Grover Cleveland
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A lot of people seem to say on /r/sandersforpresident that they will vote for Jill Stein instead. Then some others are a bit crazier:
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A lot of people seem to say on /r/sandersforpresident that they will vote for Jill Stein instead. Then some others are a bit crazier:
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It would not cause riots but in this climate that actually might cause voters to not show up in the general or vote 3rd party in larger numbers (but is very unlikely to occur. The same thing would happen on the other side if a brokered comvention put rubio up when trump had a delagate lead.A lot of people seem to say on /r/sandersforpresident that they will vote for Jill Stein instead. Then some others are a bit crazier:
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A lot of people seem to say on /r/sandersforpresident that they will vote for Jill Stein instead.
So you're repeating with yourself with a tired ass "it was legal" meme. Nobody gives a shit. It's still terrible behavior what the patriot act has done. Amazing that there is a defense force for shit like this...
Civil rights activist Dolores Huerta claims Bernie Sanders supporters chanted 'English-only' at Nevada caucus
They have found a way to appeal to Sanders supporterslol
What a load of BS
Because that worked so well after 2012. They'll triple-down and become even more unhinged.The RNC wouldn't deny the will of their group by just putting Rubio up instead. They'd lose terribly. At least with Trump, they can blame him and use it as a new call for GOPurity after the loss.
Fracturing the party and then losing would send the party towards the grave.
The RNC wouldn't deny the will of their group by just putting Rubio up instead. They'd lose terribly. At least with Trump, they can blame him and use it as a new call for GOPurity after the loss.
Fracturing the party and then losing would send the party towards the grave.
A lot of people seem to say on /r/sandersforpresident that they will vote for Jill Stein instead. Then some others are a bit crazier:
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To be fair, with today's political climate, one might as well try anyway. It's not like the GOP will be less obstructive with Clinton than they will be with Sanders, they tried to cockblock Obama at every opportunity purely out of spite. The GOP as it is now will never consider a Democrat president to be legitimate, and will be obstructive as possible as long as it suits them. Might as well push a progressive agenda that you were elected for, and then tell the people, "well, I tried, but congress isn't being reasonable, you should vote those fuckers out."
I hate how we're digging up random (4 karma, even) posts on reddit.
Those "a lot of people" are completely minuscule.
Who?
These people aren't progressives. They're angry young adults who hate DC and want free college and single payer in a year -- like that's happening even under a Sanders administration.
This election is amazing. Never before has a primary exposed so many people who have a fundamental misunderstanding about how American politics works and how one can successfully push for change.
Completely agreed. To not vote, simply because the democratic candidate isn't your preference, is frankly naive and possibly childish, when you consider the alternative. I'll be voting for the democrat candidate because the alternative is simply unthinkable. I don't even want to Imagine the damage a republican congress and presidency would do to the country.
I can't believe that this 'better in head-to-head matchups' crap is still a thing. There's a reason that the GOP isn't slinging mud at Bernie - they're praying he wins so they can sling it then.
See here: http://talkingpointsmemo.com/edblog/berned-up
He has reasonably decent favorables among polled voters, at least initially - but once the expected collection of GOP attacks are passed by those people polled, he loses - badly. Just because his favorables don't suck now doesn't mean they won't later (and evidence exists that those favorables *will* suck the closer we get to November). Hillary's favorables are a floor, while Bernie's are a ceiling - and we don't know where the floor is for him.
This is the worst. Threatening to abstain a vote is the only political power that most voters have. Voting for a candidate that you don't even like just because the alternative is worse is letting your vote be taken for granted. There's more to voting than which side wins, especially in a two-party system.
I mean, did anybody like the blue dogs? They may have been preferable in the short term to their Republican opponents, but now that they're gone there's a chance to take those seats with Democrats that aren't useless where it counts.
yeah you can vote for mickey mouse for president for all i care but at least support local politics as that will have a huge effect going forward. hell if people cared about local politics then perhaps we could have enough politicians in place that would make somebody like bernie realize most of the things he wants to do.There's plenty of scary shit going on in state and local races, threatening to abstain a vote based on the top of the ticket is moronic.
