Just about everything that could have gone right for Clinton in the past month has. It’s bad enough for the Trump campaign that he remains unable to improve his image: 70 percent of Americans are anxious about the prospect of a Trump administration, unchanged from six months ago. Sixty-four percent call Trump “not qualified” for the presidency, up six points from May. That may have something to do with the fact that 68 percent of voters agree that Trump’s attack on Judge Gonzalo Curiel’s Mexican-American background was racist. (Even 69 percent of Republicans felt the comments were “inappropriate.”) Perhaps it was the fact that only 28 percent of voters felt Trump did a better job than Clinton of responding to the Orlando shooting, and now a majority trust her more to handle the threat of terrorism. Or maybe it’s that 56 percent say that Trump stands against their beliefs.

Whatever the reason, only 77 percent of Republicans now support Trump, down eight points from a month ago. (And 62 percent say Republican leaders should criticize Trump if they disagree with him, stripping cowards on Capitol Hill of an excuse for not denouncing Trump’s more noxious attacks.) Twenty-nine percent of self-described conservative voters say they will vote for Clinton, up 11 percent from last month. And Clinton and Trump now split independents, whom Trump was winning by 13 percent in May.

In other good news for Clinton, Sanders voters are already coming around to supporting her. For weeks, Clinton supporters have groused about the disloyalty of Bernie Sanders’ supporters. And it is true that, in the last Post-ABC poll, Clinton only won 71 percent of Sanders voters. But despite the acrimony of the Democratic primary, 81 percent of Sanders backers now support Clinton against Trump. Only 8 percent of Sanders voters now support Trump, compared with 10 percent of all Republicans who support Clinton. (Clinton die-hards should think twice before complaining about Sanders backers’ supposed foot-dragging. At this point in 2008, 22 percent of Clinton primary supporters said they would vote for John McCain in the fall, and 16 percent did so.)

Finally, Trump will have to deal with a newly popular president on the campaign trail. Not too long ago, Republicans could console themselves with poll numbers that suggested that Obama would end his term as an unpopular president. But the latest Post-ABC poll gives him a 55 percent approval rating — his highest since the killing of Osama bin Laden. Yes, 56 percent say they want the next president to take the country in a new direction. But the same percentage said that seven months before the end of another president’s second term. That president was Ronald Reagan.

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I said back in March that, because of demographics and the electoral college, Donald Trump could not win the presidency. A strong start to the summer for Trump could have gone a long way toward proving that argument wrong. In 2012, Mitt Romney struggled to recover from Obama’s salvo just as the general election was getting underway, showing just how crucial these early months are. Four years later, Hillary Clinton hasn’t even had to go out of her way to hurt Trump. He has already self-destructed.