next.
"Get this man some Fireball!" a college student cried out, calling for the college favorite cinnamon-flavored whiskey.
The
merriment was briefly interrupted at times by those not looking to play
a part in the Trump spectacle, and a dozen protesters met Trump at the
state GOP tent holding signs that slammed Trump for his immigration
views, including one that read, "No human being is illegal you
colonizing white supremacist."
Others
shouted obscenities, with at least one person calling Trump a "racist"
-- cries that were quickly drowned out by Trump supporters chanting the
billionaire's trademarked name: "Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump!"
Trump
worked the crowd like a seasoned political pro, shaking hands, signing
autographs and stopping briefly for one selfie after the next.
"He
has an honest tongue," one inebriated Iowa State University student
said in the only clean part of an expletive-laced rant explaining his
support for Trump.
Bryan
Elliott, a 29-year-old National Guardsman who served one tour of duty
in Afghanistan, quickly jumped in to explain why voters should really
support Trump: his foreign policy views and his business experience.
"Everybody else's foreign policy is bulls--t," Elliott said. "I'm going to vote for him because he runs a f—ing business."
Others were downright enthusiastic, crying out that Trump would be the next president and promising to support him.
"You can do it. Don't back down," one man shouted as Trump walked by.
Amid the throngs of chanting supporters, some skeptics also emerged.
Bryannah
Slate, a sophomore at Iowa State University, said that she wasn't sure
whether she could support Trump, but, like the others, she thronged the
GOP front-runner to catch a glimpse of a man who's fortunes are rising
with the polls.


No comments:
Post a Comment