This is the worst. Threatening to abstain a vote is the only political power that most voters have. Voting for a candidate that you don't even like just because the alternative is worse is letting your vote be taken for granted. There's more to voting than which side wins, especially in a two-party system.
I mean, did anybody like the blue dogs? They may have been preferable in the short term to their Republican opponents, but now that they're gone there's a chance to take those seats with Democrats that aren't useless where it counts.
Nope, not at all.
The first is cheap talk, the second is strategic voting. Your mechanism to signal your preferences are the primaries, the generals are a head-to-head.
No u.
This is why people talk about it being important for Sanders to get the minority vote. It's not just to beat Clinton. If it's Sanders vs Trump, then Sanders can't just tell all of the black people "Hey, too bad you all have no choice but to vote for me because the alternative is Trump!" No, he actually has to work to get that vote because while they might not like Trump, they can always choose to just not vote for Sanders.
I'd be surprised if most minorities, myself included, don't do just that as letting Trump or the others into the Office is not an option. We're more likely to be affected the most by their actions as president.No u.
This is why people talk about it being important for Sanders to get the minority vote. It's not just to beat Clinton. If it's Sanders vs Trump, then Sanders can't just tell all of the black people "Hey, too bad you all have no choice but to vote for me because the alternative is Trump!" No, he actually has to work to get that vote because while they might not like Trump, they can always choose to just not vote for Sanders.
The RNC wouldn't deny the will of their group by just putting Rubio up instead. They'd lose terribly. At least with Trump, they can blame him and use it as a new call for GOPurity after the loss.
Fracturing the party and then losing would send the party towards the grave.
I
Considering that he's made no traction outside of New Hampshire and that he's looking at multiple double digit defeats in the next couple of weeks, I'd say that the real enthusiasm isn't on his side - we just don't waste time retweeting stuff or upvoting Bernie memes on Reddit. As an example, look at pro-Bernie versus pro-Hillary articles on a site like Daily Kos. The Hillary posts may have a picture or two but have a lot of content about endorsements and policy and other important things, while Bernie posts are mostly memes and 'rah rah rah' images, which look nice - but don't actually have much substance. 'Vocal' isn't the same as 'enthusiastic'. Hillary supporters, on the whole, like our candidate more - we just don't feel the need to waste time trying to create a 'revolution' on Twitter and Facebook.
I'd be surprised if most minorities, myself included, don't do just that as letting Trump or the others into the Office is not an option. We're more likely to be affected the most by their actions as president.
Huh?
I have no idea what you are getting at. Of course candidates impact turnouts and campaigning to your base is necessary. I have never contested that.
What I am contesting is the logic and strategic value of abstaining, that you argued for. There is none.
Given that scenario not much else to do really.There it is
I wonder how close the race has to be after Super Tuesday for Bernie to still realistically have a chance. Already went and voted in early voting myself, I don't think I'll ever actually go on election day again as it's such a hassle.
Alabama: Clinton 59 percent, Sanders 31 percent
Arkansas: Clinton 57 percent, Sanders 32 percent
Georgia: Clinton 60 percent, Sanders 26 percent
Louisiana: Clinton 60 percent, Sanders 29 percent
Massachusetts: Sanders 49 percent, Clinton 42 percent
Michigan: Clinton 50 percent, Sanders 40 percent
Mississippi: Clinton 60 percent, Sanders 26 percent
Oklahoma: Clinton 46 percent, Sanders 44 percent
Tennessee: Clinton 58 percent, Sanders 32 percent
Texas: Clinton 57 percent, Sanders 34 percent
Virginia: Clinton 56 percent, Sanders 34 percent
Vermont: Sanders 86 percent, Clinton 10 percent
LOLI was saying that among his supporters, he has more enthusiasm, and that's really widely known. But primaries are about where the party will be going, that's what the battles are over. GE is where the country will be going. And when it comes to the GE, we likely won't even remember the nomination process. What will happen is Hillary will do her thing, Obama will come out and do some key campaigning in swing states to promote his messages and time in office, and he will help put the stakes in place for the country to consider.
