thaiboxerken
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2001
- Messages
- 34,537
So Cruz 2020?
I think Cruz lost that chance when he decided to support Trump after all. GOP'es will see him as weak and pathetic, which he is.
So Cruz 2020?
I hope so! What I think is that they want someone that is about as extreme in policy, but not in words. Trump's problem is that he doesn't know how to use the dog-whistle. They will find someone less abrasive but just as dangerous.
I think Cruz lost that chance when he decided to support Trump after all. GOP'es will see him as weak and pathetic, which he is.
The problem is that the abrasive rallies the core and will win primaries.
The Republicans have situated their party so that they simply can't nominate a viable candidate. If they had nominated Kasich, we'd be talking about Hillary going off into the sunset.
A fiscally conservative, socially liberal-leaning with a real health care plan party could dominate this country for years. If a bunch of existing politicians from both parties got together and formed such a new party, they'd be in control within two election cycles. It would marginalize the far right and the far left to secondary parties. While the thought of a single party dominating is a bit scary, the age of each party having a conservative and liberal wing are long gone.
Isn't Hillary the first two and isn't the major hurdle to the third the complete intransigence of the GOP ?
If such a pitiful halfway house as Romney/Obama care runs into such headwinds with both the GOP and the U.S. public then what chance would a "proper" single payer system have ? IMO the fundamental problem w.r.t. healthcare in the U.S. is that the public's demand for affordable healthcare and insurance for themselves is at odds with their insistence that they shouldn't have to "subsidise" others' access to the same thing.![]()
I would argue that gerrymandering is exactly what put the GOP in this mess: candidates with no need for support from the leadership and a voting block that is more and more unlike the demographic of the population at large.
If the GOP wants to reform it needs to have independent commissions redistrict their states - it's the only way to marginalize the influence of the Alt-right.
There are very good reasons why the GOP leadership can consider Trump an outliner:
Democrats started with an incredible handicap: 8 years of a strongly polarizing president, followed by a candidate with a lot of baggage: it is incredibly rare in US politics for a party to hold the White House for more than 8 years, even more so for Democrats. And most voters, after having elected a member of one disenfranchised group (and thus ended racial discrimination forever, right?) are in no hurry to break another glass ceiling by electing a women...
The GOP had every right to believe that this year their candidate would win.
If in 4 years they manage to present a clear favourite to their constituents they will probably get the vote, unless Clinton turns out to be doing a great job (what are the chances of the Republicans letting her do that?)
"Here's the thing: Trump didn't come out of nowhere now," Obama said Thursday. "For years, Republican politicians and far-right media outlets have been pumping out all kinds of toxic, crazy stuff."
Obama went through a litany of conspiracy theories that have been pervasive throughout his presidency. The movement doubting his birthplace. Fears he wanted to "steal everybody's guns." The idea he wanted to "declare martial law."
"I say all this," the president said, "because Donald Trump didn't start all this. Like he usually does, he just slapped his name on it, took credit for it, and promoted the heck out of it."
The president had a point. Trump's rise was no accident; rather, it was a natural outgrowth of a growing and influential faction of conservative media that for years fed the Republican base a steady diet of fringe theories masqueraded as news.
And Republicans allowed it to happen, as Obama noted.
A fiscally conservative, socially liberal-leaning with a real health care plan party could dominate this country for years. If a bunch of existing politicians from both parties got together and formed such a new party, they'd be in control within two election cycles. It would marginalize the far right and the far left to secondary parties. While the thought of a single party dominating is a bit scary, the age of each party having a conservative and liberal wing are long gone.
That'd be Socialists by European standards.I'm shocked to discover the US has a far left.
More likely Peter ThielSo Cruz 2020?
More likely Peter Thiel
Trump does not care, hence his followers do not either. Besides, the only ones who really care any more are hard-core Evangelicals.And now that I think about it, what the heck has happened to gay rights as in issue in this campaign? Two years ago, I'd have expected it to be number one.