You can look at polls and read news accounts all day long, but the frustration, despair—and, in some cases, rage—among a multitude of Republican voters can be lost in the numbers. Better to let them just talk. Anecdotally, you can chat with friends, relatives, neighbors, cabdrivers, and other regular folks. But the antipathy really comes through when you listen in on Republican voters gathered in focus groups, such as one convened last week in Indianapolis by pollster Peter Hart. Since 2004, Hart has conducted focus groups of voters for the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvania, and no one does it better. The dozen Indiana Republicans, all likely voters, put into context why more than half of the potential participants in GOP primaries and caucuses are currently supporting business magnate Donald Trump, physician Ben Carson, or ex-CEO Carly Fiorina, who still counts as a political novice despite having lost a U.S. Senate race in California. Disaffected voters seem to be yearning for someone who is the antithesis of a traditional politician. Which someone? Well, according to opinion

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