Also, don't put down and make fun of Sanders supporters and how they campaign. While I view the "revolution" thing as more of a buzzword, it isn't just only college kids that support him. Sanders people know how important the SC is and you aren't going to find progressives that view it as a side issue. As I remember in 2008, there were questions about whether Obama was electable because Hillary was so experienced, and the long primary process was dividing the party, etc. The only thing right now that is dividing the party is people that want to twist and morph perspectives on candidates and their supporters.
You might not want Sanders as president over Clinton for various reasons, but you agree with him on most policy issues, right? Just like how Sanders and Clinton agree on most things. The main thing that Sanders wants for people to take note of is how money interests in politics over the decades has really morphed the system to favor certain groups for monetary benefit. He doesn't want Roe vs Wade to be over turned. He doesn't want 12 million Latinos to be deportered. He doesn't want woman rights to be taken away or for gay marriage to be taken away. He doesn't think climate change is a hox. ETC. ETC.
This primary has really been about one issue, income inequality, and how it effects the system as a whole.
For a side not, the whole free college thing isn't even my issue. I actually disagree with it because I think college is really about to morph into something else, more of a online system, and the costs will be greatly lowered over the coming decades. I feel like people don't mind paying for it, it just has to be affordable.
Healthcare? This issue is probably where I get the most upset with Hillary on. She tries to say he wants to dismantle and take it away from citizens that just got it. Its disingenuous and she knows it. Its a typical politician angle to use, and thats apart of the lukewarm feelings I have for her. Its the classic politics of inducing fear into people to get them to go away from something. Its the same method of what the GOP uses when it comes to background checks to buy a gun. Obama is going to take away your gun!!!!!
But anyway, the DEM is going to have a uphill(dawg) battle when they are in the whitehouse, come Jan 2017. Obstructionism will probably just intensify, nothing will happen, etc. The right HATES Hillary. Like more than I think people realize. They hate her more than Obama. Which of course, the hate for either isn't justified, and it speaks to how shitty the GOP is. And that's basically what all this primary season comes down to. You got a party that is at least in reality while you have another party that acts like a 5 year old that had their toy taken away from them, by crying (take our country back!) and throwing a tantrum (obstructionism).
A lot of people seem to say on /r/sandersforpresident that they will vote for Jill Stein instead. Then some others are a bit crazier:
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I'd be surprised if most minorities, myself included, don't do just that as letting Trump or the others into the Office is not an option. We're more likely to be affected the most by their actions as president.
Voter turnout is exactly what this is about. The threat of voters not turning out is what keeps candidates from taking their own base for granted.
There it is
And ultimately, I'm at the exact same position and it's quite frustrating.
People threaten to abstain, even if it would not be logical to do so, and I feel the knife on my neck. I get the impression that for some people, losing the general just means licking their wounds and protesting for 4-8 years to get ready for the next round -- and that makes abstaining to send a murky signal acceptable.
You'll excuse me for not thinking that this is an acceptable outcome when I feel like I have a whole LOT to lose if Republicans control the presidency for at least the next four years.
And I am saying that's not logical. It's a two-step removed strategic voting strategy that's dominated by the one-step strategy of voting in the Generals. The point is exceedingly simple -- murky signals 4 to 8 years in the future should not be in our consideration set, when we have the chance to send a strong signal in the generals, 4 years before.
And ultimately, I'm at the exact same position and it's quite frustrating.
People threaten to abstain, even if it would not be logical to do so, and I feel the knife on my neck. I get the impression that for some people, losing the general just means licking their wounds and protesting for 4-8 years to get ready for the next round -- and that makes abstaining to send a murky signal acceptable.
You'll excuse me for not thinking that this is an acceptable outcome when I feel like I have a whole LOT to lose if Republicans control the presidency for at least the next four years.
