Dr. Strangelove
New member
While fair, he left the party to salvage whatever he has in mind for his political career.
I incorrectly assumed the OP was referring to how Manchin voted as a Senator, where he was invaluable to the Democratic party.
While fair, he left the party to salvage whatever he has in mind for his political career.
Agreed 100% with the article. So many in the media are speaking the obvious but the 'family' and others are not facing the same reality we are seeing. The Drudge Report headlines notes everything from Jill holding on to power to a poll stating 72% want him out. Drudge is no fan of Trump either. Biden, himself, said in 2020 that he would be a 'transitional' president. Well, I think the taste of power got in the way of transition. At this particular time in history, the Dems have several qualified governors who could step in and forcefully take on Trump. But Biden(s) has gotten in their way. I also fault Obama and Clinton for not speaking the truth to him. They know, those near to Uncle Joe know and they have hidden Biden's real condition from the public -- until this debate exposed it all. Time for some truth talkers to take control otherwise I have no doubt Trump will win in November - not because so many more will turn out to vote for him but because so many more will sit on their hands and not vote for Biden.If You Can’t Communicate, You Can’t Run for President
Never even thought of that but you are right.can you imagine how big the republican victory would be if they replaced trump and ran a decent candidate instead of a criminal against Biden?
A semi-moderate Republican candidate would probably win extremely easily against any Democrat. If Romney/McCain/traditional Republican ran today, I would dare say the electoral college is so favorable, Rs would've controlled the Presidency from 2016-2028 or even 2032. The electoral college bias is that strong.can you imagine how big the republican victory would be if they replaced trump and ran a decent candidate instead of a criminal against Biden?
I think it's accurate. I've long said that replacing Biden is a bad idea, because it is. But Biden needed to use the debate to gain ground on Trump, and instead his numbers will stagnate or he'll lose a point or two. His opportunities to gain ground will rapidly deteriorate.Dang, that is kind of a scathing article.
I think an issue is...how do you get Biden to drop out?A semi-moderate Republican candidate would probably win extremely easily against any Democrat. If Romney/McCain/traditional Republican ran today, I would dare say the electoral college is so favorable, Rs would've controlled the Presidency from 2016-2028 or even 2032. The electoral college bias is that strong.
The saving grace for Democrats is that the far right makes it impressive for decent Republican candidates to emerge. Instead of EASILY winning the Presidency, they nominate Trump. The same is true when they nominated Kari Lake in Arizona or Herschel Walker in Georgia, Republicans nominate bad candidates, shooting themselves in the foot.
I think it's accurate. I've long said that replacing Biden is a bad idea, because it is. But Biden needed to use the debate to gain ground on Trump, and instead his numbers will stagnate or he'll lose a point or two. His opportunities to gain ground will rapidly deteriorate.
Democrats need to rally around a candidate like Roy Cooper and prepare a supermassive ad campaign and media blitz to increase his name recognition.
I agree here.can you imagine how big the republican victory would be if they replaced trump and ran a decent candidate instead of a criminal against Biden?
https://www.latimes.com/politics/newsletter/2023-07-14/democrats-despise-the-electoral-college-perhaps-they-should-get-over-that-essential-politicsA semi-moderate Republican candidate would probably win extremely easily against any Democrat. If Romney/McCain/traditional Republican ran today, I would dare say the electoral college is so favorable, Rs would've controlled the Presidency from 2016-2028 or even 2032. The electoral college bias is that strong.
I think you're overestimating how many people care about politics beyond the name of the candidate and the letter by their name. If the Dems replace Biden with someone the vast majority of the country doesn't know (which is the definition of a "fresh face"), it'll likely cost them at the polls. There is of course no way for us to know for sure either way, but incumbent advantage is a real thing.I have to disagree. I don’t think very many people are enamored with Biden or Trump. A fresh face that isn’t one of those 2 old farts and who may actually have some palatable policy positions might garner a surprising amount of support in very short order.
And I don’t think the current situation is a coin flip any longer. IMO Biden hurt his chances greatly last night. That performance isn’t going to swing any undecideds his way. There are pro Trump and anti Trump people locked in but the folks in between will decide this election. Joe screwed the pooch big time last night. And this is coming from somebody who will still vote for him only because he isn’t Trump. I think most undecided people will be more affected by his confused lostness than they will hold Trump accountable for all of his lies and fantasy existence. JMO
GOP voters like Trump, he drives up the number that come out to vote. While many of us that follow politics like to imagine that another candidate would do better, the primaries suggest otherwise.can you imagine how big the republican victory would be if they replaced trump and ran a decent candidate instead of a criminal against Biden?
