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OT: Democratic Primary Thread

Moderators: j4remi, HerSports85, NoLayupRule, GONYK, Jeff Van Gully, dakomish23, Deeeez Knicks, mpharris36

Who are you voting for?

Poll ended at Sat Mar 14, 2020 11:48 pm

Joe Biden - I have no idea why, and I also forgot what year it is
18
28%
Bernie Sanders - I am an intelligent human being, and understand Sanders is our last hope and America needs him
38
58%
Tulsi Gabbard (Dropped Out) - Ringo Starr is also my favorite Beatle
9
14%
 
Total votes: 65

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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#601 » by Clyde_Style » Thu Apr 2, 2020 6:49 pm

Stannis wrote:
j4remi wrote:
Clyde_Style wrote:
Since I'm assuming Sanders is going to stay in until the convention, my main concern now is how voting will be conducted during the rest of the primaries and in the general election.

There's the health issue and there might be greater potential for fraud.

I don't believe Trump will be able to declare a national emergency and postpone the election, but he and his followers are dangerous and capable of anything so I hope the Democrats have their act together to ensure there is a clean vote with no vote suppression tactics.


What's frustrating about it is that the obvious solutions for the problem will be fought against because those solutions would encourage more voters.

Read on Twitter


They don't even hide that they want to suppress turnout any more.


Well damn, they are flat out saying it now


Yep, we're in an era of unconcealed greed and corruption which is cresting now because Trump has gotten away with so much the rest of the flock are now emboldened to show their worst selves publicly. It's that feeling of impunity + a special new breed of stupid that increasingly defines the rank and file of the GOP. Mitch is not stupid, but he is evil. He knows how to incentivize and herd his stupids.

Trump is partly the problem, but he is largely symptomatic. The McConnells of the party have been laying the groundwork for seizing and retaining control without true majorities their whole careers so the voter suppression tactics and gerrymandering is old hat to those operatives.

This is one of the reasons I keep stomping my feet about getting them out in a decisive manner. A landslide victory that cascades down ticket is necessary to flush out these vote manipulating bastards. If it is even a little bit close, we risk losing everything to them, because they don't play fair and will cheat. We need a decisive majority this November so no funny business allows them to stay in power.
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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#602 » by Clyde_Style » Thu Apr 2, 2020 6:52 pm

Trump knows who butters his bread

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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#603 » by HarthorneWingo » Thu Apr 2, 2020 7:05 pm

j4remi wrote:
Clyde_Style wrote:
Since I'm assuming Sanders is going to stay in until the convention, my main concern now is how voting will be conducted during the rest of the primaries and in the general election.

There's the health issue and there might be greater potential for fraud.

I don't believe Trump will be able to declare a national emergency and postpone the election, but he and his followers are dangerous and capable of anything so I hope the Democrats have their act together to ensure there is a clean vote with no vote suppression tactics.


What's frustrating about it is that the obvious solutions for the problem will be fought against because those solutions would encourage more voters.

Read on Twitter


They don't even hide that they want to suppress turnout any more.


Of course. Dems are the clear majority in this country. I wonder why they're not coming out to vote? /sarc This you can add all of the former Dems who left the party because the party gave up on them. The system is broken. Our country is broken.
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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#604 » by Pointgod » Fri Apr 3, 2020 1:52 pm

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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#605 » by Clyde_Style » Fri Apr 3, 2020 2:00 pm

HarthorneWingo wrote:
j4remi wrote:
Clyde_Style wrote:
Since I'm assuming Sanders is going to stay in until the convention, my main concern now is how voting will be conducted during the rest of the primaries and in the general election.

There's the health issue and there might be greater potential for fraud.

I don't believe Trump will be able to declare a national emergency and postpone the election, but he and his followers are dangerous and capable of anything so I hope the Democrats have their act together to ensure there is a clean vote with no vote suppression tactics.


What's frustrating about it is that the obvious solutions for the problem will be fought against because those solutions would encourage more voters.

Read on Twitter


They don't even hide that they want to suppress turnout any more.


Of course. Dems are the clear majority in this country. I wonder why they're not coming out to vote? /sarc This you can add all of the former Dems who left the party because the party gave up on them. The system is broken. Our country is broken.


