Winstonm, on 2018-February-01, 15:23, said:
If the comment hurt, it hurt because it energized those people to actually cast a ballot. I seriously doubt if it caused anyone to change sides or an undecided to abandon her.
It isn't exactly a matter of getting defensive.
How do people choose how to vote? A big question and of course with many answers.
I want a Senator, a Representative, a President, who knows something. But we also look for someone who shares our values, at least in a general way. We look not at their highly prepared statements that are written by someone else and vetted and vetted again by PR types so that the whole thing becomes meaningless. At least partially we look for the unguarded comment.
This is not the whole of it, of course not. We, or at least I, want an intelligent resourceful and at least reasonably honest person in power. We want good judgment. And we also want to have some confidence that what we think is important is something that they think is important.
The old joke is that sincerity is critical, once you learn how to fake that you have it made. Politicians certainly try to fake it, but sometimes the truth slides out.
Anyway, defensive is not the issue. Not for me anyway. If someone insults me I do not necessarily get defensive. But I am not too likely to vote for them. If they have contempt for things that I value, then they can go their way, I will go mine. That's not defensive, that's just realism.