US Politics Mega-thread - Page 4048
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JimmiC
Canada22817 Posts
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ChristianS
United States3156 Posts
On August 27 2023 08:37 Introvert wrote: Hardly "copium" I've never maintained DeSantis was likely to win and have repeatedly said I don't know if his strategy will work. But I do know from watching other people try to take on Trump (not just in a primary but within the party generally) that the other ways that have been tried don't work. Kemp ran, so far as I could tell, by ignoring Trump for the most part but obviously you can't do that when running against him directly. 2016 showed us that. It just seems to me that a lot of the people here really don't understand Republican politics and get everything they from their own side and filter that through their own predilections. Which is fine and understandable if you aren't a member of the GOP, but I'm pushing back on the idea that the GOP voters aren't flocking to him because they somehow decided they don't like him. That simply isn't supported by what we see. I mean, to me the DeSantis strategy reminds me a lot of when I was seeing articles in 2016 claiming Ben Carson had cracked the code of how to run against Trump, which was basically a formula of averting your gaze somewhat while he slanders you and then when it’s your turn to speak just saying “well, anyway, maybe consider voting for me?” The idea, I guess, being that you could make Trump look petty without dirtying yourself if you just don’t engage him. Except now it’s 2023, and it’s essentially indisputable party canon that Trump was an outstanding president (maybe the best we’ve had, at least in living memory!), and that it’s criminal he didn’t win re-election (and maybe, literally, that criminals stole the election from him). By “indisputable” I of course mean that anybody in the party that *did* dispute those things was run out of town on a rail (or, if that wasn’t feasible, at least marginalized and loudly despised by most of the party). The Carson strategy didn’t work then, you really think it’s gonna work now, when all these guys are already on record loudly endorsing that canon? And that’s not even DeSantis’s problem, his problem is that the more non-Floridans see of him, the less they like him. I bet if you charted his poll numbers alongside “% of Americans that know what his voice sounds like” you’d see a similar curve. I mean, Florida’s a pretty different animal, and anyway it’s not unusual that someone looks promising in the minor leagues but can’t pull it together once they hit the big time, you know? Let alone going against Mister Big League himself. | ||
Introvert
United States4564 Posts
On August 27 2023 10:04 ChristianS wrote: I mean, to me the DeSantis strategy reminds me a lot of when I was seeing articles in 2016 claiming Ben Carson had cracked the code of how to run against Trump, which was basically a formula of averting your gaze somewhat while he slanders you and then when it’s your turn to speak just saying “well, anyway, maybe consider voting for me?” The idea, I guess, being that you could make Trump look petty without dirtying yourself if you just don’t engage him. Except now it’s 2023, and it’s essentially indisputable party canon that Trump was an outstanding president (maybe the best we’ve had, at least in living memory!), and that it’s criminal he didn’t win re-election (and maybe, literally, that criminals stole the election from him). By “indisputable” I of course mean that anybody in the party that *did* dispute those things was run out of town on a rail (or, if that wasn’t feasible, at least marginalized and loudly despised by most of the party). The Carson strategy didn’t work then, you really think it’s gonna work now, when all these guys are already on record loudly endorsing that canon? And that’s not even DeSantis’s problem, his problem is that the more non-Floridans see of him, the less they like him. I bet if you charted his poll numbers alongside “% of Americans that know what his voice sounds like” you’d see a similar curve. I mean, Florida’s a pretty different animal, and anyway it’s not unusual that someone looks promising in the minor leagues but can’t pull it together once they hit the big time, you know? Let alone going against Mister Big League himself. DeSantis has criticized Trump on terms Reps can accept and has managed to maintain his favorablility with GOP voters. He also has a record of his to run on, which is an implicit (somwtimes made explicit) criticism of Trump. Which also directly contradicts your last point, besides the fact that thr third largest state and largest swing state is pretty close to the major leagues. I don't know how many times I'm going to say the same thing but Republican voters, the one who will be voting, don't like DeSantis any less than they did before, despite his criticism of Trump (mostly about Covid) and despite Trump's tantrums and kinda lame nicknames for him. Maybe, just maybe, there's more going on here. Especially when you consider that his high polling point existed before he even announced and started to dip also before he announced. | ||
