Rasp wrote:The Romulan Republic wrote:
I daresay the FBI meddling right before election day probably helped, too.
That always came off like a weak scapegaot by partisan hacks - there is no evidence to suggest it would have in any way affected the result in the rustbelt. The Democrats are flummoxed by this because they cant imagine it was themselves and their own shitty policies that proved unpopular no it had to be ANYTHING else - See Russia. I mean after losing the presidency - the senate - the house - the majority of state legislators - totaling around 1,000 lost seats - clearly they are doing absolutely nothing wrong since Obama took office and The FBI or Russia or the Bernie Bros are to blame for EVERYTHING that went wrong. Their trip to Egypt must been really productive they swam in the Nile and it was SALTY.
First of all, this is a ridiculously broad generalization about Democrats. The Democratic Party covers a fairly wide spectrum, from outright conservatives all the way to socialists.
Secondly, I believe I made no claim about it affecting any of those other races- only the Presidential one. And while I can't definitively prove that, it seems fairly obvious that a major development in the hacking scandal (which turned out to be basically nothing) a week or so before election day might have an effect. And given how close the race was (a couple hundred thousand votes in three states would have swung it), even a minimal effect could have changed the result. I can't prove it definitively, but its just common sense- albeit common sense which doesn't fit the "Democrats are to blame for everything" narrative.
Remember that while Trump's EC win was fairly wide, he lost the popular vote, and won the essential states that put him over the top (presuming he did win them- full recounts were not held in all of those states) very narrowly.
I also think that this election was probably more a defeat of Hillary Clinton than the Democratic Party/platform as a whole. Remember that key states that voted for Trump also voted for Obama, who is ultimately a Centrist Democrat.
So whatever your personal feelings about the Democratic Party, I don't think you can honestly treat this election as a popular rejection of the Democratic Party.
No, I know no such thing, and its irrelevant to my argument (see above).
Besides being two years out of date, which is a long time in politics.
The electoral college IS still bullshit but if the democrats don't like systems like that they should do away with their own super-delegate system otherwise they have NO room to complain.
One shitty system does not justify another, but yes, both need to go.
Every one of them that defended the super-delegate / closed primaries system then immediately started to criticize the college after they lost - showed that one person one vote is not a CORE BELIEF they have - it's just an excuse to trot out when its convenient. This is why I hate the democrats.
Frankly, you treat the negative caricatures of Hillary Clinton as representative of the entire party, so given that, its no surprise that you hate them.
Overriding grassroots movements with super-delegates is just the sort of elitist authoritarian thinking that has been killing the democratic party. I'm all but convinced the democratic elite actually believe Corporate Lobbyists are actually "Grassroots Movements".
First of all, the super delegates, as a matter of factual accuracy, did not override the popular or pledged delegate vote. Clinton won all three.
Of course, its quite possible that had all states, for example, held primaries that were open to independents, she wouldn't have, but that's another matter.
I do think as well that the super delegates are unlikely to be so united behind one candidate next time around. 2016 was an odd year in that their was this overwhelming presumption of Clinton as the nominee from the start, and pretty much everyone against her rallied behind Bernie. It wasn't an open field.
I think that we'll probably see a more diverse competition next time around.
It's gotten so bad in the democratic party that strong progressives are
infiltrating the republican party instead. because the democrats have proven to be out of control authoritarians with innumerable barriers to grass roots efforts where the republican party is far more vulnerable.
Given the Republican base, I can't imagine them getting very far in most places.
Honestly, the main reason I stick with the Democratic Party is that, as long as the odds of progressives winning through the Democratic Party might seem, they're longer everywhere else. Third partiers are doing extraordinarily well if they break five percent. Republicans have a base that resembles the Klan. At least in the Democrats progressives make up a substantial (and growing, if they don't all just quit because they hate the Democrats) chunk of the party membership.
"Certainly there are some people in the Democratic Party who want to maintain the status quo, They would rather go down with the Titanic so long as they have first-class seats"
I'd rather have a "Justice Caucus" of Insurgent Leftist RINO's than allow the current Democrats to keep running things into the ground.
Plus Insurgent Leftist RINO is really fun to say... Insurgent Leftist RINO
Its a lovely idea, just one that I don't think is practicable.