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Georgia's 6th Congressional District Special Election |OT| Round 2: Fight!

Tommy DJ

Member
Evangelical support for Trump just makes my head spin. "I can't vote for someone that supports abortions, so I'll vote for a man that is a perfect storm of the seven deadly sins." "I can't vote for a man whose pastor said something un-American; I'll vote for this guy that's never been seen at a church service in his life."

That is the gist of Australian evangelicals who support Trump. They hate the man but love the message. It doesn't matter if he's a piece of shit, the sheer fact that the man is completely fearless in saying whatever shit he wants gets these people excited. These are things that Rubio and Cruz can't replicate since they're a hell more careful about what they say.

The ends justifies the means so to speak. He's completely emboldened a lot of people on my Facebook feed to openly support Margaret Court being a piece of shit.
 
Keep ignoring the warning signs senor Trump.

What warning signs?
Democrats have lost 5 elections in a row since Trump was elected.

The only warning signs are for the democratic party to get their collective shit together before the midterms.
Replacing Pelosi would be a good start.
 
Objectively speaking, these are warning signs. Like you wouldn't be pissing yourself in terror if Republicans were mounting credible challenges in D+10/15/20 seats in urban California right now? Be honest.

No, because Americans have the attention spans and memories of goldfish and (R) voters always vote (R) no matter what name is in front of the (R).

Until actual Democrats win actual elections, it's all sound and fury signifying nothing.
 
So, in all seriousness, what is it that people were seeing in Handel?

All I know about her is that she doesn't think people should earn a livable wage. And I think she just moved to the district after living in DC?
People see the R next to her name on the ballot. She didn't win because she had any redeeming qualities. She isn't even that popular among republicans.
 
Objectively speaking, these are warning signs. Like you wouldn't be pissing yourself in terror if Republicans were mounting credible challenges in D+10/15/20 seats in urban California right now? Be honest.

We were already given insight into GOP mindset when they were worried it was a toss up. I don't think tonight changes things.

The SC result is...odd. And it won't do future forecasts any favors.
 
What warning signs?
Democrats have lost 5 elections in a row since Trump was elected.

Anyone in this thread, just answer this question. If Republicans were challenging reliable blue seats right now, how would you be feeling?

Objectively speaking, these are warning signs. Like you wouldn't be pissing yourself in terror if Republicans were mounting credible challenges in D+10/15/20 seats in urban California right now? Be honest.
 
What warning signs?
Democrats have lost 5 elections in a row since Trump was elected.

These districts were vacated in part because they're such strong GOP bases. While Dems losing is frustrating, the fact that they've closed the margins so much in these races is a positive.

Obviously at some point you'd want to win something, but given the realities of these particular races, the next best thing is to significantly close previous gaps. So yeah if a Dem can take a +20 R district down to +5, what does that say about the +15 or +10 or +5 GOP districts out there in 2018?
 
What warning signs?
Democrats have lost 5 elections in a row since Trump was elected.
I love how people keep quoting this post and not the posts where I explain the warning signs I'm talking about.

Because you all know what I'm talking about and either want to ignore that and gloat or ignore that and pretend that there is either nothing we can do, or only one thing we can do.

And it's pretense. The only thing I don't know is if you're ignorant enough to think we won't see through it or if you are trying to convince yourself that there is zero reason for Trump and the GOP to be concerned.
 
To put it in war terminology...

The Democrats went on five suicide missions thus far and inflicted serious casualties that will have an impact on the overall war.

2017 is Rogue One, and 2018 will either be Star Wars or Empire.
 
I love how people keep quoting this post and not the posts where I explain the warning signs I'm talking about.

Because you all know what I'm talking about and either want to ignore that and gloat or ignore that and pretend that there is either nothing we can do, or only one thing we can do.

And it's pretense. The only thing I don't know is if you're ignorant enough to think we won't see through it or if you are trying to convince yourself that there is zero reason for Trump and the GOP to be concerned.

Is their zero reason for the democrats to be concerned? They should absolutely be concerned and they should be doing something about it instead of saying "hey we got second place!". They need to get organized... and quickly... before it's too late. Stop pointing fingers, take a look in the mirror and improve the party.
 

