Huh? They have ALWAYS been that way. Doesn't mean some Democrat voters are also low-info sometimes. Why do you think it can't be one and the other?The liberals around here haven't adjusted to the fact that largely due to Trump, the roles have reversed and right now in the US, the low-information voters tend to be Republicans. To be honest, I'm having a tough time adjusting to it myself.
I think Crist should be seen as a poster boy for centrist politics, seeing as he can't even make up his own mind whose side he's on, and his failure speaks for itself.
It's a fine strategy in theory, I get it: so long as you're ever-so-slightly left of whatever Klan rally the GOP is raiding for candidates these days you should be able to grab all the left votes, all the center votes, and a fair number of non-deplorable right votes too. Against a fascist thug like DeSantis it should have been a landslide, if it worked that way. But it don't. Enough Democrats are never going to vote for a Republican, even one pretending to be a Democrat, even when the alternative is DeSantis, and enough Republicans are never going to vote for a Democrat, even one secretly Republican, even when the alternative is DeSantis, that the numbers falter. Hell I'd put money on there being more voters turned off just by Crist's cowardly fecklessness than turned on by DeSantis's arrogant authoritarianism. Running nearly-Republicans against actual-Republicans is a failing strategy no matter how many times it fails and the best you can think of is "oh so you think you could have done better?!"
What exactly that means for the party in terms of where its ideological preferences for candidates should be, I don't think we have enough data to say. Obviously I'd argue it'd be better for America in the long run if it was pushed as far left as possible to try and rebuild the social safety nets the GOP seems so eager to tear down, but all we have here is evidence that where we are right now is NOT where we need to be.
The liberals around here haven't adjusted to the fact that largely due to Trump, the roles have reversed and right now in the US, the low-information voters tend to be Republicans. To be honest, I'm having a tough time adjusting to it myself.
I regard DeSantis as another shameless buffoon. He's done three things that have caught my eye recently though. He's put in work to protect the environment and natural resources of Florida, raised minimum teacher pay, and backed candidates not aligned with Trump. These are things the rightwing base do not normally crusade for. And IMO they provide an opening for liberals and Never-Trumpers to ingratiate themselves with the DeSantis coalition as it may turn out to be.
I sort of get the point of the OP, but "should we start considering backing" seems a bit excessive. To be not as bad as Trump requires little virtue.
Just to get the man over the initial ********* Trump will throw at him. It could also possibly hurt DeSantis to be pictured shaking hands with Radical Leftists and RINOs.
If something is retruthed does that make it truthier?
**** DeSantis and anyone else peddling the lie that grade school textbooks are teaching critical race theory.
Critical race theory? DeSantis isn't trying to eliminate critical race theory, he's targeting education. He went after a MATH book, for God's sake. He will keep "cracking down" until there are no words teachers can safely say in a classroom.
Top Florida officials have been holding talks with the founder and chief executive of an education testing company that backers have said is centered on the "great classical and Christian tradition," according to The Miami Herald.
The potential of such a test being used in Florida has come into closer view as Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis has tussled with the College Board in recent weeks over the curriculum of its pilot Advanced Placement (AP) African American Studies course, with the governor on Tuesday floating the idea that the state could pull its support for the rigorous, college-level AP courses.
The Classic Learning Test, which is billed by Classic Learning Initiatives as being "steeped in content that is intellectually richer and more rigorous than other standardized tests and college entrance exams," is largely utilized in private schools and home-school environments . . .
DeSantis has not specifically mentioned the Classic Learning Test as one of the sources he had in mind as a SAT alternative, but he stated that he'd like to look at "other vendors."
Florida Department of Education Senior Chancellor Henry Mack on Thursday expressed interest in using the Classic Learning Test.
"Not only do we need to build anew by returning to the foundations of our democracy, but CLT also offers the opportunity for all our colleges & universities to rightsize their priorities," he said on Twitter.
Huh? They have ALWAYS been that way. Doesn't mean some Democrat voters are also low-info sometimes. Why do you think it can't be one and the other?
We don't need all that evil science and math!
De Santis is destorying the FLorida education system.
Just visited that sito that test and it big thing is that SAT and ACT are evil and seclurists.
There used to be a pretty strong positive correlation between the level of education a person had and their likelihood of voting Republican. High school dropouts voted for the Democrats in strong numbers, high school grads in less strong numbers, while those with a college degree tended to go for the Republican. At the advanced degree level things did swing back to the Democrats, so if you want to raise the argument that the very highest and very lowest information voters were Dems, feel free.
My point is that since Trump, things have changed. High school dropouts are now reliable GOP voters and college grads have shifted over to the Democrats. I see no alternative to believing that now, in fact the low-information voters are more likely to be Republicans. As a partisan you may wish that was always the case, but remember the Democrats have always billed themselves as the party of the working man (well, until they substituted working family).
No I'm not a partisan. Far from it. See if you can figure out why...There used to be a pretty strong positive correlation between the level of education a person had and their likelihood of voting Republican. High school dropouts voted for the Democrats in strong numbers, high school grads in less strong numbers, while those with a college degree tended to go for the Republican. At the advanced degree level things did swing back to the Democrats, so if you want to raise the argument that the very highest and very lowest information voters were Dems, feel free.
My point is that since Trump, things have changed. High school dropouts are now reliable GOP voters and college grads have shifted over to the Democrats. I see no alternative to believing that now, in fact the low-information voters are more likely to be Republicans. As a partisan you may wish that was always the case, but remember the Democrats have always billed themselves as the party of the working man (well, until they substituted working family).
The liberals around here haven't adjusted to the fact that largely due to Trump, the roles have reversed and right now in the US, the low-information voters tend to be Republicans. To be honest, I'm having a tough time adjusting to it myself.
Retruthing something is akin to retweeting it.
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No I'm not a partisan. Far from it. See if you can figure out why...
And the stats seems to suggest that your categorizing party affiliation by education level is incorrect. It's marginally more likely that lower-educated people are Republicans, but VERY much more likely that rural people are Republicans especially the lower educated. But the biggest differentiators are religion, and the combination of ethnicity and education.
Here's the 2018/18 stats: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1dh8w8Osyc7ZfRC2EsgehTVTV1DOolhFxGgyI_0RfFxM/edit#gid=0
See lines 103-109, and 146-148.
Data from the Pew Research Center show that, increasingly, different people are populating the two major political parties — with Republicans and Democrats moving in sharply different directions among college-educated voters.
At the beginning of this century, Republicans held an 11-point edge on party affiliation among college-educated voters.By the time Barack Obama was president, the figures had flipped to become a 4-point edge for the Democrats. And as President Donald Trump’s term was winding down, the numbers had come full-circle and the Democrats had a 13-point edge among college-educated voters on party affiliation.
Deliberately so. That was at the end of the Obama presidency. The stats show that the difference even then is not actually due to education but ethnicity & geography, and religion.Your stats are from 2016-2018.
Or it could be the numbers of voters attaining college degrees has changed and where they live and who they are, not their political affiliation changing?But Brainster is correct that Republicans used to hold quite the large edge on voters with college degrees, but that has changed: