ray245 wrote: ↑2018-07-16 09:13pm
The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2018-07-16 08:22pm
This is starting to become a broken record.
What makes you believe that the Democrats (who are frequently attacked for supposedly lacking spine or principles) will gain more votes from pandering to people who support locking children in cages than they will lose by alienating their base? Please provide specific arguments.
Whether they will gain more votes is debatable. What matters is whether they will gain the key votes to win an election.
So you acknowledge that they might very well lose votes by doing this, but then just repeat (without really elaborating as to why) that the votes of Centre Right whites are the only votes that matter?
There are certainly other reasons for losing the elections. The problem is with the rise of Trump, the Republican machine and the far-right is doing their utmost best to demonise social justice and making it a new bogeyman that will scare the voters in the swing states.
More than that, they're trying to suppress the votes of the poor and minorities, so that middle and upper-class white peoples' votes are the only ones that matter.
I would contend that rather than accommodating that strategy, we work to a) challenge voter suppression and gerrymandering in court, and b) work on mobilizing enthusiastic turnout to help offset the suppression tactics.
Note also that which states are swing states is not necessarily fixed, and that winning a few swing states is only the be-all and end-all in
Presidential elections- the Democrats' further alienating their base would potentially hurt them in down-ballot races all over the country.
It's not enough to hold onto existing states. You need to win back those states as well.
Of course, but winning new states will do you no good if you lose states you currently hold in the process. There are swing states that went to Hillary that might not go Democrat if the party takes a dump on its base, as you propose.
But it's still a swing state that finds no problem with supporting Trump.
Err, Virginia went Democrat, as I said.
The Republicans will try and lock down those states, and if identity politics helps them in that regard, they will play it up for maximum gain.
Were you aware that the key swing states that voted for Trump (Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania) and put him over the top all went to Obama? That alone calls into question the assumption that it was fear of the scary minorities that cost the Democrats those states.
Also, read these articles, which lay out a case for how it was not more voters turning out for Trump, but fewer voters turning out for Hillary (including black voters) that cost her those states:
https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/re ... -election/
http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/ ... ction.html
In other words, a very strong argument can be made that it was not centrists or conservatives fleeing from identity politics and voting Trump, but disgruntled Leftists who simply stayed home or protest-voted, that cost Clinton the election. In which case, again, your proposed solution would in fact be pretty much guaranteed to make the problem worse.
I wasn't aware that there's an all-out conflict in the US.
Don't try to be cute. You know perfectly well what the point of that analogy is: that sometimes there is a moral imperative to defend a position which overrides short-term security- that some battles have to be fought even if they are costly. And that trading fundamental principles for advantage isn't compromising- its surrendering.
It's written by an American Professor of Political Science from Columbia University if you want to be precise.
My mistake, though I would still question why you apparently feel that this one article is the definitive word on the subject.
Have you actually read the article in question? The author suggests people are more psychologically inclined towards right-wing positions if they feel their social position is under threat. So the "moderates" can be pushed further right, and quite easily.
So in short, humans are naturally Right-wing bigots, so we shouldn't bother ever trying to stand up for Left-wing principles because we're certain to lose?
If that is the case (which I do not concede, but for the sake of argument), then again, why not just drop the pretense and vote Republican, if you've given up any hope of changing the world for the better?
You can bet a lot of voters will be asking that question if the Democratic Party abandons its base. I repeat that in 2016, perhaps the single most damaging argument against the Democrats was that they were "no different from the Republicans". Trump and Russia expertly capitalized on this cynicism to encourage angry Leftists and "anti-establishment" voters to protest vote or stay home, and that is likely one of the things that cost Hillary Clinton the election. This is all well-known and widely reported on.
It was largely a lie in 2016. What you advocate would be to give the lie credence.
This also means those who might support progressive policies might keep on shrinking.
Whatever I say, you just repeat your one talking point: an assumption, based on citing a single article, that the only voters who matter are bigoted voters on the Right, that the key cause of Trump's election was a backlash against identity politics, and that any attempt to defend progressive policies will cost votes while any abandonment of them will not (or at least, not votes that matter).
Point out that trying to pander the bigots won't work, because they're nearly all lifetime members of the Cult of Trump?
"But then progressive policies might continue to lose support."
Here's a fun fact from CNN last night: according to recent polling, Trump has, among Republicans,
the highest approval rating of any Republican President in history. Higher than George W. Bush's approval rating the week after 9/11. This is post-locking children in cages, remember.
If you want to talk about winning over moderates who might stay home, alright. I still think you're wrong, but at least that's within the realm of reason. But you can forget about winning over Trump supporters. The Republican Party is a neo-fascist party built on a cult of the leader. Full stop. We are not winning over these people in any remotely significant numbers.
1. Can this base be established given the history of this base? ( Clinton's defeat and the Bernie-or-burst crowd suggest this is NOT a reliable base)
The Bernie-or-Bust crowd are
not reliable Democratic voters, obviously, but the Bernie-or-Bust crowd is not synonymous with the Democratic base. There are a
lot of voters on the Left, a lot of Democratic voters(largely women and minority voters) who were not part of the Bernie-or-Bust crowd but are
absolutely essential to the Democrats being a viable political party at the national level, who would be alienated by what you propose.
As to Clinton's defeat, as I previously noted, a compelling case can be made that it occurred due to lower turnout from traditionally Democratic voters and the base- likely due partly to Hillary herself, but also due partly to the perception that the Democrats are just Republican-lite. A perception which you are essentially arguing that the party should double-down on.
In short, the course you are proposing is so tailor-made to benefit Trumpism, not the Democrats, that if I did not know better I would think that was your intent.
2. Would this base be enough to overturn the base that the Republican is consistently mobilizing?
The slow-motion blue wave in special elections over the last year and half would suggest so, though this November is the real test.
3. Would the "moderate-Democrats" feel disenfranchised that they will simply sit out the elections?
There are some Democrats who are "moderates" on many issues, but as women and minorities would be potentially alienated by this strategy. There are others who might indeed be alienated by a strong progressive/social justice platform- but I would contend that "moderates" are probably less likely to act on their disgruntlement than the base. Perhaps a strong Left-wing platform could cost moderate Democratic votes if there were a moderate alternative on the Right- but there isn't. No one who is actually "moderate" is going to jump ship now because the Democrats support social justice. Not considering who and what the alternative is.
"I know its easy to be defeatist here because nothing has seemingly reigned Trump in so far. But I will say this: every asshole succeeds until finally, they don't. Again, 18 months before he resigned, Nixon had a sky-high approval rating of 67%. Harvey Weinstein was winning Oscars until one day, he definitely wasn't."-John Oliver
"The greatest enemy of a good plan is the dream of a perfect plan."-General Von Clauswitz, describing my opinion of Bernie or Busters and third partiers in a nutshell.
I SUPPORT A NATIONAL GENERAL STRIKE TO REMOVE TRUMP FROM OFFICE.