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Column: Trump can’t win in 2020. But Democrats can lose, and they’re showing us how

President Trump speaks during a meeting with a group of sheriffs from around the country before leaving the White House in Washington for a trip to El Paso, Texas on Feb. 11.
(Manuel Balce Ceneta / Associated Press)
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Donald Trump can’t win in 2020 but the Democrats can lose, and they seem determined to give it their best shot.

Straight-line predictions are the undoing of every pundit and prognosticator. But it seems safe to say that if present trends hold, President Trump has no path to winning a majority of the popular vote.

In 2016, Trump lost the popular vote by 2,865,075 ballots. He carried the electoral college by very narrow margins: 10,000 votes in Michigan, 22,000 in Wisconsin and 45,000 in Pennsylvania. In January, according to Morning Consult, Trump’s approval ratings in these states was 40%, 40% and 43% respectively. An NPR/PBS/Marist poll last month found that 57% of Americans say they will vote against Trump while a mere 30% said they will definitely vote for him. He is underwater in a slew of states any Republican needs to win, and he has never once broken 50% in approval ratings nationally.

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Politics is no longer about capturing the center where most voters gravitate, but revving up the ranks of the most passionate.

Just going by the numbers, barring a compelling independent candidacy of someone likely to siphon votes from the Democratic column, it seems impossible for Trump to get reelected.

Of course, it’s not impossible because, again, we never get to the future as the crow flies. In the heat of an election, many Trump-skeptical Republicans and Republican-leaning voters will come home. But if that happens, it almost surely won’t happen because Trump moderated his behavior.

If the president could pivot to a more “presidential” persona he would have done it already. When British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was confronted with calls to turn away from her market liberating reforms, she famously declared, “the lady’s not for turning.” Trump, while a very different kind of leader, could give a speech declaring, “the man is not for pivoting.”

So, the only variable in the binary presidential election lies on the left side of the ledger. If the Democrats present a face that is scarier than the reality show of the previous four years, many Americans could vote against the Democrats rather than for the Republicans.

That process is already starting. Erick Erickson, a prominent “Never Trump” conservative in 2016 and a critic since then, announced on Monday that he will be voting for Trump in 2020.

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Democrats would be wise to pay attention. Erickson hasn’t suddenly fallen in love with Trump, he’s grown decisively horrified by the Democrats. And I can’t blame him. Just last week, Democrats unveiled the Green New Deal, a wild-eyed fantasy of an agenda that would cost trillions, destroy whole industries and serve as a Trojan horse for socialism.

Not long before that, Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) cavalierly admitted that “Medicare for all” would wipe out the insurance policies of more than a 100 million Americans. She has done some backpedaling since, but other leading Democrats remain committed, including Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, who recently said eliminating private insurance was an “urgent goal.”

The scandals unraveling the Democratic Party in Virginia have obscured the fact that the controversy started because someone was appalled by Gov. Ralph Northam’s defense of legislation that seemed to support the right to terminate the life of delivered babies.

There’s ample room to criticize the way Trump has handled immigration and shoved all his chips into the center of the table for his wall, but some Democratic rhetoric about immigration — abolish Immigration and Customs Enforcement, for example — hasn’t made them appear like a reasonable alternative.

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A host of other story lines, largely ignored or downplayed by the mainstream media, have caught the attention of conservatives nonetheless. From increasingly open hostility to Catholic judicial nominees to greater tolerance for anti-Semitic rhetoric.

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House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) seems to grasp that it’s in her party’s interest not to go overboard in response to Trump, but collectively it’s as if the Democrats think the savvy political response to the radicalism they see in Trumpism is an alternatively radical agenda.The problem is that Trump’s actual agenda — so far— hasn’t been as radical as the disorientating nature of his norm-defying personal conduct and obvious contempt for institutional and democratic safeguards has led many liberals to believe.

In many respects the parties are mirroring each other, as the incentive structure on both sides is geared toward the extremes. Politics is no longer about capturing the center where most voters gravitate, but revving up the ranks of the most passionate. Faced with that reality, enough Americans may hold their noses and vote against the devil they don’t know.

jgoldberg@latimes.columnists.com

Follow the Opinion section on Twitter @latimesopinionand Facebook

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