They did come out to vote in 2018 and took back the House of Representatives
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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#606 » by Pointgod » Fri Apr 3, 2020 3:41 pm

j4remi wrote:
Pointgod wrote:“No one” has a better chance of winning the Democratic Primary than Bernie. He has no chance of winning bro. Even in the event that Biden drops dead tomorrow it’s not like Bernie is going to get the nomination, the contention would still be contested. And your old favs like mayor Pete, Elizabeth Warren and gulp, even Bloomberg will jump right back in.

The point of dropping out now is to consolidate around the nominee and present a united Democratic front leading to November. Bernie is literally the most influential person to dispel the whole Progressives or young people won’t vote for Biden narrative. Bernie would also be influential in getting Biden to adopt some of his policies. The country is in the middle of a pandemic, the primaries either need to be vote by mail or pushed back. But pushing them back just means less time for Democrats to rally around the eventual nominee.

It’s a tough pill to swallow but the math does not favour Sanders at all.


Bernie supporters aren't rallying around Biden just because the primary ended a week sooner. Replace week with month...same thing. Replace month with a damned year, still the same. You're not magically getting the anti-establishment voters by having more time to push the same messages they've been rejecting this whole time. That's as fanciful as thinking that Bernie's sticking in the race only because of a chance to win rather than to try and exert more influence over the platform and direction of the party (which is what he managed to do by sticking around last time).


Are you saying that Bernie supporters will never support Biden? Because I disagree, Bernie has a lot of influence to get people to come out to vote for the Democratic Party up and down the ticket. If you want more Progressive legislation to be passed and sustained, then the only way that will happen is to have Democratic President, Congress and a left leaning makeup of the Supreme Court. Bernie could use this reasoning as a way to rally his supporters around Biden. If you’re saying that Bernie supporters will never vote for a “establishment democrat” then that’s very unfortunate and nothing has been learned from 2016.
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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#607 » by Clyde_Style » Fri Apr 3, 2020 4:29 pm

Pointgod wrote:
j4remi wrote:
Pointgod wrote:“No one” has a better chance of winning the Democratic Primary than Bernie. He has no chance of winning bro. Even in the event that Biden drops dead tomorrow it’s not like Bernie is going to get the nomination, the contention would still be contested. And your old favs like mayor Pete, Elizabeth Warren and gulp, even Bloomberg will jump right back in.

The point of dropping out now is to consolidate around the nominee and present a united Democratic front leading to November. Bernie is literally the most influential person to dispel the whole Progressives or young people won’t vote for Biden narrative. Bernie would also be influential in getting Biden to adopt some of his policies. The country is in the middle of a pandemic, the primaries either need to be vote by mail or pushed back. But pushing them back just means less time for Democrats to rally around the eventual nominee.

It’s a tough pill to swallow but the math does not favour Sanders at all.


Bernie supporters aren't rallying around Biden just because the primary ended a week sooner. Replace week with month...same thing. Replace month with a damned year, still the same. You're not magically getting the anti-establishment voters by having more time to push the same messages they've been rejecting this whole time. That's as fanciful as thinking that Bernie's sticking in the race only because of a chance to win rather than to try and exert more influence over the platform and direction of the party (which is what he managed to do by sticking around last time).


Are you saying that Bernie supporters will never support Biden? Because I disagree, Bernie has a lot of influence to get people to come out to vote for the Democratic Party up and down the ticket. If you want more Progressive legislation to be passed and sustained, then the only way that will happen is to have Democratic President, Congress and a left leaning makeup of the Supreme Court. Bernie could use this reasoning as a way to rally his supporters around Biden. If you’re saying that Bernie supporters will never vote for a “establishment democrat” then that’s very unfortunate and nothing has been learned from 2016.


Since there is little chance Bernie will be the nominee, a simple question to ask is:

What does Bernie gain if Trump and the GOP wins?
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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#608 » by j4remi » Fri Apr 3, 2020 4:58 pm

Pointgod wrote:Are you saying that Bernie supporters will never support Biden? Because I disagree, Bernie has a lot of influence to get people to come out to vote for the Democratic Party up and down the ticket. If you want more Progressive legislation to be passed and sustained, then the only way that will happen is to have Democratic President, Congress and a left leaning makeup of the Supreme Court. Bernie could use this reasoning as a way to rally his supporters around Biden. If you’re saying that Bernie supporters will never vote for a “establishment democrat” then that’s very unfortunate and nothing has been learned from 2016.