ChristianS
United States3156 Posts
On August 27 2023 10:52 Introvert wrote: DeSantis has criticized Trump on terms Reps can accept and has managed to maintain his favorablility with GOP voters. He also has a record of his to run on, which is an implicit (somwtimes made explicit) criticism of Trump. Which also directly contradicts your last point, besides the fact that thr third largest state and largest swing state is pretty close to the major leagues. I don't know how many times I'm going to say the same thing but Republican voters, the one who will be voting, don't like DeSantis any less than they did before, despite his criticism of Trump (mostly about Covid) and despite Trump's tantrums and kinda lame nicknames for him. Maybe, just maybe, there's more going on here. Especially when you consider that his high polling point existed before he even announced and started to dip also before he announced. Idk, to me if you want to know who people will support for president, you should ask them “who do you support for president,” not “how favorably do you feel about these people.” I bet Taylor Swift is super high on favorables, for instance. Similarly if somebody’s poll numbers were higher before they announced, that seems like a really bullish indicator to me. As soon as you started campaigning they stopped wanting you to be president? Yikes. Simplest explanation to me, tell me where it fails: after a disappointing midterm, Republicans started looking at their bench and trying to figure out who might have a path forward. DeSantis did well, so for a bit people thought he was a good candidate. But as they learned more about his platform (basically the same too-online culture war bullshit that did so poorly in the midterm outside Florida and New York) and saw him campaign (the awkward clips on Twitter can be overstated, but dude, the guy doesn’t seem like a natural baby-kisser) they started to think “uh, maybe not.” Especially as Trump announced his candidacy and started dominating news cycles again. Anyway, maybe we’re missing the forest for the trees here. Why does this faction consider fairly mild criticism of Trump treasonous (often literally)? It’s not an 11th commandment thing, they love when Trump calls other Republicans pedophiles or whatever. If these people really do think Trump is the best president in living memory and his re-election was literally stolen, how are they possibly going to be swayed by “we need to appeal better to independents”? | ||
WombaT
Northern Ireland22456 Posts
On August 27 2023 08:37 Introvert wrote: Hardly "copium" I've never maintained DeSantis was likely to win and have repeatedly said I don't know if his strategy will work. But I do know from watching other people try to take on Trump (not just in a primary but within the party generally) that the other ways that have been tried don't work. Kemp ran, so far as I could tell, by ignoring Trump for the most part but obviously you can't do that when running against him directly. 2016 showed us that. It just seems to me that a lot of the people here really don't understand Republican politics and get everything they from their own side and filter that through their own predilections. Which is fine and understandable if you aren't a member of the GOP, but I'm pushing back on the idea that the GOP voters aren't flocking to him because they somehow decided they don't like him. That simply isn't supported by what we see. What’s to get? Trump saying he could shoot someone in broad daylight on 5th Avenue and not lose voters is probably the truest statement that’s ever emerged from his vocal chords. | ||
Introvert
United States4564 Posts
On August 27 2023 11:13 ChristianS wrote: Idk, to me if you want to know who people will support for president, you should ask them “who do you support for president,” not “how favorably do you feel about these people.” I bet Taylor Swift is super high on favorables, for instance. Similarly if somebody’s poll numbers were higher before they announced, that seems like a really bullish indicator to me. As soon as you started campaigning they stopped wanting you to be president? Yikes. Simplest explanation to me, tell me where it fails: after a disappointing midterm, Republicans started looking at their bench and trying to figure out who might have a path forward. DeSantis did well, so for a bit people thought he was a good candidate. But as they learned more about his platform (basically the same too-online culture war bullshit that did so poorly in the midterm outside Florida and New York) and saw him campaign (the awkward clips on Twitter can be overstated, but