And I am saying that's not logical. It's a two-step removed strategic voting strategy that's dominated by the one-step strategy of voting in the Generals. The point is exceedingly simple -- murky signals 4 to 8 years in the future should not be in our consideration set, when we have the chance to send a strong signal in the generals, 4 years before.
That this poster understands how strategic voting works, and he doesn't want someone to fuck them over on their social and economic rights? Or were you implying something else?
We know from past elections that the bernie supporters will toe the line just like hillary supporters did in 2008. If your worried about hillary losing the general you should be focusing on the issues that would actually cause that to happen. She has high unfavorables, trust issues with a large segment of the electorate and the republicans have had high turnout this cycle. I assure you a handful of vocal bernie supporters should be the least of your worries in this regard.
Fuck.
Is the star of the reality TV series "The Apprentice" going to be President of the United States, guys?![]()
LOL
Not even fucking close. They only hate Hillary when she's running for office.
The vast majority really do respect her.
Obama though...that shit is genuine.
I don't think it's murky. Maybe my previous example was too extreme. Let's say Clinton is the nominee and she loses because the youth vote didn't show up for her. You don't think the beancounters at the DNC and future presidential exploratory committees are going to look at this and think "Wow, we really underperformed with young voters. We should consider ways to alter the party platform and messaging to try to attract these voters next time."
I think it's pretty clear. Then you have to remember that this all happens in real-time with polling. Clinton doesn't have to wait 4 or 8 years to adjust her message. The beancounters at her campaign can see anticipated low voter turnout and adjust the messaging during the campaign.
You can see where this is going right? I don't want to stray too far from reality with hypotheticals but in a world where everyone votes doing what you say is "logical" then the best place for Clinton to stand is basically right next to Trump but ever so slightly to the left. You need people who won't just vote for Trump-lite to prevent that outcome. Thankfully, that's a pretty significant amount of voters.
Also forgot to mention in my other post, I'm not sure how long Bernie can ride it out if Super Tuesday shapes up the way we think it will. He's been berning through the money in January. While he brought in $21.5 million he spent $34 million, including heavily outspending Hillary in NV and SC. He has, by most estimates, about $14 million cash on hand. If he only manages 8 and 22 in the month of March (which is being a bit generous) I'm not sure the money is going to keep coming in. At that point, I would argue the remaining supers will commit to make it mathematically impossible for Bernie to win.
I don't think it's murky. Maybe my previous example was too extreme. Let's say Clinton is the nominee and she loses because the youth vote didn't show up for her. You don't think the beancounters at the DNC and future presidential exploratory committees are going to look at this and think "Wow, we really underperformed with young voters. We should consider ways to alter the party platform and messaging to try to attract these voters next time."
I think it's pretty clear. Then you have to remember that this all happens in real-time with polling. Clinton doesn't have to wait 4 or 8 years to adjust her message. The beancounters at her campaign can see anticipated low voter turnout and adjust the messaging during the campaign.
You can see where this is going right? I don't want to stray too far from reality with hypotheticals but in a world where everyone votes doing what you say is "logical" then the best place for Clinton to stand is basically right next to Trump but ever so slightly to the left. You need people who won't just vote for Trump-lite to prevent that outcome. Thankfully, that's a pretty significant amount of voters.
We know from past elections that the bernie supporters will toe the line just like hillary supporters did in 2008. If you're worried about hillary losing the general you should be focusing on the issues that would actually cause that to happen. She has high unfavorables, trust issues with a large segment of the electorate and the republicans have had high turnout this cycle. I assure you a handful of vocal bernie supporters should be the least of your worries in this regard.
Huh. Bernie Sanders won the Latino vote by 8 points?
What she really needs is to win Ohio, Pennsylvania, Florida, and Virginia. All four have seemingly turned further right since 2012 with the exception of Virginia. I think the general will be a lot closer election than people are expecting.
Its 2014 results notwithstanding, Florida has actually shifted slightly to the left (there's been a fuckton of immigration to the state from Puerto Rico, and PR has generally leaned left as of late)
Fuck.
Is the star of the reality TV series "The Apprentice" going to be President of the United States, guys?![]()