this post was submitted on 15 Nov 2024
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[–] berno@lemmy.world 1 points 2 hours ago

DNC rigged their primary in favor of Hillary in 2016 and fucked him over AGAIN in 2020 when Obama made a phone call urging both Klobuchar and Buttigeg to drop and endorse Biden. They fucked themselves and the rest of the country twice (now three times) in a row. They're done as a party, many moved Independent and will remain there for the rest of their lives unless the Dems get their shit together.

[–] zbyte64@awful.systems 7 points 4 hours ago

Maybe, but it's all academic if we don't have the power to get him nominated. I am reminded of a quip: "We elect people without power and we're surprised that they're powerless to change things". That is the best case scenario if the DNC had somehow nominated Bernie. We need to build power, no matter what our strategy or objective. Highly recommend reading this over doom posting: https://wagingnonviolence.org/2024/11/10-things-to-do-if-trump-wins/

[–] TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world 61 points 9 hours ago

For the previous 8 years, instead of fighting fascism and white nationalism, the Democrats have made their enemy the populists within their own party.

It ended expectedly.

[–] FlowVoid@lemmy.world 21 points 9 hours ago* (last edited 9 hours ago) (2 children)

Bernie won fewer votes in Vermont, his home state, than Kamala. One of the rare incumbent Democratic Senators who actually underperformed Harris.

[–] nondescripthandle@lemmy.dbzer0.com 11 points 8 hours ago (21 children)

Okay now do swing states, the only states that actually end up mattering in presidential elections. Bernie captivated audiences on Fox news during his campaign, appeared in Republican town halls and listened to people. Id bet you dollars to donuts Bernie would outperform her by miles in the swing states.

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[–] NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip 3 points 8 hours ago* (last edited 8 hours ago) (2 children)

I go back and forth, but I do think Sanders would have had good odds in 2020. We had the same "I can't vote for the status quo" non-arguments going around and a semi-populist candidate arguing for all the things people desperately needed (a socioeconomic safety net, basically) at the height of COVID and civil unrest would have done well. That said, an old white guy who was "warm and safe and was in the same room as Obama a few times" was probably still the right play.

But yeah. In 2024 when all people care about is "not the status quo" and "why eggs expensive"? A guy arguing for MORE government programs does not fair well against "Yo, what if we got rid of all taxes and government funding? Don't ask where the money is going"

[–] grue@lemmy.world 3 points 3 hours ago

But yeah. In 2024 when all people care about is "not the status quo" and "why eggs expensive"? A guy arguing for MORE government programs does not fair well against "Yo, what if we got rid of all taxes and government funding? Don't ask where the money is going"

Bernie has better answers to that than Trump, though.

[–] Nightwingdragon@lemmy.world 5 points 8 hours ago (2 children)

But yeah. In 2024 when all people care about is “not the status quo” and “why eggs expensive”? A guy arguing for MORE government programs does not fair well against “Yo, what if we got rid of all taxes and government funding? Don’t ask where the money is going”

This is something I've always tried to get people to understand.

If you're running for office, and your opponent is saying monkeys flying out of your ass are terrorizing the city and causing a huge problem, you'd be right to want to write them off as an unhinged lunatic with no grasp on reality, because anyone can see there are no flying monkeys. Should be pretty cut and dry; ignore him and let him go back to giving sermons to pigeons in the park.

But if 51% of the voting base believes that monkeys flying out of your ass are their top concern, you had better come up with a solution for the flying monkeys. Of course, you could try to appeal to reason and logic and point out that you have pants on and there are no flying monkeys. But if 51% of voters are hooked on the flying monkey problem, you'll be making those appeals during your concession speech, while your opponent will suddenly point out that there are no flying monkeys because he managed to solve the problem on day one.

That's just the reality of running for office. Sometimes, feels win out over objective reality. There are a certain number of voters who fall into this category, and those voters were always out of reach. You cannot use logic to persuade someone to change a position they didn't logic their way into to begin with.

[–] Keeponstalin@lemmy.world 3 points 5 hours ago* (last edited 5 hours ago)

You don't need to concede to their belief and subsequent policies if they aren't grounded in reality, like on immigration. You provide a counter narrative grounded in reality that actually address their needs and concerns, real or perceived.

The Republican narrative on immigration is that immigrants are criminals, bringing crime and drugs into our country to kill our citizens, steal jobs, and exploit welfare, so we need mass deportations. None of that is based on reality.

US citizens are responsible for smuggling in drugs. Immigrants are responsible for less crime per capita than US citizens, use much less welfare than citizens, and contribute far more than they use. The underlying fear is cost of living and safety. So a counter narrative that both points out the realities of mass deportation, aka concentration camps, and provides real solutions to the problems, would absolutely capture those voters and fracture the Republican base.