dude, the guy doesn’t seem like a natural baby-kisser) they started to think “uh, maybe not.” Especially as Trump announced his candidacy and started dominating news cycles again. Anyway, maybe we’re missing the forest for the trees here. Why does this faction consider fairly mild criticism of Trump treasonous (often literally)? It’s not an 11th commandment thing, they love when Trump calls other Republicans pedophiles or whatever. If these people really do think Trump is the best president in living memory and his re-election was literally stolen, how are they possibly going to be swayed by “we need to appeal better to independents”? Obviously favorablility is not the same as support for president but it seems logical that a decline in poll numbers would correspond to a decline in favorablility if somehow your average GOP voter decided to switch support. DeSantis had a few months of post election bump and went back down, all before he started crisscrossing the country. Edit: I guess I just don't see why to view his bump after November as some sort of strong support that he had to lose. I am asking people who are going to say things like this to put themselves in the shoes of a Republican. I have solid circumstantial evidence for what I've said pointing to polling data, you are repeating the thought of people who don't like DeSantis already and trying to explain it. Re: electability. Polls say many Republicans think Trump has the best chance in November 2024, and there are some Trump supporters who don't care even if he isn't. That's part of what DeSantis has to deal with. Ad for your last sentence, it wouldn't be framed that way obviously. You were around in 2020, remember how Dem leaders basically willed Biden to victory? They just kept saying "we have to beat Trump and Biden is the one who can." I just think that saying "oh DeSantis was at 30+ for a few months before announcing and now he's not, he clearly sucks!" is backwards reasoning. People who came of age politically in the Obama wra have a skewed view of political talent, he was, thankfully, a once in a generation or more demagogue, and Trump has been a part of American culture for decades. Meanwhile, you don't win Florida by 20 while Republicans every else are underperforming being a weirdo. And you can't hand-wave that away with post facto reasoning. Florida hasn't become more red by random accident. You of course can have your opinion, but I think when you look at when all this happened thr alternative explanation makes sense. Might be wrong! But not unreasonable. Ans RDS is more likely than not to lose! But not because people turned on him, because they haven't. On August 27 2023 12:16 WombaT wrote: What’s to get? Trump saying he could shoot someone in broad daylight on 5th Avenue and not lose voters is probably the truest statement that’s ever emerged from his vocal chords. There is some truth in that but also it fits in nicely with my point. The task is to take votes from the former president very popular with his own party. It's a hard task. | ||
ChristianS
United States3156 Posts
Nate Silver wrote an analysis on this a little while ago. TLDR: DeSantis has tended to get pretty replacement-level Republican vote totals, with the exception of 2022 where he outperformed by 9-10 points. But there’s little evidence in current polling that whatever that was based on is continuing to appeal nationally. Simplest explanation might be that Florida voters liked his Covid policies, which Is good for him, but unlikely to carry into a national contest very well. Of course, you don’t have to put much stock in Nate Silver’s opinion. I don’t necessarily, not as a rule, but in this case I think the case is pretty clear-cut. There’s just no reason to think voters actually want this guy to be president, and it’s getting harder and harder to imagine why that would change. | ||
Liquid`Drone
Norway28443 Posts
*note that I'm not definitely calling a Trump/Biden election for Biden, as people don't like him either, and it's definitely true that Democrats also have to balance the difficult task of appealing to both the progressive and the centrist side. (This balancing is basically best executed by running against Trump.) | ||
Introvert
United States4564 Posts
