"So if Trump keeps up his momentum for the next three months," James P. Pinkerton concluded in the piece, "then, as did Reagan nearly four decades ago, he’ll win in a landslide."

Landslide.

The piece was about two speeches Trump gave Monday and Tuesday that drew praise from his backers and even some in the mainstream media. It started there and worked its way through a bunch of arguments before arriving at the Reagan parallel: The country wants law and order. Trump and Reagan promised law and order. Trump landslide.

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The divergent focus is nothing new from Breitbart, which has long offered a counterintuitive, pro-Trump narrative whenever controversy arises or Trump's poll numbers head south. But it is worth noting just how hard it has sometimes had to work to generate those storylines. The new chief executive of Trump's campaign, Steve Bannon, has been accused of running a Trump propaganda site, and sometimes it's not hard to see why.

Here are some examples of Breitbart's most remarkable cheerleading for Trump.

1) Unskewing the polls — and failing

After a slew of national polls showed Trump losing ground to the Democratic nominee both nationally and in swing states in recent weeks, Breitbart last week commissioned its own national poll to get around "the mainstream media filter."

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“It’s an open secret that polls are often manipulated and spun to create momentum for a particular candidate or issue,” editor-in-chief Alex Marlow said. The site was also out-front in so-called unskewing of the polls in 2012, suggesting that GOP nominee Mitt Romney was actually better-positioned than the polls suggested. (He wasn't.)

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But the new Breitbart poll, conducted by a pollster with a very spotty track record, wound up showing Trump down by five points — just one point off the current Real Clear Politics average, which has Clinton up by six.

Not to worry, though. The site a day later highlighted a poll from another scrutinized pollster that showed Trump down just two points. "Clinton Leads Trump By Two Points: 'Back To A Close Race,'" read the headline, which quoted the pollster. It made no mention of the fact that no other poll this month has shown the race that close or that other polls show Trump losing by as many as double digits in key swing states.

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2) Siding with Trump over its own staff

Back in March, Breitbart sought to defend the Trump campaign against allegations made by the site's own reporter, Michelle Fields, that Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski had grabbed her during a campaign event.

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First, Breitbart's chief executive and president, Larry Solov, offered a lukewarm statement that treated its own reporter's account as merely one version of the story. "If that’s the case, Corey owes Michelle an immediate apology."

Then Breitbart decided to break down the available evidence and strongly suggest that Fields was mistaken. It wrote that "the person who made contact with Fields was likely not Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski."

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Video later made clear that it had been Lewandowski and that the Trump campaign had not been honest in its repeated denials. Fields and several other Breitbart staff members left the website.

3) Saying Trump was "literally" right about Clinton and Obama founding the Islamic State

Trump himself has now said he was just being sarcastic about President Obama and then-Secretary of State Clinton being the "founders of ISIS," but not before Breitbart ran a "fact check" declaring that his allegation was technically correct — "and quite literally, so."

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To make the case, the site pointed to a 2012 defense intelligence report that they claim proves the United States was supporting al-Qaeda in Syria — basically, because the U.S. government supported some opposition forces and al-Qaeda was a leading opposition force. Factcheck.org has stated clearly that this is false, that there's no proof in the report that the United States was supporting al-Qaeda.

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"So Donald Trump is literally correct," Breitbart concluded. "Obama and Hillary created ISIS. They figure among the founding fathers of the world’s most brutal terrorist organization. They deserve ISIS Most Valuable Player awards for their efforts."

The fact check was published the same day Trump said that not even he literally thinks Obama and Clinton founded the Islamic State.

4) Passing along gossip about critical reporters

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“There were two beautiful girls walking around Mar-a-Lago,” Trump said in the Breitbart "exclusive." “He said to me, 'Boy, I wish my wife looked like that' while he was gawking at them. Unbelievable. What a scumbag."

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One hostess named as "Bianka Pop" said in the story, "I don’t know how to say it — he was looking at me like I was yummy."

The allegations were so laughable to those who know Coppins, a practicing Mormon, that they joked about it on social media.

5) Cheering his lackluster debate performances

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"He may not always have had the 'right' answer, but he sounded more fluent with his own positions," the site wrote.

It added of the triad moment: "He took a pass on Hugh Hewitt’s question about the nuclear triad. His opponents will remember. No one else will."

Another entry in this genre, following a February debate: "How Trump Won The GOP Debate By Losing It":