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Trump's baffled: 'Why am I not doing better in the polls?'

"I don't see how I'm not leading" is the sort of thing a candidate says when he knows that he's ... not leading.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump greets audience members at a campaign rally on June 29, 2016 in Bangor, Maine. (Photo by Brian Snyder/Reuters)
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump greets audience members at a campaign rally on June 29, 2016 in Bangor, Maine.
Last weekend, Paul Manafort, Donald Trump's campaign chairman, appeared on NBC's "Meet the Press" and expressed nothing but confidence about the state of the race. Chuck Todd noted recent polling showing Hillary Clinton leading and asked Manafort whether he'd concede that his candidate was trailing. "No," he replied, adding, "[W]e're confident that we are not behind the Clinton campaign."
 
Obviously, the polling evidence is readily accessible, but more to the point, Manafort doesn't appear to have convinced his boss. Politico had this report yesterday on Trump's appearance on Mike Gallagher's conservative talk-radio show.

"Well, you know, I really feel it, Mike. I go to Ohio, we were there two days ago, and Pennsylvania and near Pittsburgh and we -- I was in West Virginia, the crowds are massive. And you know, I walked out of one, and I said, 'I don't see how I'm not leading,'" Trump said, invoking the size of his crowds. "We have thousands of people standing outside trying to get in, and they're great people and they have such spirit for the country and love for the country, and I'm saying, you know, 'Why am I not doing better in the polls?'"

First, the fact that Trump is even asking the question is notable, given the campaign's pretense that Trump is doing just fine in the polls. "I don't see how I'm not leading" is the sort of thing a candidate says when he knows that he's ... not leading.
 
Second, and more important, is the fact that the first-time candidate doesn't seem to understand the difference between having fans show up at public events and actually winning at the national and statewide level. Bernie Sanders also saw "massive" crowds, and as impressive as that was, the senator still came up short in the race for the Democratic nomination.
 
Every major presidential candidate can draw an audience. That doesn't mean he or she is going to win.
 
That said, these comments from Trump aren't just amateurish, they also shed light on why he assumes the polls are wrong. In the Republican's mind, if the surveys were correct, he wouldn't have thousands of people showing up to cheer him. That doesn't actually make any sense, but from his perspective, it's easier to believe "crowds = victory" than to accept polls showing him trailing.