On August 27 2023 13:30 ChristianS wrote: Have you seen Florida politicians? I think being a weirdo is the only way you win in Florida. Nothing against weirdos, mind you, but again, Florida is a pretty different animal to the rest of the country, and that’s pretty well-known. Nate Silver wrote an analysis on this a little while ago. TLDR: DeSantis has tended to get pretty replacement-level Republican vote totals, with the exception of 2022 where he outperformed by 9-10 points. But there’s little evidence in current polling that whatever that was based on is continuing to appeal nationally. Simplest explanation might be that Florida voters liked his Covid policies, which Is good for him, but unlikely to carry into a national contest very well. Of course, you don’t have to put much stock in Nate Silver’s opinion. I don’t necessarily, not as a rule, but in this case I think the case is pretty clear-cut. There’s just no reason to think voters actually want this guy to be president, and it’s getting harder and harder to imagine why that would change. To avoid filling the thread with the same thing over and over I'll try to be short. "Have you seen Florida politicians?" I've seen that the last GOP governors who have run and won the state have been remarkably not weird. Just like the "well DeSantis is unlikeable" you are resorting to a handwaving argument or as we might say "vibes." However, your vibes are notably not in tune with that of a GOP electorate and thus should be considered with that in mind. I read the Silver piece already (and think not being at 538 anymore has done him good, he's clearly more reasonable than the people who worked/work there). I think three house races where RDS was either a bit above or a bit below the metric he chose to evaluate is only mildly interesting, which he kind of acknowledges There’s not much evidence that DeSantis has that sort of talent — other than 2022. Sure, 2022 is a pretty big other than — other than that, Mrs. Lincoln — and political reputations have been made on less. But with every week that his polling numbers stagnate, the 19-point win looks like more of an outlier. ... 1 And by the way, it’s possible that Florida is becoming redder in part because of DeSantis. There was a lot of migration there during the COVID pandemic, perhaps motivated in part by people who were tired of strict COVID regulations in blue states. And I am saying that from a Republican perspective these are huge plusses, and again we are evaluating the state of the race in a Republican primary. These things he did to win by 20 after winning in 2018 by 0.1% (and won independents by double digits in 2022). A lot of his success was certainly because of COVID, and it is a boon to him and is part of "political talent" i.e. following through on the right decision instead of folding and making his case to the electorate. Your final sentence, while not phrased the way I would, is not anything objectionable as obviously Trump is currently leading. I was originally asked why I thought RDS had "fallen so far" or something like that and I have been trying to answer that question, not say that he's secretly winning or is going to win. I don't know, I just hope he will and I think his strategy is different but perhaps worth trying. Sucking up to Trump won't work, going Liz Cheney won't work, so you have to try a third way, which also might not work! it just seems to me that Dems are not the ones to listen to when evaluating someone, since most dems have thought he was basically "smart Trump" and hated him before they even knew him. I think most lefties who level these charges against DeSantis are backfilling their own feelings when trying to figure out why he hasn't caught on among Republicans. edit: was not as short as I thought lol edit2: I'll throw you a bone and say I do think RDS said "woke" too much, and notably he didn't say the word once in the debate. But I don't know how significant something like that is. obviously as you run you learn what people are interested in hearing about and who in the party cares about what. But that's normal politicking and moreover RDS is a smart, studious guy so I think he will always been fine-tuning and tweaking his messaging while talking about his record. | ||
Introvert
United States4564 Posts
On August 27 2023 14:29 Liquid`Drone wrote: Honestly I think if you are a DeSantis supporter I with a think you should wish for a Trump - Biden election with the ideal outcome being Trump losing and being solidified as a loser, Biden spending 4 more years becoming older and more unpopular (which will certainly hurt the next Dem candidate too), so he can run from a much better spot in 2028. This election is tainted from a republican point of view - either you're Trump/with Trump meaning democrats fucking hate you and independents are sick of you and sane republicans have to choose between plague and cholera, or you're against Trump meaning a majority of republicans think you're a traitor to the cause & country. *note that I'm not definitely calling a Trump/Biden election for Biden, as people don't like him either, and it's definitely true that Democrats also have to balance the difficult task of appealing to both the progressive and the centrist side. (This balancing is basically best executed by running against Trump.) I think this is akin to the much maligned "5-d chess" arguments. Biden is weak now and if RDS wins the primary that will indicate he has the support of most of the party. It's hard to believe in today's polarized climate that all the hot air from Trump guys about not voting for anyone else is actually realistic. Voters come home. Contest every presidential election, and try to put up someone besides the least-liked presidential candidate in America. Seems like that's obviously smarter than having Trump run and most likely lose again. At least for me, who actually cares about what happens and what policies are implemented. I'm not DeSantis or bust, I'm not in it to make sure "my guy" becomes president one day. If RDS loses the nomination in 2024 and isn't so good in 2028, so be it. Find someone who can win and do a good job. I want good, conservative government, not a particular politician as president (except insofar as they are the best person for the job). | ||
