Two paragraphs from Shawn Zeller of Roll Call would seem to beg a particular question:
Republican aides are growing increasingly despondent about their party’s prospects in the 2016 presidential election, according to CQ Roll Call’s most recent Capitol Insiders Survey.
A majority of the GOP staffers who responded to the April survey now expect either Donald Trump or Texas Sen. Ted Cruz to win the party’s nomination and nearly half of them―a solid plurality―think the Republican nominee will lose.
That is to say: A plurality? What do you mean “nearly half”? Who the hell are the rest, and what the hell are they thinking?
The answer is actually pretty straightforward: Denial.
Say what we will about the thirty-one percent of GOP respondents to the CQ Roll Call Capitol Insiders Survey who actually think a Republican candidate will win; between those who so loathe Hillary Clinton as to not see straight, those who hope the Party will find another nominee somewhere, and those who for whatever reason really believe Donald Trump or Ted Cruz can win the election, sure, I can believe thirty-one percent.
The forty-nine percent of GOP respondents who said a Democrat will be the next president would seem to be the realists.
That nineteen percent opting for, “I don’t know”, however, is simply in denial.