Those real solutions would include legalization of illegal immigrants to stop companies from exploiting both them and citizens with a two-tier immigration system, increasing taxes on corporations and the wealthy to pay for universal social services, systemic solutions to addiction and homelessness, and increasing security to catch smugglers at points of entry. All of which are popular. You address their fears, improve their material needs, and point out how terrible the oppositions 'solutions' are, all without conceding to the Republican framing based on racist lies.

In fact, many progressive policies are popular across the board, including Republicans and independents.

Polls on campaign messaging

How to Win a Swing Voter in Seven Days

“The View” Alternate Universe: Break From Biden in Interviews, Play the Hits in Ads

Polls on policy

How Trump and Harris Voters See America’s Role in the World

Majority of Americans support progressive policies such as higher minimum wage, free college

Democrats should run on the popular progressive ideas, but not the unpopular ones

Here Are 7 ‘Left Wing’ Ideas (Almost) All Americans Can Get Behind

Finding common ground: 109 national policy proposals with bipartisan support

Progressive Policies Are Popular Policies

Tim Walz's Progressive Policies Popular With Republicans in Swing States

[–] NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip 3 points 7 hours ago

That is why trump and vance were so adamant about no fact checking during the debates. All they had to do was say "nuh uh. I saw it on the news" and the moderators couldn't really do much.

Which gets back to the underlying problem of Democrats not actually having a way to communicate with voters. Because even when Fox was saying "Just to be clear for legal reasons, there is no evidence of Haitian immigrants eating dogs" it was followed with "now let's see what else god emperor trump has to say".

Whereas Democrats? We had people who were more interested in attacking Biden than trump (even after he stepped down) and who mostly just said "ha ha, trump says stupid shit."

Because, yeah, logic can't beat vibes. But we also weren't putting out the vibes the way we were in 2020.

[–] SaltySalamander@fedia.io -5 points 2 hours ago (1 children)

Bernie was on every ballot. I voted for him, twice. The fact that he didn't win means nothing more than he didn't win. He had the opportunity, the voters simply didn't vote for him.

[–] Lanthanae@lemmy.world 5 points 2 hours ago (1 children)

He would have won in the general. The primary is not reflective of the general electorate. This is the whole point.

[–] SaltySalamander@fedia.io 3 points 2 hours ago (1 children)

Maybe so, but Democrats didn't turn out to vote for him in the primary, even though they had every opportunity to do so, in every single state. Kinda makes your whole point moot.

[–] mojofrododojo@lemmy.world 2 points 1 hour ago* (last edited 1 hour ago)

this is exactly the kind of attitude that lets trump win repeatedly.

'yeah yeah, we know you don't want the candidate we're pushing but you don't get a choice.'

then 20 million people stay home.

great fucking job. Meanwhile Sanders would have won, EITHER ELECTION. great. fucking. work.

[–] frustrated_phagocytosis@fedia.io 5 points 8 hours ago (1 children)

I was a Bernie delegate in Minnesota when he won the state in 2020 and I skill knew he had no shot in the vast majority of less liberal states. Where are the numbers coming from for people who would have supposedly voted him in, despite not winning enough primaries?

[–] grue@lemmy.world 2 points 3 hours ago

They would have been coming from:

  1. People who sat out the primaries because they were so disgusted with both parties failing to represent their interests
  2. People who voted Trump in the primary as a "burn it all down" protest vote
  3. Liberals, who would surely "vote blue no matter who" because they aren't hypocrites, right?
[–] Nightwingdragon@lemmy.world 2 points 8 hours ago (3 children)

So let me get this right.

The Democrat party was upset we were putting up a president that was "too old" and showing signs of cognitive decline, especially since he was going up against another old man with even more cognitive decline.

So the Democrat party gets the old man to drop out at the last minute and since there's no time for a Democrat primary, they put up a black woman as the nominee.

But because the black woman wasn't the absolutely perfect candidate, wasn't articulate enough on her policies, and didn't hand the left everything they wanted on a silver platter, they opted to stay home in protest and let the old white man with even more dementia return to power in order to "send a message" to Democrats not to put up old white guys.

And now they're saying that the solution to the old white guy that they didn't want to vote for was to put up an even older white guy who managed to get even less votes than her in his own home state.

Please, make it make sense.

And if you're one of the 10+ million Biden voters who opted to sit home, you still fucking voted for this. "If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice." And you made that choice fully informed, knowing it was a de-facto vote for Trump.