Liquid`Drone
Norway28443 Posts
I agree that Republican voters would vote for DeSantis if he wins the republican primary, assuming he doesn't throw Trump under the bus, in which case he definitely loses a bunch of Trumpists, a lot of those people are hardly conservative and have no real alignment with the republican party in the first place. But if you don't distance yourself from Trump, you will drive up democrat turnout too. I think January 6 is going to be a much bigger topic in the presidential election than it is in the republican primary and while there might be a way to navigate that question in the republican primary I don't think there is a way in the presidential election, and if DeSantis is the guy most likely to further the conservative agenda then losing this presidential election would mean you have to find a new guy for 2028. I get your point, though. | ||
WombaT
Northern Ireland22456 Posts
On August 27 2023 15:17 Liquid`Drone wrote: I'm actually largely on board with that and in principle I'd agree entirely. But I think there are two other additional truths - American politicians normally seem to get 1 shot to run for president and popular+competent politicians seem pretty rare (at least on a national level). I agree that Republican voters would vote for DeSantis if he wins the republican primary, assuming he doesn't throw Trump under the bus, in which case he definitely loses a bunch of Trumpists, a lot of those people are hardly conservative and have no real alignment with the republican party in the first place. But if you don't distance yourself from Trump, you will drive up democrat turnout too. I think January 6 is going to be a much bigger topic in the presidential election than it is in the republican primary and while there might be a way to navigate that question in the republican primary I don't think there is a way in the presidential election, and if DeSantis is the guy most likely to further the conservative agenda then losing this presidential election would mean you have to find a new guy for 2028. I get your point, though. Indeed, so much can happen in 4 years and it feels like waiting is a dangerous game if you fervently wish to be President. I mean if I time travelled back to 2012 and told prospective candidates who were holding out for 2016 or beyond that Donald Trump would become President and the GOP would be reformed as a borderline cult of personality where loyalty to that individual and where they’d shifted the party trumped (pun intended) other considerations, and if they want in they need to run now. I don’t think they’d believe me, even if I otherwise irrefutably demonstrated evidence of my time-travelling being legit | ||
JimmiC
Canada22817 Posts
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Gorsameth
Netherlands21113 Posts
On August 28 2023 00:02 JimmiC wrote: I think he will quickly pass into irrelevancy once he is in jail/house arrest and loses contact to his cultist followers.I’d trump loses are we sure he won’t be again in 2028? It’s not like he’s going to admit defeat or pass the torch. | ||
Acrofales
Spain17654 Posts
On August 28 2023 00:02 JimmiC wrote: I’d trump loses are we sure he won’t be again in 2028? It’s not like he’s going to admit defeat or pass the torch. Well, if the evidence is as irrefutable as it seems on either of the mishandling of classified documents or the conspiracy to commit election fraud cases, he'll be in jail in 2028. While there's nothing forbidding him from running, it sure will be a lot harder to get any kind of publicity going. | ||
ChristianS
United States3156 Posts
