The question isn’t so much if Donald Trump can win the election as whether or not he’ll still be the GOP candidate come November. Nobody can predict what mad trajectory the Republican nominee’s campaign might take. But given Trump’s erratic, politically self-destructive behavior, it’s reasonable to suspect he might get forced out or quit in a huff rather than face the ultimate indignity of losing to a girl.

Just the other day, Rep. Richard Hanna of upstate New York, disavowed Trump and endorsed Hillary Clinton, the first Republican member of Congress to do so. Describing himself as “stunned by the callousness” of the candidate’s remarks about Khizr and Ghazala Khan, the Gold Star parents whose son died fighting in Iraq, Hannah called Trump “a national embarrassment,” and “unfit to serve.”

Hanna added that while he disagrees with Hillary Clinton on many issues, “she stands and has stood for causes bigger than herself for a lifetime. That matters.” The implication, of course, is that Trump’s only cause is himself and his grotesquely swollen ego.

But whether or not Republican leaders can summon the political courage to break with Trump and his inflamed supporters, there are increasing signs that the great man himself is hearing footsteps, as they say in the NFL.

To begin with, he doesn’t talk about polls anymore. No surprise, as Trump’s bombastic “I alone” acceptance speech claiming to be the nation’s one-man hope of redemption was an utter failure.

A Gallup poll taken after the 2016 GOP convention showed voters less likely to vote for Trump by a 51-36 margin — the first negative numbers in post-convention polling history. No national political convention since Gallup began asking the question in 1984 has failed to improve a nominee’s standing. Even Mitt Romney got a two percent bounce. Trump dropped 15 points.

I couldn’t believe my ears when I heard Trump describe the U.S. as a doomed, hellish landscape with “poverty and violence at home, war and destruction abroad.” Were Republicans really so far gone into his cult of personality as to leave patriotism, optimism and the enduring hope of a better tomorrow to Democrats?

Indeed, they were. Hence voter dismay, and a recent CBS News poll showing 63 percent of voters saying Trump “lacks the right temperament” for the presidency. For all the hugger-mugger over Hillary Clinton’s emails, 60 percent think she’s prepared.

Faced with a far better informed rival who doesn’t rattle easily and also happens to be a woman, Trump’s all of a sudden hunting a way to crawfish out of the presidential debates.

Longtime Trump confidant and GOP dirty trickster Roger Stone says Trump should start claiming that, “If there’s voter fraud, this election will be illegitimate, the election of the winner will be illegitimate, we will have a constitutional crisis, widespread civil disobedience, and the government will no longer be the government.”

In short, something like a coup attempt.

Except I don’t believe Trump’s got the guts to go through with it.

Do you?

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