I'm saying that all this "If Biden wins it's Bernie's fault for not dropping out RIGHT NOW!!!" is strategically foolish. We just watched this same dynamic play out when Bernie supporters tried to get Warren out of the race because her agenda and Bernie's are FAR closer than Biden's. It backfired entirely, Warren supporters were turned completely off and voted against their own agenda, Warren backed down on her no Super PAC principle just to stick around and Bernie lost a number of Super Tuesday races that he likely wins if Progressives unite.

I'm also saying that if you think Bernie dropping out and saying "Vote for Biden" is going to change anti-establishment minds, you're dreaming. We watched this unfold with Hillary no matter how much she fronts or tries to blame him for her failure here's a story from around that time:

https://www.newyorker.com/news/amy-davidson/bernie-sanderss-hard-fight-for-hillary-clinton

The point here is simple. If Biden wants to win Bernie Supporters over, it's on HIM to win those voters over; not Bernie. Saying "this will be all your fault" won't do a damned thing but alienate even more supporters. Learn how to appeal to voters instead of trying to shame them, it's a better strategy on all levels.
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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#609 » by j4remi » Fri Apr 3, 2020 5:07 pm

Clyde_Style wrote:Since there is little chance Bernie will be the nominee, a simple question to ask is:

What does Bernie gain if Trump and the GOP wins?


This is close to how you appeal to them, but flip the question and make it broader than Bernie. What does the progressive left stand to lose if Trump is in office another 4 years? That's the question you should be asking (and answering).
1. Supreme Court and Court Appointees; any lefty legislation will have a mountain to climb getting through the courts as they stand let alone after another 4 years of Federalist selections.

2. EPA rollbacks on regulations will continue which puts the climate change crisis even further in the "inevitable" rather than "preventable" position.

3. More immigrants and refugees seeing their opportunities and rights assaulted.

Those are the trifecta I'm looking at when I try to pull lefties. What I won't be aiming for is:
1. Joe Biden is gonna do this for you...faith in him is light on the left based on his track record which is ostensibly trash.

2. It'll be on you if Trump gets elected...this strategy doesn't work, we've got Gore and Clinton losses to point to as well as Warren in the primary for how easily this backfires.

3. We need incremental change to get to where you want to be. This appeal makes some sense but doesn't give off any kind of vision. You'll want to be more specific. You'll need to point to specific legislation and explain how we can build on that to move left, otherwise it will ring insincere. Edit: I should throw in that this can backfire if you run into a lefty accelerationist but there aren't all that many of these types (I really think they all broke for Tulsi Gabbard of all people).
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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#610 » by Clyde_Style » Fri Apr 3, 2020 5:25 pm

j4remi wrote:
Clyde_Style wrote:Since there is little chance Bernie will be the nominee, a simple question to ask is:

What does Bernie gain if Trump and the GOP wins?


This is close to how you appeal to them, but flip the question and make it broader than Bernie. What does the progressive left stand to lose if Trump is in office another 4 years? That's the question you should be asking (and answering).
1. Supreme Court and Court Appointees; any lefty legislation will have a mountain to climb getting through the courts as they stand let alone after another 4 years of Federalist selections.

2. EPA rollbacks on regulations will continue which puts the climate change crisis even further in the "inevitable" rather than "preventable" position.

3. More immigrants and refugees seeing their opportunities and rights assaulted.

Those are the trifecta I'm looking at when I try to pull lefties. What I won't be aiming for is:
1. Joe Biden is gonna do this for you...faith in him is light on the left based on his track record which is ostensibly trash.

2. It'll be on you if Trump gets elected...this strategy doesn't work, we've got Gore and Clinton losses to point to as well as Warren in the primary for how easily this backfires.

3. We need incremental change to get to where you want to be. This appeal makes some sense but doesn't give off any kind of vision. You'll want to be more specific. You'll need to point to specific legislation and explain how we can build on that to move left, otherwise it will ring insincere.


Sure, but that was the question I was asking already. I merely phrased it differently from the singular viewpoint of Sanders himself, because he does have loyal followers and his reasoning will influence their decision.

I know there is nothing sexy about saying we have more to lose than we have to gain at the moment, but that is the stark reality. We can't tick all of our boxes in one stroke, but that's pretty much always the case. It is just more dire circumstances this time.

I do think the three you listed (Environment, Courts, Racism) should be plenty to want to defend by fighting back the GOP, but that has been my position all along.

