Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
Don't bother, I'm not interested in trying to convert the corporatist shill wing of the Democratic Party.
Steyer is the opposite of what you describe here.
Don't bother, I'm not interested in trying to convert the corporatist shill wing of the Democratic Party.
It's ironic, isn't it, Bloomberg the Republican against Trump the Democrat.Speaking of people not being real Democrats.
Mike Bloomberg spent two terms in as the Republican mayor of NYC. He hosted the RNC conference in the city and spoke in favor of Bush and the disastrous war.
In 2016 Bloomberg gave nearly 12 million to incumbent Republican Senator Pat Toomey, one of the largest contributions to a senate race in history. Toomey won a narrow victory over the Democratic challenger and likely owes his success to Bloomberg.
Recall that McConnell holds a majority in the senate by 3 seats, one of which can practically be directly credited to Bloomberg. Toomey voted to confirm Kavanaugh, tilting the SCOTUS to the right for a generation. Toomey also voted no to calling more witnesses in the impeachment trial.
The DNC is bending over backwards to allow Bloomberg to participate in the debates.
Yes, it would seem that "medicare for all" will be a cudgel for both sides.National polls are irrelevant - All that matters, as it always does, are those 15 or so swing states. I don't see a lot of data available for them, but this poll from November shows Sanders and Trump within the margin of error. Of course, this was 2 long months ago and a lot has happened since then!
Trump won 10 of those 15 states in 2016. And it's there that we will find out how much support there is for Sanders (or whoever the nominee is) and what we're calling the Progressive wing of the Democratic Party.
The major theme Rick Wilson harped on in his book on how to defeat Trump was make it a referendum on Trump, and not policy, while focusing almost entirely on the swing state voters. I don't know if that will work for Sanders, as Medicare for All might dominate in his campaign.
FYI, I'm voting for any Democrat regardless of the candidate.
Why the hell are you dragging me into this?
TragicMonkey said:"Started a bank" is supposed to be something a progressive would do?
Belz said:If it's a bloodbank, maybe.
I am afraid a more divisive issue will come to the fore in the general. One which will, I suspect, kill us in the swing States. Reparations.
Stepping back from the current race and looking at the broader picture I'm legit surprised the DNC didn't really push to run Hillary again, really leaning into "But she really won the first time" narrative.
I mean, a bunch of deadlines to even get on the ballot have already passed. Anyone really considering entering the race has already made their decision.
I have reread this like 10 times and can't figure out what you mean here. Care to rephrase it?
Even allowing for that, he still never said or implied what you claimed. You're drawing an inference that one leads to the other, but your accusation has not been substantiated. If you had said that dudalb's argument is effectively equivalent to this, I would not have challenged. But you said that he has said this, when he has not.
No feelings hurt. I just don't understand why you seem to view every question as some sort of challenge to a duel.
National polls are irrelevant - All that matters, as it always does, are those 15 or so swing states. I don't see a lot of data available for them, but this poll from November shows Sanders and Trump within the margin of error. Of course, this was 2 long months ago and a lot has happened since then!
Trump won 10 of those 15 states in 2016. And it's there that we will find out how much support there is for Sanders (or whoever the nominee is) and what we're calling the Progressive wing of the Democratic Party.
The major theme Rick Wilson harped on in his book on how to defeat Trump was make it a referendum on Trump, and not policy, while focusing almost entirely on the swing state voters. I don't know if that will work for Sanders, as Medicare for All might dominate in his campaign.
FYI, I'm voting for any Democrat regardless of the candidate.
Yay, another voice of someone thinking these things through beyond the headlines.![]()
He continued Monday to portray himself as a political outsider, even though he has spent more than $200 million of his own money on national campaign organizations and state ballot measures over the past decade. He said that a decade of taking on corporations from outside the system shows that “I have 10 years of proving it. Ten years of beating corporations at the ballot box.”
He said his No. 1 issue is removing the corrupting influence of money in politics. “Corporations don’t have hearts. Or souls. Or futures,” Steyer said in his campaign launch video.
From treating beef farming as a part of a climate change solution to arguing against private land ownership and FDIC insurance for the biggest banks, Beneficial State Bank CEO Kat Taylor has radical views on how to change the world....
Taylor, though less explicitly involved in politics, runs her bank, the ranch and her nonprofits in line with her political ideals. While both Taylor and Steyer are unabashed capitalists, there’s a political argument in the ways they run their businesses and nonprofits: Capitalism is broken, and has to change....
Around 2004 when John Kerry was not elected president, Tom and I just got this sense of dire need, like— we’ve got to drop everything and work on this full time. We ended up making significant investments in research stations, the ranch and the bank where we could take a systems approach to food and finance and try to get insights into what was wrong in those industries. We’ve also realized that we cannot remain conventionally invested. Nobody in society should be conventionally invested. We can’t give that prerogative to fossil fuels and private prisons and payday lending. Our first principle is do no harm and then do some good.
So? Gosh, sometimes I also skip whole pages.Yay, someone who read the entire thread before posting responses to everything in chronological order!
It wasn't.
Sanders has already lost a primary to Hillary.
Hillary lost a primary to Obama.
Bill Clinton and Barack Obama had never been in primaries before the primaries they won and they both won their elections. Two terms.
I'm eyeballing the last 10 or so primaries and their candidates so maybe I missed one and I'll scrub the data to make 100% sure but it looks like if you lose a primary and they try to run you again... you don't generally win.
Voters don't get hard ons for a party's second choice. Bernie's lost a primary to the person who lost a primary and then just lost.
... nobody ever seems to win on their second or third.
Biden's 2020 presidential campaign is his third attempt to seek election for president of the United States.[14] His first campaign was made in the 1988 Democratic Party primaries where he was initially considered one of the potentially strongest candidates. However, newspapers revealed plagiarism by Biden in law school records and in speeches, a scandal which led to his withdrawal from the race in September 1987.[15]
He made the second attempt during the 2008 Democratic Party primaries, where he focused on his plan to achieve political success in the Iraq War through a system of federalization. Like his first presidential bid, Biden failed to garner endorsements and support. He withdrew from the race after his poor performance in the Iowa caucus in January 3, 2008. He was eventually chosen by Barack Obama as his running mate and won the general election as vice president of the United States, being sworn in on January 20, 2009.
No.
Prove to me that Sanders will do better then Biden in the general election to the exact same standards using equally valid datasource as you expect me to prove the alternative.
There is no default here that gets to make the "Burden of Proof" argument and rest on its laurels.
"Sanders is more popular with Democrats" is not proof of anything.
And Sanders just inched ahead of Biden in the last week or so. He's been second or even third since they started polling. Funny how the polls don't matter until the brief moment when your guy is in the lead.
Again Sanders have been second or third (often distantly) until like a week or so ago.
You ignored the polls until your boy got in the lead and now want to treat them as Holy Writ.
You're picking and choosing data.
Or let me put it this way. If Sanders drops back below Biden next week are you gonna change your mind or will the polls magically not count anymore?
Both the leader contenders might be badly flawed.
Trust the Dems to snatch defeat from the jaws of Victory.