On August 27 2023 14:42 Introvert wrote: To avoid filling the thread with the same thing over and over I'll try to be short. "Have you seen Florida politicians?" I've seen that the last GOP governors who have run and won the state have been remarkably not weird. Just like the "well DeSantis is unlikeable" you are resorting to a handwaving argument or as we might say "vibes." However, your vibes are notably not in tune with that of a GOP electorate and thus should be considered with that in mind. I read the Silver piece already (and think not being at 538 anymore has done him good, he's clearly more reasonable than the people who worked/work there). I think three house races where RDS was either a bit above or a bit below the metric he chose to evaluate is only mildly interesting, which he kind of acknowledges And I am saying that from a Republican perspective these are huge plusses, and again we are evaluating the state of the race in a Republican primary. These things he did to win by 20 after winning in 2018 by 0.1% (and won independents by double digits in 2022). A lot of his success was certainly because of COVID, and it is a boon to him and is part of "political talent" i.e. following through on the right decision instead of folding and making his case to the electorate. Your final sentence, while not phrased the way I would, is not anything objectionable as obviously Trump is currently leading. I was originally asked why I thought RDS had "fallen so far" or something like that and I have been trying to answer that question, not say that he's secretly winning or is going to win. I don't know, I just hope he will and I think his strategy is different but perhaps worth trying. Sucking up to Trump won't work, going Liz Cheney won't work, so you have to try a third way, which also might not work! it just seems to me that Dems are not the ones to listen to when evaluating someone, since most dems have thought he was basically "smart Trump" and hated him before they even knew him. I think most lefties who level these charges against DeSantis are backfilling their own feelings when trying to figure out why he hasn't caught on among Republicans. edit: was not as short as I thought lol edit2: I'll throw you a bone and say I do think RDS said "woke" too much, and notably he didn't say the word once in the debate. But I don't know how significant something like that is. obviously as you run you learn what people are interested in hearing about and who in the party cares about what. But that's normal politicking and moreover RDS is a smart, studious guy so I think he will always been fine-tuning and tweaking his messaging while talking about his record. Yeah, the chain is getting a little unwieldy. One thing I think is worth addressing specifically: Political migration (that is, people moving to another polity specifically to live under the policies there) has had a lot of right-wing narratives around it in the last few years. This is a thing that DeSantis gets celebrated for on the right, and "right-wingers moving to Florida because of DeSantis" has certainly happened. Personally I'm always skeptical that the demographics on that kind of thing wind up all that significant – a lot of people move to and from a lot of places, usually for work or family, and I generally doubt ideology is moving the percentages that much. Maybe DeSantis is an exception; for one thing, if a group of people feelthat strongly about his Covid policy, work is probably not unrelated. But it also just doesn't seem like much cause for celebration, for the country as a whole or for Republicans specifically. Historically, the word "émigré" does not generally presage a period of peace and prosperity. If the phenomenon was "Democrats fleeing the country and renouncing citizenship" that would obviously have some upside for Republicans electorally, but plasmidghost excepted, that doesn't seem to be a big phenomenon. Instead the alleged phenomenon is "a Republican governor in Florida convincing Republican voters to move to Florida (and maybe convincing Dems to leave). Maybe my point's already obvious but I'll try to be explicit anyway: if you have a guy who won his (allegedly "swing") state by 19 points in a year when the rest of his party underperformed, it's natural to think "well let's look at this guy's formula and try to copy it elsewhere." But if his formula relies heavily on "convincing Republicans to leave other places and move to his constituency" that's not really scalable, is it? How exactly is that supposed to help in a national election? In fact, if the numbers really were that significant, isn't that probably part of *why* the party underperformed elsewhere? Like I said, I'm skeptical of political migration narratives generally, and to the extent there wasa meaningful one here it seems like it might have been Covid-specific. I think Florida was already not really a swing state in 2018, so maybe DeSantis accelerated that process but for Democrats, the shortest path to the White House hasn't run through Florida or Ohio in like a decade. But to the extent political migration is a phenomenon, that's not good news for just about anyone. | ||
farvacola
United States18805 Posts
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DarkPlasmaBall
United States43255 Posts
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JimmiC
Canada22817 Posts
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Gorsameth
Netherlands21113 Posts
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