None of the other candidates came close to featuring The Message we voters wish to hear. Prosperity. If the other candidates — most notably #2 Ted Cruz — wished to gain the voters' hearts, or at least votes, they would stop hassling Trump about his already very well-known foibles and flaws.
The blowback from Cruz's slam on "New York values" -- when he could have said "Upper East Side New York Values" and hammered it home by pointing out that Trump brags that Hillary Clinton was a guest as his 2005 wedding -- shows the folly of picking on Donald Trump's foibles.
Most of the voters are not looking to elect someone for their personal virtue. The voters are looking for someone who will get the job done.
What job? Job One: Restoring jobs and opportunity.
Shrewd candidates would make prosperity the keynote of every speech and every comment and every commercial between now and the end of the primaries. And, then, in the general election.
What is unfathomable about Cruz is that he has dealt himself a royal flush while Donald Trump is holding, at best, a pair of deuces. Cruz has presented the most impressive proposal in the field for creating a roaring Reaganesque recovery. Yet Cruz is not materially campaigning on it.
The charismatic Mr. Trump's economic platform is pure Jabberwocky. As Megan McCardle pointed out:
As to his monetary policy, as I pointed out here, Mr. Trump criticized Fed Chair Janet Yellen before she raised the discount rate for failing to raise interest rates while, in the next breath, claiming that raising interest rates was a recipe for "a recession-slash-depression." Come in, Houston: Whiskey Tango Foxtrot?
Meanwhile, Cruz's proposal to replace the tax code with a 10% flat tax (with ample exemptions for working families), coupled with a Business Transfer Tax, has been scored by the neutral Tax Foundation as close to deficit neutral and beneficial to every level of worker, from us Gilligans to the Thurston Howell IIIs (and Loveys), across-the-board. Very Reaganesque and unsurprisingly so, having been architected by Arthur Laffer, one of the premier minds behind the Reagan tax rate cuts.
On monetary policy, Cruz has called for the gold standard, which I have called a very good idea and the best idea — for restoring prosperity — in the presidential debate. Cruz would be insulated from attacks by Trump because Trump has spoken sympathetically, albeit ignorantly, about the gold standard. Trump, on WMUR last year:
Trump's promise of a worldwide-depression-inducing tariff would be another albatross around his neck if only he were forcefully held to account. Such a Depression would not merely be Great. It would be The Greatest Depression Ever!
On taxes, money, and trade Cruz's proposals are sensible and defensible. Trump's ideas do not hold up even to casual scrutiny. Trump has a brutally exposed flank right in the heart of what we voters most yearn for (according to all the polls): Prosperity.
Apparently the problem of getting candidates to campaign on job creation and economic growth is a real classic. As Bob Shrum wrote in his unforgettable political memoir No Excuses (which I have quoted before yet bears repeating):
To reiterate, presidential elections largely hinge on two issues: national security and prosperity.
National security has been well handled and the candidates' positions well established. I roughly divided the GOP field into three "tough doves" — Trump, Cruz, and Paul — two "moderate hawks" — Bush and Rubio — three "wild hawks" — Kasich, Christie and Fiorina — and one confusing effort to straddle hawk and dove — Carson. The polling strongly indicates that the GOP voters prefer the Reaganite "tough doves" over hawks. So let's move on.
Nobody can trump Donald Trump on "shock jock/Reality TV" style politics. It's pointless even to try.
Presenting a credible recipe for real prosperity is another matter.
Security handled, in the world of the American voters prosperity trumps. Will Cruz, Kasich, Bush, Paul, or another candidate come out of the weeds and relentlessly focus on what this election now mainly is about: prosperity ... and who has the most credible recipe?
If so, will they do so in time? If not… here comes nominee, and maybe even president, Trump. If the contenders will focus on prosperity the nomination remains up for grabs.
Prosperity trumps.
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Ralph Benko is senior advisor, economics, to American Principles in Action's Gold Standard 2012 Initiative, and a contributor to the ARRA News Service. Founder of The Prosperity Caucus, he was a member of the Jack Kemp supply-side team, served in an unrelated area as a deputy general counsel in the Reagan White House. The article which first appeared in Forbes.
Tags: Ralph Benko, Ted Cruz, Coup de Grâce, Donald Trump To share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service. and "Like" Facebook Page - Thanks!Source

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