Loxley

Member
Not even remotely surprised. I've never heard of a single Trump voter turning on him, whether on the internet or real life. Sadly, I fully expect Dems to lose big in 2018 and Trump gliding to a second term. This country is a piece of dog shit, I give up on it.

Imagine if every Democrat felt the way you do right now, we genuinely would be screwed. I don't mean to be a dick, but so long as you've got this defeatist attitude, you're part of the problem and helping nobody. In fact you're actively making things worse by spreading a message of hopelessness - you're essentially doing the GOP's job for them. This sort of attitude is giving them exactly what they want. "Stay home Democrats, no need to even bother turning up to vote, there is no hope for you. We won, you're fucked for life."

Democrats absolutely need to take a good look at wear they stand as a party in light of Ossoff's loss, and whether or not they want to move further left or keep trying the centrist route. I'm not trying to sugar-coat anything, but flat-out giving up does nobody any good.

Trump wants you to despair in this result. He's jacking off to your tears and hopelessness. The 6th fucked itself tonight, don't get me wrong. But if you give in and give up, then it's going to be your Eeyore ass I point to in 2018 and 2020 if there's depressed dem turnout.

Exactly.
 
Willfully ignorant. When Dems won massive majorities in the house they didn't win GA-6. Losing this doesn't mean they will fail to make significant gains in the house.

You know this of course.

I think the thing here is that Trump is an exceptionally toxic figure, and as such many are expecting exceptionally vociferous backlash but ultimately not seeing it. I'd be very happy with tonight's results if Rubio were president, but he's not. A reality TV star who's waist deep in a Russian corruption scandal five months into his term is the president, and we're still losing to his party by not-exactly-razor-thin margins. I fully understand that these are safe R seats. I think what people are disappointed by is that the swing we're seeing is more or less in line with what one would expect from a regular R, but not when confronted with the complete lack of benefits, if not detriment, the current crop of Republicans have brought to the country. Our opponents want to suck the life out of the most vulnerable among us and are led by an incompetent imbecile... and we're losing to them over and over again. At what point do Republicans, at the very least, lose faith in the direction of their party and stay home on election day? There just aren't that many millionaires who actually benefit from these policies. The 2010 swing against Obama was in response to a pretty average democrat, policy-wise. As such, a similar swing against Trump would be disappointing because he's not an average Republican. So, to use a buzz word, I think much of the rancor right now is about the "normalization" of Trump as just some unpopular Republican rather than what he really is: incompetent, authoritarian, ignorant, corrupt, narcissistic, and a pathological liar. He really is those things, unlike the tea party loons who thought Obama was a "Muslim atheist."
 
These reactions just make no sense to me. It's the same as people who get themselves riled up over the simple idea that Trump will always have some loyal supporters somewhere.

Here's a reality check for you, there are 500+ seats in the House of Representatives. Many of those seats will stay Republican no matter how awful you think Trump or the Republican party is, just deal with it. Five of those seats were up for election and became more competitive than many thought they would be.

All it takes for control to change is for 20 some odd seats to change out of 500+, that's all. Seats that are historically competitive or not strongly Republican enough to withstand a general change in the national mood.

I'm not some partisan cheerleader, I'm just explaining the facts to you. Of course there are warning signs, kind of like all the signs Democrats ignored in 2016. The same mistakes are being made and no one seems to give a damn.
 
I think the thing here is that Trump is an exceptionally toxic figure, and as such many are expecting exceptionally vociferous backlash but ultimately not seeing it. I'd be very happy with tonight's results if Rubio were president, but he's not. A reality TV star who's waist deep in a Russian corruption scandal five months into his term is the president, and we're still losing to his party by not-exactly-razor-thin margins. I fully understand that these are safe R seats. I think what people are disappointed by is that the swing we're seeing is more or less in line with what one would expect from a regular R, but not when confronted with the complete lack of benefits, if not detriment, the current crop of Republicans have brought to the country. Our opponents want to suck the life out of the most vulnerable among us and are led by an incompetent imbecile... and we're losing to them over and over again. At what point do Republicans, at the very least, lose faith in the direction of their party and stay home on election day? There just aren't that many millionaires who actually benefit from these policies. The 2010 swing against Obama was in response to a pretty average democrat, policy-wise. As such, a similar swing against Trump would be disappointing because he's not an average Republican. So, to use a buzz word, I think much of the rancor right now is about the "normalization" of Trump as just some unpopular Republican rather than what he really is: incompetent, authoritarian, ignorant, corrupt, narcissistic, and a pathological liar. He really is those things, unlike the tea party loons who thought Obama was a "Muslim atheist."