I have no vested faith in Joe Biden, so I don't campaign for him. I'm strictly big picture which means the stakes are such that I will support the nominee. I'm not actually much of a fan of either Biden or Bernie. I really like Warren. So I don't split hairs. I go down the line and support the ticket at this point. I see no alternative for the time being.

If the GOP wins, I will leave the country as soon as I can arrange it. If we can't get enough agreement to beat these fascists then I do think the country is broken beyond repair. Right now, I think we're very broken, but we can patch it up and start to build a better system. This current crisis will create conditions for major structural changes and it does mean progressive reform may be possible. But fascism is just as possible too.

So I don't want to sugarcoat things, but if you think strategically it is wrong to suggest some change will have to be incremental, I'll defer to your knowledge of your particular demographic. I don't think it is really true, so I'm not sure what the pitch really is going to be that convinces rabid Bernie supporters to vote the ticket. TBH, isn't it politicking to avoid speaking the truth as you see it? Do Sanders voters really need to be pandered to? I don't think so.

I do think some degree of compromise can be made on the platform that encourages progressives to believe the Democrats can start to transform the party for the better. That's the only way IMO to maintain sincerity for everyone on the spectrum of Democratic voters. We're just not going to get a completely leftward shift all at once so to imply that to win votes would be dishonest.
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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#611 » by j4remi » Fri Apr 3, 2020 5:48 pm

Clyde_Style wrote:Sure, but that was the question I was asking already. I merely phrased it differently from the singular viewpoint of Sanders himself, because he does have loyal followers and his reasoning will influence their decision.

I know there is nothing sexy about saying we have more to lose than we have to gain at the moment, but that is the stark reality. We can't tick all of our boxes in one stroke, but that's pretty much always the case. It is just more dire circumstances this time.

I do think the three you listed (Environment, Courts, Racism) should be plenty to want to defend by fighting back the GOP, but that has been my position all along.


How you pose the question is important. This isn't just true of Bernie supporters, spend an hour or two door knocking or text canvassing and it can be eye opening. But the reality is winning elections is almost entirely about persuasion. You can have the right idea but get the pitch wrong and still lose.

Clyde_Style wrote:I have no vested faith in Joe Biden, so I don't campaign for him. I'm strictly big picture which means the stakes are such that I will support the nominee. I'm not actually much of a fan of either Biden or Bernie. I really like Warren. So I don't split hairs. I go down the line and support the ticket at this point. I see no alternative for the time being.


No one has faith in Biden (enthusiasm polling is scary to look at right now). That's why the excuses for him losing are already manifesting. I mean that too, it's not a good faith attempt to recruit voters to blame them if you lose. I had a problem with Sanders supporters doing it to Warren supporters and I see the same backfire effect happening in real time now. Provocation is not the way to win over support.

Clyde_Style wrote:If the GOP wins, I will leave the country as soon as I can arrange it. If we can't get enough agreement to beat these fascists then I do think the country is broken beyond repair. Right now, I think we're very broken, but we can patch it up and start to build a better system. This current crisis will create conditions for major structural changes and it does mean progressive reform may be possible. But fascism is just as possible too.

So I don't want to sugarcoat things, but if you think strategically it is wrong to suggest some change will have to be incremental, I'll defer to your knowledge of your particular demographic. I don't think it is really true, so I'm not sure what the pitch really is going to be that convinces rabid Bernie supporters to vote the ticket. TBH, isn't it politicking to avoid speaking the truth as you see it? Do Sanders voters really need to be pandered to? I don't think so.


Clyde, read my post again. I didn't say you can't point to incremental change, I said you have to be specific and show how that incremental change can be built on. If all you do is shout buzzwords then your pitch just sounds insincere. I laid this out in an earlier post about the nuances of what makes quality incremental change vs weak incremental change. It's not pandering to be able to show your work (as every damned math teacher used to say before the test). "We want the same thing and we'll get there" has been rendered meaningless for people who have lived in poverty through both Republican AND Democratic administrations. "We want the same thing and we'll get there..here's how" is what you need to do.

Warren was really good at this. Biden hasn't even tried and it seems to be baked into his campaign strategy.

Clyde_Style wrote:I do think some degree of compromise can be made on the platform that encourages progressives to believe the Democrats can start to transform the party for the better. That's the only IMO to maintain sincerity for everyone on the spectrum of Democratic voters. We're just not going to get a completely leftward shift all at once so to imply that to win votes would be dishonest.


