I think a lot of people with less than a full pper bag of facts are misreading Mr. Trump's popularity.
Firstly, we've had a troubling amount of terrible crimes committed by illegal aliens who are here for the third or fourth time, illegally since they aren't tracked adequately by the INS. One of the latest was a young woman ismply ralkin on the pier in San Francisco with her father when approached by an illegal immigrant (five times deported and returned) and shot to death with a stolen gun. Hearing her father's description of her last words in his arms being, "Dad, help me"... just add emphasis to how bad the situation is with the illegals... most all of whom come thorugh the porous sowthwestern border with Mexico.
Trump intend (if elected) to build the fence/wall and have Mexico pay for it. Mexico reaps huge financial benefits of immigrants comming to the U.S. and sending money back to Mexico as well as large companies, (Nabisco, Ford, etc.) moving nearly all of thier manufacturing/production facilities to Mexico since the labor rates are so much less and then re-importing the finished goods on which we pay a trariff... Mexico would gladly pay the cost!
Again, I can't understand the criticism's of Ms. Palin when the facts of her selection as Vice Presidential candidate by the John McCain people are quite the contrary to those usually offered in the criticisms.
Ms. Palin was an articulate, attractive, self-dependant addition to his campaign who, nearly on her own re-engergized Mr. McCains flagging attempt. Several "insider" articles have been written about McCains fear of her over-shadowing him in the run so much so that she was muzzeled and kept out of the limelight and later, people from Obama's campaign stated she was the one they truly feared, not the war hero McCain...
"...After announcing Palin as the presumptive vice-presidential nominee, the McCain campaign received US$7 million in contributions in a single day. According to a Washington Post/ABC News survey published on September 9, 2008, John McCain had gained huge support among white women voters since the announcement; he had not only surpassed the Democratic Party candidate Senator Barack Obama in white women voters, but also amassed a lead of five percentage points in the Gallup polls. John Zogby found that the effects of Palin's selection were helping the McCain ticket since "She has high favorability numbers, and has unified the Republican Party..." (Source, Washington Post).