If Rubio were elected, these races wouldn't be this close. There is a clear Anti-Trump movement alive and well.

These reactions just make no sense to me. It's the same as people who get themselves riled up over the simple idea that Trump will always have some loyal supporters somewhere.

Here's a reality check for you, there are 500+ seats in the House of Representatives. Many of those seats will stay Republican no matter how awful you think Trump or the Republican party is, just deal with it. Five of those seats were up for election and became more competitive than many thought they would be.

All it takes for control to change is for 20 some odd seats to change out of 500+, that's all. Seats that are historically competitive or not strongly Republican enough to withstand a general change in the national mood.

I'm not some partisan cheerleader, I'm just explaining the facts to you. Of course there are warning signs, kind of like all the signs Democrats ignored in 2016. The same mistakes are being made and no one seems to give a damn.

438, but yes. I think 435 vote.
 
T

thepotatoman

Unconfirmed Member
Well, I guess there's still time, but this is probably not a seat that democrats can lose in 2018.

But i believe 3.8% is a way bigger gap than we hoped for.
 

Staccat0

Fail out bailed
San Antonio TX recently elected a new mayor who made transgender rights and suing the TX government over their anti-sanctuary city bullshit.

Good things happen. We need to fill the bench. We need to actually resist and do shit right instead of waiting for national elections. I want better turnout in smaller elections.

People love to complain about the lack of a real left in this country, but they only wanna show up for the final act.
 

EYEL1NER

Member
I was hoping for Ossof to win and didn't expect much from SC District 5. I'm surprised to see how close it was here in SC now, but still disappointed. I mean, it's great news that it's closer than it could have been and close enough to make some on the Right nervous; it looks like the SC District 5 being within 4 points was closer than the general election in November when Mick Mulvaney won. That's all great. But it's hard to not still think about the situation here in SC District 5 as "Great. Another asshole who wants to suck off Trump while vigorously voting 'Yes' for a stupid-fucking border wall and repealing the ACA won."

I said it in the PoliGAF thread a while back when I still had some hope about winning District 5 that the area around me voted pretty strongly for Clinton in November. It looks like the results for today's election here in Sumter County were Parnell 5,547, Norman with 3,660. So I can still take some solace in knowing that not everyone around me is a hateful and selfish piece of shit.
 

StoOgE

First tragedy, then farce.
I'm not sure how much I trust polls though after the Presidential election and again after tonight. Obama and Hilary is completely different from Reagan and Bush (which was more of the point I was trying to make). I believe that if Hilary wasn't such a flawed candidate (Democratic fall out with Bernie didn't help) and Obama had a much higher sustained growth (GDP and actual jobs) it would have been a different story (also shows popularity isn't everything). Also, to assume that Republicans are not at all open to the idea of a black president is in itself racist and ignorant. Look at Ben Carson. :)

Also, I was not making a prediction, just pointing out that if (if) he can turn things around and prove to the people that he can follow through on his promises, they will vote for him again. They will not give him a second chance like most politicians, he only has one chance.

As for popularity, this man is a freaking oddity. He was unpopular and still won by a good margin. Imagine if he ever became popular.

Almost nothing you said is true.

Obama had good jobs growth and GDP
 

Davidion

Member
The energy is still there as far as I can tell, just gotta keep on fighting.

Yup, lots of ground to be taken and lot more effort to be exerted before good results come in. Democrats will definitely need to lick their wounds and make adjustments without falling to delusions that they have the upper hand, but that's been true for a while now.

As for the people insisting that everything's lost... I mean, do you and give up? Not really sure where the long game with that is.
 

Cybit

FGC Waterboy
I've been asking myself this for almost a year.

