Pre-election political observations and images
How important are endorsements? I'll offer myself as one data point. I always know enough about the "big" races (for president, Congress, and governor) to know which candidate I prefer, but for lesser races I often don't, and researching all of them would be an onerous task. In such cases, I do look at endorsements. If a candidate is endorsed by a bunch of labor unions, for example, I can safely assume that candidate is the one to vote for.
I've been glad to see that there's very little concern being expressed about what would once have been a serious question -- whether the country is ready for a woman president. In a sense, the question was answered in 2016, when Hillary Clinton won the popular vote even though the Electoral College thwarted the will of the people. Beyond that, female leadership is no longer a rarity among democracies. Italy, Mexico, and Thailand have women leaders right now. Germany and Taiwan did until recently. The UK elected Margaret Thatcher in 1979 and Israel elected Golda Meir in 1969. One might ask why the US is taking so long.
All week the racist insults aired at Trump's Madison Square Garden rally have been the talk of the left-wing internet. Personally, I doubt this event will move the needle much in the overall election, though it may have some marginal impact by motivating Puerto Rican voters (especially in Pennsylvania and Florida, which have substantial Puerto Rican populations), particularly since several Puerto Rican celebrities have forcefully called attention to it. It might even slow down the trend of Republican gains among Hispanic voters, though US Hispanics are far from homogenous in ethnic consciousness. But the idea that it's an election game-changer strikes me as more of a blogosphere concept than a real-world one. Trump already has a long history of ethnic slurs, including slurs targeting Hispanics. Any needle-moving that such utterances could do, probably was baked in long ago. In this case, the offensive remarks weren't even delivered by Trump himself, and his campaign rushed to repudiate them.
However, I think the slurs at that rally may do the Republican party considerable harm in a more subtle way.
As noted above, early-voting patterns suggest that the Dobbs effect is indeed producing a "blue wave". However, the polls are still showing the race very close (despite this bearing no resemblance to the actual vote so far), and the media are still pushing a close-race narrative. If the actual result is a blue wave, with the Democrats overwhelmingly winning the presidency, Senate, and House as well as state races that were expected to be close, the right wing will suffer a profound shock. The dumbest and most delusional among them will start bleating about the election being stolen, rigged, etc, but there may not be very much of that -- there wasn't in 2022 when the poll-predicted red wave failed to materialize (probably also squelched by the Dobbs ruling). Most of them, including the leaders, will realize something went very wrong, and will focus on determining what that something was.
The religious hard-liners will be desperately trying to fend off the obvious answer -- that it was the party's attacks on abortion -- to avoid that issue being jettisoned as the ballot-box poison it in fact is. If the celebrating left is trumpeting Trump's racism as the game-changing factor (which many will -- leftists try to make everything about racism if they can find a remotely-plausible pretext for doing so), they'll seize upon that as a diversion -- it wasn't forced-birthism that sank the party, it was Tony Hinchcliffe. And a lot of the leaders will want to believe this, to avoid the agonizing internal conflicts which would result from throwing forced-birthism overboard. It may well become the accepted explanation for the unexpected loss. Thus the Republicans will suffer a major defeat and loss of power, and will not even gain the benefit of correctly understanding their weaknesses so they can correct them.
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Made by Pliny.
Do not repeat the mistake.
8 Comments:
Thank you, thank you for this. It steadied my nerves for the day. I hope all you predict comes true. I did all I could, even though I'm in a very blue state, I contributed $$$, wrote post cards, etc. I try to be positive, but it's difficult.
Today, as I was walking in my city (Boston), a man with a bullhorn was reciting the Lord's Prayer; and when he finished, he segued into politics saying this election was about godliness and that we all should know that the only choice is Trump.
When I hear
I can only keep hoping that Trump does not win this.
Shaw: I can understand the anxiety. But I hope we'll know for sure pretty soon after the election.
Sounds like the guy with the bullhorn was practicing his righteousness before other people in order to be seen by them, with a hefty dose of ordinary bullying mixed in. It's like blog trolling; people like that don't really expect to persuade anybody, they just want to annoy and harass and feel self-righteous.