I certainly don't disagree.https://www.latimes.com/politics/newsletter/2023-07-14/democrats-despise-the-electoral-college-perhaps-they-should-get-over-that-essential-politics
That’s a rarity. As Kyle Kondik and J. Miles Coleman recently documented on the Crystal Ball election site, the system is pretty unbiased most of the time: In the 19 presidential elections since the end of World War II, the results of the electoral college and the popular vote matched closely.
Usually, but not always.
In 1948, for example, the electoral college had a pronounced Republican tilt. Democratic President Harry Truman won anyway, but his margin in the electoral college was famously thin despite his healthy victory in the popular vote. In 2000, the Democratic nominee, Vice President Al Gore, was less lucky. A slight Republican tilt in the electoral college was enough to give Bush the White House after the Supreme Court declared him the winner in Florida. And, of course, in 2016, a fairly large Republican tilt in the electoral college handed the White House to Trump even though Hillary Clinton got more votes.
In 2020, President Biden overcame an even bigger electoral college bias to win: He took the popular vote by 4.5 percentage points but garnered only a 0.6% edge in electoral votes.
The reason the electoral college and the popular vote don’t always track is that election results are much closer in some states than others. In recent years, that’s had a lot to do with California.
In 2020, for example, Biden won the state by 29 points, garnering about 5 million more votes than he needed to capture its electoral votes. That swelled his national popular vote margin but didn’t gain him anything in the electoral college. The Democrat racked up a similarly disproportionate margin in New York, padding his popular vote margin by another couple million.
Because most people pay attention to the electoral college only when something goes awry, and both of the anomalies in living memory favored the GOP, a lot of people assume the electoral vote always leans Republican. Not so.
In both of President Obama‘s victories, for example, the electoral vote had a Democratic bias although no one paid much attention. Since World War II, the electoral college has had a Democratic tilt nine times and a Republican one 10.
It could easily flip again. Just look at the results of the 2022 midterm elections, as Coleman and Kondik noted.
This EC “bias” isn’t nearly as large as you think it is. Republicans have basically given up on CA and NY which account for the entirety of the popular vote victory Dem’s have enjoyed. Why have R’a done this???? Because they decided they can’t win and spend hardly any resources, ie., money in the state beyond some congressional races. Republican voters in those states have zero incentive to vote for the Presidential race.I certainly don't disagree.
My point was that Republican's enjoy a much higher than normal Electoral College bias starting in 2016 that would've lasted until 2028 or 2032. This is because by then, Texas will become a blue state where Democrats will once again enjoy an electoral college bias for a period until more demographic shifts cause that bias to revert back to Republicans.
My other point is that, Republicans are squandering their current electoral friendly environment by nominating bad candidates. IF Trump manages to lose again in 2024, Democrats will have effectively taken 8 years of the Presidency during a time when it was the Republicans turn to dominate politics. Republicans need to figure out how to keep the crazies from taking over the party when it's their turn to dominate politics.
It's large in the sense that the popular vote is heavily tilted towards Democrats, and they have to win a large share in order to win the Presidency. From there, small, rural states have slightly inflated Electoral College representation compared to larger states. Republicans now dominate rural America, Democrats in heavily populated states. This demographic split wasn't always this severe. Thus, Republicans have enjoy a robust EC bias that'll last until Democrats can reliably turn a state - probably Texas, but possibly North Carolina blue. Once they do, they'll be at an advantage.This EC “bias” isn’t nearly as large as you think it is. Republicans have basically given up on CA and NY which account for the entirety of the popular vote victory Dem’s have enjoyed. Why have R’a done this???? Because they decided they can’t win and spend hardly any resources, ie., money in the state beyond some congressional races. Republican voters in those states have zero incentive to vote for the Presidential race.
Democrats have done a great job in trying to make Texas competitive by spending resources, taking a long game view of trying their best to have open borders and birthing a new generation of Democrat voters in the state, and nominating some moderate candidates to counter some of the extreme R candidates.
Each political party has basically the same amount of “guaranteed” EC votes. Roughly 180. The Democrats are usually favored in more of the non guaranteed states (toss ups can change from election to election) than Republicans are which means Republicans have to run more of the table than Dems do.
I think that's a hell of a lot easier than getting Trump to quit on his self made political party cult.I think an issue is...how do you get Biden to drop out?