He's not even a good liar. He's just... Full of shit. Completely. Used car salesman full of shit. How could anyone possibly fall for it?

Louise Mensch says hi. Confirmation bias is a hell of a drug.

Sex discrimination is not discrimination based on sexual orientation and this has been proven many times to be an issue and why orientation needs to be a protected class. You would know this if you did you your research. You haven't even touched transgender issues.

To be fair, even the progressive efforts revolve way too much around trying to find loopholes and shame businesses (and running into free association issues and private business issues) rather than actually trying to make orientation a protected class (which is the way to actually protect them)

This is not a good result, but it's at least a sign that things might be getting closer for a Dem victory than not. Couple of takeaways

1) We really fucked up during the run off - if we had game theoried it right, we had enough Dem votes to actually take the top two spots if we had divided our votes relatively equally IIRC. Which would have made all of this a moot point.

2) The national attention may have hurt Ossoff near the end more than helped. By projecting so much of 2018 onto the race, it increased polarization and brought Republicans back into the fold (since it started to become a referendum on the national GOP rather than just Trump). SC was insanely close; and I think that might have had to do with the lack of national attention from the media.

3) We will have to keep morale up, because I suspect it will be low after this and if AHCA gets through the Senate (DAMNIT MCCONNELL). We have energy but do we have longevity?

4) Whether the Trump coalition stays together into 2018 is going to be interesting. AHCA and tax reform could bring back a lot of the Obama/Trump voters into the Democratic fold, or at least sour them enough on Trump to not come out and vote R. But tax reform could push those upper class social moderates back into the GOP camp.

Almost nothing you said is true.

Obama had good jobs growth and GDP

Indeed; though the redistribution of that wealth geographically and class-wise (more than its' fair share went to the coasts and to upper middle class families) hurt the Democratic party. That's probably a major policy issue that we have been sticking our head in the sand about (because most of the people here live in those areas that benefited disproportionately) that we need to reckon with before 2020.
 
If Rubio were elected, these races wouldn't be this close. There is a clear Anti-Trump movement alive and well.



438, but yes. I think 435 vote.


I certainly hope so. I just don't know how incompetent the President has to prove himself to be before R's at least stay home, to the extent that you would expect sane individuals to when their political party is led by a reality tv celebrity. For instance, if Kanye were the president right now, and my party was pretty enthusiastically supporting him, I probably wouldn't be voting for that party. Why are republicans so unconcerned with what's happening to "the party of Lincoln?"
 
I certainly hope so. I just don't know how incompetent the President has to prove himself to be before R's at least stay home, to the extent that you would expect sane individuals to when their political party is led by a reality tv celebrity. For instance, if Kanye were the president right now, and my party was pretty enthusiastically supporting him, I probably wouldn't be voting for that party. Why are republicans so unconcerned with what's happening to "the party of Lincoln?"

Republicans tell themselves anything that makes them feel better, true or not.

I think this race was too early. September or early 2018 would have done better, let these scandals and a slagging economy take root. Dow is up, which is the only thing Fox News gives a shit about when reporting on the economy (and I guess gold prices). You also had an extremely bland candidate, honestly. Both of them were, but one had the right letter behind their name

There are more things to it than that, but it really is time for me to go to bed.
 

Sulik2

Member
Even though they cut the margins the fact the Dems haven't managed to win a single one of these seats concerns me. The blue wave might not be big enough. They have to flip some red seats and this was a very winnable one.
 

Rked

Member
As long as Pelosi and the old democratic guard is in power the Republicans have an easy trump card to play. Also I'm sick and tired of the Democrat playing nice it never works go for the throat call them traitors throw the book at them.
 

Steel

Banned
Indeed; though the redistribution of that wealth geographically and class-wise (more than its' fair share went to the coasts and to upper middle class families) hurt the Democratic party. That's probably a major policy issue that we have been sticking our head in the sand about (because most of the people here live in those areas that benefited disproportionately) that we need to reckon with before 2020.

The thing is that they weren't able to do anything about those issues because Congress wouldn't even let them pass status-quo spending bills without shutting down the government.

Which obviously has worked quite well for them in the last election.
 