Nobody is demanding a complete leftward shift. I'm saying that "Not voting for Biden is a vote for Trump" is an argument that make ZERO appeals to compromise. Saying "we'll get every insured some day" also doesn't do much but ring hollow. If you believe compromise can be made, your appeal to the left needs to be on the grounds of showing them where you see compromise and how they can try to build on it in the future.

I've mentioned these low hanging fruits in the past. Postal Service Banking, Expanding student debt forgiveness (not the total forgiveness of Warren or Bernie but an expansion) and Legalizing Marijuana are three places that you can point to immediate impacts in wealth disparities, education and prison reform which are full leftward shifts but establish footholds to turn the conversation.

I'm not saying you have to go all the way left. I'm saying you have to learn how to appeal to lefties. That doesn't mean changing your principles, just taking smarter rhetorical approaches in your appeals than demonizing the lefties you mean to recruit as Trump enablers.
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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#612 » by Clyde_Style » Fri Apr 3, 2020 6:05 pm

j4remi wrote:
Clyde_Style wrote:Sure, but that was the question I was asking already. I merely phrased it differently from the singular viewpoint of Sanders himself, because he does have loyal followers and his reasoning will influence their decision.

I know there is nothing sexy about saying we have more to lose than we have to gain at the moment, but that is the stark reality. We can't tick all of our boxes in one stroke, but that's pretty much always the case. It is just more dire circumstances this time.

I do think the three you listed (Environment, Courts, Racism) should be plenty to want to defend by fighting back the GOP, but that has been my position all along.


How you pose the question is important. This isn't just true of Bernie supporters, spend an hour or two door knocking or text canvassing and it can be eye opening. But the reality is winning elections is almost entirely about persuasion. You can have the right idea but get the pitch wrong and still lose.

Clyde_Style wrote:I have no vested faith in Joe Biden, so I don't campaign for him. I'm strictly big picture which means the stakes are such that I will support the nominee. I'm not actually much of a fan of either Biden or Bernie. I really like Warren. So I don't split hairs. I go down the line and support the ticket at this point. I see no alternative for the time being.


No one has faith in Biden (enthusiasm polling is scary to look at right now). That's why the excuses for him losing are already manifesting. I mean that too, it's not a good faith attempt to recruit voters to blame them if you lose. I had a problem with Sanders supporters doing it to Warren supporters and I see the same backfire effect happening in real time now. Provocation is not the way to win over support.

Clyde_Style wrote:If the GOP wins, I will leave the country as soon as I can arrange it. If we can't get enough agreement to beat these fascists then I do think the country is broken beyond repair. Right now, I think we're very broken, but we can patch it up and start to build a better system. This current crisis will create conditions for major structural changes and it does mean progressive reform may be possible. But fascism is just as possible too.

So I don't want to sugarcoat things, but if you think strategically it is wrong to suggest some change will have to be incremental, I'll defer to your knowledge of your particular demographic. I don't think it is really true, so I'm not sure what the pitch really is going to be that convinces rabid Bernie supporters to vote the ticket. TBH, isn't it politicking to avoid speaking the truth as you see it? Do Sanders voters really need to be pandered to? I don't think so.


Clyde, read my post again. I didn't say you can't point to incremental change, I said you have to be specific and show how that incremental change can be built on. If all you do is shout buzzwords then your pitch just sounds insincere. I laid this out in an earlier post about the nuances of what makes quality incremental change vs weak incremental change. It's not pandering to be able to show your work (as every damned math teacher used to say before the test). "We want the same thing and we'll get there" has been rendered meaningless for people who have lived in poverty through both Republican AND Democratic administrations. "We want the same thing and we'll get there..here's how" is what you need to do.

Warren was really good at this. Biden hasn't even tried and it seems to be baked into his campaign strategy.

Clyde_Style wrote:I do think some degree of compromise can be made on the platform that encourages progressives to believe the Democrats can start to transform the party for the better. That's the only IMO to maintain sincerity for everyone on the spectrum of Democratic voters. We're just not going to get a completely leftward shift all at once so to imply that to win votes would be dishonest.


Nobody is demanding a complete leftward shift. I'm saying that "Not voting for Biden is a vote for Trump" is an argument that make ZERO appeals to compromise. Saying "we'll get every insured some day" also doesn't do much but ring hollow. If you believe compromise can be made, your appeal to the left needs to be on the grounds of showing them where you see compromise and how they can try to build on it in the future.