It looks like your comment was cut off. I didn't delete anything.
Mary: Fairly sure he won't. We'll know soon enough.
I continue to be confident that Harris will win and Democrats will take over the do-nothing Republican Congress. And the chances of holding the Senate seem strong.
Re: Unions. I saw UAW president Shawn Fain say that his union has supported Harris from Day One (they poll their members), but since they've been educating the members about the differences between the candidates, support for Harris has increased by 20%.
The people closest to the campaign are being cautiously optimistic. David Plouffe (senior adviser, ran Obama's campaigns) tweeted yesterday: "It's helpful, from experience, to be closing a Presidential campaign with late deciding voters breaking by double digits to you and the remaining undecideds looking more friendly to you than your opponent. Close race, turnout and 4 days of hard work will be key. But good mo." [meaning momentum]
One of the most hopeful things is that the ground game to get out the vote is apparently huge and working beautifully. That's in contrast to Elon Musk's taking over Trump's ground game with no knowledge and failing miserably.
I sure hope we get a win big enough to make all the subsequent cries of fraud look even more ridiculous that in 2020. Trump has already started the Big Lie process, and Steve Bannon has said the only way the Democrats win is if they steal the election. But we have more folks anticipating this fraud and ready to counter it.
My favorite image is the takeoff of Norman Rockwell's painting, with Harris alongside the shadow of the young Black school girl. But lots of good ones. Thanks.
I feel the same way. Ann Selzer, historically one of the most accurate pollsters, now has Harris ahead in Iowa, which I don't think is a state Democrats thought they could win. One more sign of a possible blowout.
I've noticed that the candidates with the most union support are almost always Democrats.
Elongated Muskrat seems to screw up everything he touches. And he's continuing his streak with Trump's campaign.
Excellent post. And great comments too. I too find it interesting that union support usually goes to the democrats. Except for the teamsters. Google Teamsters support for Trump if you like. I'm ashamed of my former union.
I’m reading this after the Iowa poll thinking how immediately your assessment of the election was seemingly confirmed
‘YEP ‘ is what came to mind. I felt the exact same way of what you’re saying here
Selzer is like the nation’s premier pollster. When she’s the outlier, it usually means everyone else is off, and there seems to have been a concerted effort to moderate polls and suppress ‘surprise’ results so no one embarrasses themselves.
On top of that, there was a lot of junky MAGA ‘red wave’ polls flooding the zone to move the polling averages like 538.
That’s why all the polls look the same for so long. If they get something that they’re afraid to put out there they tweak the sample.
Polymarket appears to have just been an opinion leading propaganda exercise regarding the election
Seems indicative of a wider trend tho, this Selzer Iowa poll. I think Biden was down 18 points when he left the race there, she’s up three. Trump won the state by 9 1/2 and eight the last two elections.
Also bodes well for ‘Nebraska 2’ district
Women hate Trump, combined with the rest of the haters like us. I think he’s in real trouble now.
I felt good about this race for sometime, and found the polling suspicious. So many of the other indicators were positive for the Democrats, and I think it’s certain they’ll take the house too.
Fingers crossed
Seafury: Thanks! I had heard one or two unions had endorsed Trump, but when I spoke of looking at endorsements, I'm thinking of candidates for mayor and county commissioner and things like that. With the candidates for president, senator, etc, I already know enough about them not to need to look at endorsements to make a decision.
Reaganite: It seems like the Selzer poll has kind of given everyone in the media permission to start thinking outside the "close race" narrative. Certainly if there's such a shift in Iowa, there's probably a similar shift in other demographically-similar areas at least. If Trump won Iowa by nine points last time and Harris is now ahead by three, that's a twelve-point shift. You can imagine what a shift that large would mean if replicated across the rural Midwest, or across the country. But it would be perfectly in line with what I anticipated almost two weeks ago, based on the evidence of all those post-Dobbs elections.
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