Cybit

FGC Waterboy
The thing is that they weren't able to do anything about those issues because Congress wouldn't even let them pass status-quo spending bills without shutting down the government.

Which obviously has worked quite well for them in the last election.

I think by the time Obama entered office, it was too late to really prevent what had started to happen. We sacrificed manufacturing jobs for service jobs, because most of the folks who make decisions in the country live on the coasts, and stood to benefit from cheaper goods. Because we were so insecure about the economic recovery from Trump's attacks, we kept talking about how much the economy has recovered without acknowledging that it didn't recover for a whole lot of people.

Mind you, said globalization of trade lifted billions of people out of poverty, so thinking outside of the US, it was (so far) a net gain. But at the cost of the American middle class for the most part.
 

Random17

Member
I would say that's fair. If Dems fail to take the House in 2018. Then.... that's just about that for me.

The next question is what can conceivably be done to fix the problem? Change of strategy, messaging or policy? Or wait for the GOP to screw up so badly that Democrats sweep into power?
 

SURGEdude

Member
I think the thing here is that Trump is an exceptionally toxic figure, and as such many are expecting exceptionally vociferous backlash but ultimately not seeing it. I'd be very happy with tonight's results if Rubio were president, but he's not. A reality TV star who's waist deep in a Russian corruption scandal five months into his term is the president, and we're still losing to his party by not-exactly-razor-thin margins. I fully understand that these are safe R seats. I think what people are disappointed by is that the swing we're seeing is more or less in line with what one would expect from a regular R, but not when confronted with the complete lack of benefits, if not detriment, the current crop of Republicans have brought to the country. Our opponents want to suck the life out of the most vulnerable among us and are led by an incompetent imbecile... and we're losing to them over and over again. At what point do Republicans, at the very least, lose faith in the direction of their party and stay home on election day? There just aren't that many millionaires who actually benefit from these policies. The 2010 swing against Obama was in response to a pretty average democrat, policy-wise. As such, a similar swing against Trump would be disappointing because he's not an average Republican. So, to use a buzz word, I think much of the rancor right now is about the "normalization" of Trump as just some unpopular Republican rather than what he really is: incompetent, authoritarian, ignorant, corrupt, narcissistic, and a pathological liar. He really is those things, unlike the tea party loons who thought Obama was a "Muslim atheist."

The formatting leaves much to be desired, but this is a great post.
 
As long as Pelosi and the old democratic guard is in power the Republicans have an easy trump card to play. Also I'm sick and tired of the Democrat playing nice it never works go for the throat call them traitors throw the book at them.
No. Pelosi's got nothing to do with this (particularly not if you can't show any evidence that the people who voted for Handel specifically voted for her because of the Pelosi boogeyman and wouldn't have still voted for her if that hadn't been present, which is lacking. Republicans shouting it at the top of their lungs in the adverts doesn't translate into what people who actually show up to vote do and don't give a fuck about and how they would have voted otherwise). Quoting what I said elsewhere about this topic:
The counter argument here is ______________________ ?
That that isn't her goddamn job? That's on the DNC/DCCC/DSCC. If we're going to blame her and put things that have nothing to do with her entirely on her shoulders, it just demonstrates that the people making those calls have so little understanding of government and her actual job that I don't know why anyone would take such hot-takes seriously.

Unless the answer is to make that the minority leader/Speaker of the House's role and responsibilities, but it currently is not.

And beyond that, what's the solution? Because whoever replacers her Republicans will do the same goddamn thing to because they're entire line of attack against her is that she was Speaker of the House in the past, and could be again. That's something they could literally do to ANYONE. Not at first, but with time.

So the solution to that is... what exactly? Never keep anyone as Speaker/Minority Leader for more than 2 years? That ain't a good way to build up experience and actually let people become competent at the job! That and it certainly doesn't help the DNC or whatever institutions you think the Minority Leader/Speaker of the House should be working with to elect more D's to actually become a well-oiled machine if our leaders are constantly coming and going, coming and going, coming and going.

And if you don't replace them just like that, then Republicans will have the ability to do with anyone what they did with Pelosi, since their entire line of attack is that she was a Democratic Minority Leader of the House/Speaker of the House, and that's a no good, very bad, terrible thing.