I've mentioned these low hanging fruits in the past. Postal Service Banking, Expanding student debt forgiveness (not the total forgiveness of Warren or Bernie but an expansion) and Legalizing Marijuana are three places that you can point to immediate impacts in wealth disparities, education and prison reform which are full leftward shifts but establish footholds to turn the conversation.

I'm not saying you have to go all the way left. I'm saying you have to learn how to appeal to lefties. That doesn't mean changing your principles, just taking smarter rhetorical approaches in your appeals than demonizing the lefties you mean to recruit as Trump enablers.


I agree with your points. I do want Biden to extend himself and address core points that affect all of us, not just Sanders supporters. If there was ever a time to reboot his approach to health care, now would be a good time. A month ago the context was different. The world is never going to be the same again after what we're going through so the old solutions won't work. That means everybody needs some form of subsidized health care and he really needs to do more than say some vaguely modified form of Obamacare will do the trick. If he does that, he'll win some of the votes we're talking about.

And, yes, that is a good part of why Warren was my favorite. She is usually fairly specific. I see her as the most necessary type of progressive needed today which is a compassionate policy wonk. If she were the nominee, I do believe she could win over many parts of the democratic spectrum by demonstrating HOW she intended to accomplish her goals. Her and Bernie have lots of overlap in terms of goals, but to me that does not really equal vision which I think of as a combination of aspirations + strategy.

I think Bernie had a shot at winning the nomination, but the perception of the moderate Dems is even if they like some of his ideas they feel unsure about how he intends to pay for his programs. If he could have made a case that he'd be able to fund health care, student debt relief and free universities without clipping people's pocketbooks too hard, he'd probably have won more votes.

I do think we say this election is about defending our rights and the planet against the GOP. While that may not be a ringing endorsement of the nominee, it is a prime reason to vote Democrat. That + Biden extending himself on several initiatives that give younger voters hope (you mentioned legalization, school loans, etc.) really should be enough for us to coalesce, win and move forwards.
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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#613 » by CharlesOakley » Fri Apr 3, 2020 6:31 pm

Biden looks like he will be drooling on himself by the time the election rolls around. Trump can hit hard below the belt and Biden can't form complete sentences. I fully expect Trump to win another term even while people are dying in the streets. Queue up all the pollsters and democratic pundits asking "how could this happen"?
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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#614 » by Clyde_Style » Fri Apr 3, 2020 6:50 pm

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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#615 » by duetta » Fri Apr 3, 2020 10:59 pm

They wanted Rick Scott - and this is what they got.
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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#616 » by Appleshampoo » Fri Apr 3, 2020 11:38 pm

CharlesOakley wrote:Biden looks like he will be drooling on himself by the time the election rolls around. Trump can hit hard below the belt and Biden can't form complete sentences. I fully expect Trump to win another term even while people are dying in the streets. Queue up all the pollsters and democratic pundits asking "how could this happen"?


Don't worry they'll blame Bernie Sanders.
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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#617 » by Clyde_Style » Sat Apr 4, 2020 12:58 am

Trump is not going to win unless we let him. Millions of Republicans are turning against him now or very soon.

This ad will be airing on Fox

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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#618 » by Knickfan1982 » Sat Apr 4, 2020 3:57 am

Clyde_Style wrote:
Since there is little chance Bernie will be the nominee, a simple question to ask is:

What does Bernie gain if Trump and the GOP wins?


Maybe it will finally galvanize Democrats into backing candidates and policies that work for the people.
Why rely on nuance, facts and logic when you can bludgeon the other side with mindless repetition of "Duuur McDaniel's has potential :tooth and still be treated as if you were reasonable.
Clyde_Style
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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#619 » by Clyde_Style » Sat Apr 4, 2020 4:38 pm

Five Thirty Eight aggregates various polls and today I saw their adjusted numbers for the typically pro-Trump Rasmussen poll to have dipped to 38%. I don't recall seeing that low an adjusted number from Rasmussen before.

I give it a month before every poll's non-adjusted hard numbers are dipping into the 30s. Then the GOP hedging will become more prominent.

Mitch already threw Trump under the bus this week when he said Trump had mishandled the crisis because he was distracted by the impeachment process. Trump's alliances are cracking.

https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/trump-approval-ratings/
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Re: OT: Democratic Primary Thread 

Post#620 » by Clyde_Style » Sat Apr 4, 2020 6:15 pm

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