If your solution to the problem of "old white guy" is "even older white guy", then just admit it. You didn't vote for Harris because she's a black woman and are just using the narrative as a convenient excuse so you don't have to admit (to yourself, to friends) that you're a closeted racist. Because nobody with three active fucking brain cells believes that the solution to anything is to sit back and allow Trump to return to power.

"I don't like Harris's economic policies, so I voted for a guy who's economic policy is "They're eating the dogs!"

"I don't like Harris's policy on Gaza, so I voted for a guy who promised to speed up the genocide even faster."

"I don't like Harris flip-flopping on policies, so I voted for the guy who says he has "concepts of a plan".

"I don't like Harris's record as a prosecutor, so I'm going to vote for a guy who wants to have me deported because of my race."

"I don't like Harris being endorsed by a Republican woman (the men are just fine, though), so I'm just going to allow all of them to return to power."

And all I keep seeing from the people defending this line of bullshit is that "They couldn't vote for Harris because.....", or "Harris went too far to the right.....", or "Well, Liz cheney showed up that one time.....". Yet asking the questions of "So how the hell does allowing Trump to return to power help in any way? Better yet, how does allowing Trump to return to power not make the situation actively worse? What is Trump going to do to help me?" is met by silence, insults, and downvotes. Because they know what the answer is. It doesn't. It makes everything worse. But they just don't want to admit (again, either to themselves and/or to others) that they would rather allow an old white wanna-be dictator to return to power before they'd vote for a black woman. Everything else is just excuses.

[–] grue@lemmy.world 0 points 3 hours ago (1 children)

Please, make it make sense.

No.

The voters are entitled to their vote whether it makes sense or not. Failing to vote for Kamala (or Hillary, for that matter) to stop Trump was objectively stupid, but it was their right to be objectively stupid if they wanted.

The Democrats had two choices: they could capitulate to that stupidity, run a progressive, and have a chance of winning, or they could obstinately cling to neoliberalism and lose. You'd think their basic responsibility as a political party whose goal is to win would have them choose the former, but instead they chose the latter. Make that make sense!

[–] SaltySalamander@fedia.io 0 points 2 hours ago (1 children)

Sure, just as it's our right to call them fucking stupid.

[–] grue@lemmy.world 3 points 2 hours ago* (last edited 2 hours ago)

But it's not the Democratic Party's right to do so. Calling people stupid instead of trying to win their vote is dereliction of duty.

The Democrats have kowtowed to corporate donors (and the likes of AIPAC) to the point that they are failing to do their job, and they need to be held accountable for that.

[–] spujb@lemmy.cafe 6 points 8 hours ago (1 children)

you make a lot of really persuasive points. if only the campaign had communicated them.

i think the chronically online politics sphere overestimates how much the average voter knows by about 100-fold and that’s why we get comments like this.

when mcdonalds releases a new burger and no one buys it, we blame the product and the marketing. but when the DNC drops a new candidate, there is no room to talk about the candidate or the marketing for some reason—it’s all finger pointing and blaming one another for not “just getting” information that’s all but kept hidden from a population with >20% rates of low literacy.

[–] NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip 2 points 8 hours ago (1 children)

I think the problem is less "the campaign" communicating and more... there is no way for them to reach the majority of the audience.

There are plenty of memes about people realizing on election day that Biden wasn't running. And... that isn't that far out. Because people:

  • Refuse to watch commercials... ever
  • Get pissy when "politics" is brought up in their entertainment
  • Get even pissier when "politics" is brought up in a message board

So republicans can more or less advertise directly to the fox news crowd and they have influencers like xqc and all of kick to get that message out.

On the left side? We have fucking Hasan. A nepo baby who has somehow convinced people to equate "being a socialist and fighting for progress" with "donating subs to a super rich guy in a mansion" and whose own fans point out that he "Attacked both sides but attacked trump a lot worse"

We need people who can reach out to the idiots. And we need people who can do so and actually say "Look. I fucking hate Biden and am wary of Kamala. They are going to be horrible for Palestine. But you know who is going to be worse? Fucking trump. So yeah, I would vote for Genocide Joe in a heartbeat if the alternative is trump and that is what we need to understand"

John Oliver did a spectacular job of saying almost exactly that. But he is on HBO and has a much smaller audience.

Aside from that? I guess we had Walz playing Madden with AOC a few times?

It feels like Democrats are still running TV ads and phone banking. Whereas republicans are bringing out ALL the grifters to push their side.

[–] spujb@lemmy.cafe 3 points 8 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago)

really good insight and it sounds like a good opportunity for the DNC to find those channels rather than give up and court suburban conservatives.

[–] NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip 4 points 8 hours ago

Well said. Every time someone says that Kamala "was not likeable" I just assume "I don't want no women in office"

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