So what's the solution to that exactly? Because I damn well haven't heard one. Either we make Minority Leader/Speaker of the House a revolving door position, or Republicans will do to whomever your replacement ends up being the same they did to Pelosi?

What's the solution to that Catch-22 situation? Until someone can actually answer that, you can all shut the fuck up about Nancy Pelosi and how terrible she is for Democrats based on fucking Republican attack ads that we don't even have a goddamn clue about whether they had any effect on who these people voted for and whether or not they would have voted the same way regardless, and the hit take from that being a solution that would have us wind up in the same position (new Minority Leader/Speaker of the House being demonized just like Pelosi) or worse (the Speaker becoming an ineffective revolving door position for Democrats trying to avoid Pelosi style attacks and shooting themselves in the feet in the process by the works bring gummed up and no one being able to gain experience in the position, which Republicans would also no doubt turn into attack ads about how terrible Democrats are since they can't even keep a leader on board for more than 2 years or whatever and how can you trust such an unstable party like that regardless).

Until I can hear an answer to THAT any hot takes about Pelosi can find their way to the nearest dumpster because unless you can resolve that Catch-22, they're useless and involve tossing an effective fundraiser (among her actual jobs) to the curb just to find ourselves in the same or a worse situation regardless.
 

mo60

Member
To put it in war terminology...

The Democrats went on five suicide missions thus far and inflicted serious casualties that will have an impact on the overall war.

2017 is Rogue One, and 2018 will either be Star Wars or Empire.

Actually later this year will be the start of the democratic empire with the two gubernational elections in Virgina and New Jersey and other elections being held I think in these states to. And seriously I have watched byelections before in Canada were one party can close to winning a seat and in the next general election they won the seat.The most recent case occurred because the party that kept that seat in the byelection experienced about a 20% decline in their polling numbers provincially between that byelection and the general election which made it possible for the second place candidate in the byelection to win that seat in the general.
 
DCzuwZmWAAA5EIq.jpg


Democrats "Biggest concern" isn't winning, but having to *GASP* move left.

Democratic party is in a death spiral.
Fascinating. This anecdote is consistent with my take on the state of the Dem party, and damn, it kinda is dire
 

Steel

Banned
I think by the time Obama entered office, it was too late to really prevent what had started to happen. We sacrificed manufacturing jobs for service jobs, because most of the folks who make decisions in the country live on the coasts, and stood to benefit from cheaper goods. Because we were so insecure about the economic recovery from Trump's attacks, we kept talking about how much the economy has recovered without acknowledging that it didn't recover for a whole lot of people.

Mind you, said globalization of trade lifted billions of people out of poverty, so thinking outside of the US, it was (so far) a net gain. But at the cost of the American middle class for the most part.

Globalization was inevitable. If we stuck our head in the sand the manufacturing jobs would still have eventually disappeared, whether to automation or to foreign competition. Not to mention that trade agreements like NAFTA have millions of jobs in the U.S. that rely on them.

That being said, what was not inevitable was the whole detail where the gap between the rich and everyone else has gotten so huge. Legislation could have helped offset that problem. But, regardless, I suppose that's kinda irrelevant given the GOP's stances on it.

Wait, how is this an opening for left-wingers? That doesn't make sense.

Don't you get it? If the dems had put up a bernie-like then a bunch of voters from the left would show up magically that wouldn't show up for someone like Ossof and push em to the finish line in a primarily red district.
 
Wait, how is this an opening for left-wingers? That doesn't make sense.

Presumably being centrist/moderate left is not gonna sway anyone, so they might as well go all Bernie left, since he was so popular last year and is extremely popular in VT.

Keep in mind that in 2018 there are more D (and I caucusing with D) seats in the senate and more R seats in Congress and governors in play.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Senate_elections,_2018

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_House_of_Representatives_elections,_2018

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_gubernatorial_elections,_2018

They spent a lot of money on GA 6th congressional district and came up short. It's a high risk high reward play for the democrats, I can't blame them for trying giving Bernie's popularity. I'll be interested in seeing how everyone is gonna play their hands next year.
 
Presumably being centrist/moderate left is not gonna sway anyone, so they might as well go all Bernie left, since he was so popular last year and is extremely popular in VT.

Keep in mind that in 2018 there are more D (and I caucusing with D) seats in the senate and more R seats in Congress and governors in play.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Senate_elections,_2018

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_House_of_Representatives_elections,_2018

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_gubernatorial_elections,_2018

They spent a lot of money on GA 6th congressional district and came up short. It's a high risk high reward play for the democrats, I can't blame them for trying giving Bernie's popularity. I'll be interested in seeing how everyone is gonna play their hands next year.


That makes zero sense in the context of GA 6.
 

Joeytj

Banned
Sucks about Ossoff, but again, it's mostly bad luck that all the special elections so far were for heavy GOP districts that just 7 months ago voted overwhelmingly for a Republican candidate, notwithstanding how they voted for Clinton.

Clinton made it close in GA-6, but she still lost. We like to think that Trump makes every single seat up for grabs, but the sad (or hopeful truth) is that local Republicans are managing to stay alive by not being too close to Trump, although still enjoying the help they get from Trump's base.

This was Hillary's mistake as well. She bet that she could peel away enough moderate Republicans from Trump to win her the presidency, but there were enough and separating Trump from the rest of the Republican party was disastrous for Congressional races.

Ossoff still manage to do well. He kept most of the anti-Trump vote from 2016, even if those anti-Trump suburban voters have never been particularly Democratic or progressive and could just as easily have voted for a typical Georgian Republican like Handel in other years.
 

mo60

Member
Well, you have people calling the guy who ran in SC-05 Parnell (who's an ex-Goldman Sachs executive) a populist, so people don't really seem to make sense about things like this period.

Yeah. Parnell flew under the radar in a district that used to vote for democrats before it got changed to favour republicans more. Mulvaney's popularity in the district did not even rub off Norman much which is kinda shocking. Parnell wasn't a populist but he was not really campaigning as a true blue democrat either which hellped him a lot.
 
Sucks about Ossoff, but again, it's mostly bad luck that all the special elections so far were for heavy GOP districts that just 7 months ago voted overwhelmingly for a Republican candidate, notwithstanding how they voted for Clinton.

Clinton made it close in GA-6, but she still lost. We like to think that Trump makes every single seat up for grabs, but the sad (or hopeful truth) is that local Republicans are managing to stay alive by not being too close to Trump, although still enjoying the help they get from Trump's base.

This was Hillary's mistake as well. She bet that she could peel away enough moderate Republicans from Trump to win her the presidency, but there were enough and separating Trump from the rest of the Republican party was disastrous for Congressional races.

Ossoff still manage to do well. He kept most of the anti-Trump vote from 2016, even if those anti-Trump suburban voters have never been particularly Democratic or progressive and could just as easily have voted for a typical Georgian Republican like Handel in other years.

Hillary's issue was she thought that the areas Obama won were safe, and didn't hit those areas as hard as she should have campaign wise. They needed to fall in love with her like they did him, and the bernie fallout didn't help.

All the democrats need to do in 2018 is put the right candidates in the right contests, and they will take seats. Especially if things get worse under trump and the current GOP.
 

CazTGG

Member
The next question is what can conceivably be done to fix the problem? Change of strategy, messaging or policy? Or wait for the GOP to screw up so badly that Democrats sweep into power?

Hope the Supreme Court strikes down partisan gerrymandering in a case they'll be hearing and voter suppression in a future case, thereby eliminating the main issues that plague Democract-leaning voters?
 
Hot take, I know, but honestly seeing the state of how the American populace persists in their idiocy; I do think Trump will win a second term. The US is too stupid and too stubborn to display any real change in the political process.
 

Taramoor

Member
Hillary's issue was she thought that the areas Obama won were safe, and didn't hit those areas as hard as she should have campaign wise. They needed to fall in love with her like they did him, and the bernie fallout didn't help.

All the democrats need to do in 2018 is put the right candidates in the right contests, and they will take seats. Especially if things get worse under trump and the current GOP.

Hillary and the Dems biggest failure was assuming that people wouldn't vote for the openly racist idiot conman who admitted to sexual assault, repeatedly made pervy comments about young girls, and flagrantly and constantly lied.
 
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