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appal_jack

(3,813 posts)
Fri Mar 10, 2017, 10:46 PM Mar 2017

The Democratic Party seems to have no earthly idea why it is so damn unpopular

I think all of us here need to engage this problem eloquently articulated by Shaun King of the NY Daily News

The Democratic Party seems to have no earthly idea why it is so damn unpopular

A troubling new poll was just released showing that the Democratic Party is significantly less popular than both Donald Trump and Mike Pence. My gut tells me that Democrats will ignore this poll, or blame it on bad polling, and continue down the same course they are currently on: being funded by lobbyists and the 1%, straddling the fence or outright ignoring many of most inspirational issues of the time, and blaming Bernie Sanders for why they aren’t in power right now.



(snip)

When good people who are frustrated with the Democratic Party express their genuine concerns, I see them being told to shut up and unify. “Now is not the time for public complaints,” they are told. “We must all work together.” But what this apparently means to the people who are calling for unity is getting behind the corporate, suit and tie, lobbyist-driven agenda of the establishment. But let me break it to you – the establishment has almost no grassroots momentum. Virtually every progressive grassroots movement in America right now is fueled by people outside of the Democratic Party establishment and this is a huge reason why the party is so outrageously unpopular.

Huge grassroots movements, made up of millions and millions of people, are fueling the fight for a $15 minimum wage, fighting back against fossil fuels and the Dakota Access Pipeline, fighting to end fracking, fighting to remove lobbyist money from politics, fighting to end senseless wars and international violence, fighting for universal healthcare, fighting for the legalization of marijuana, fighting for free college tuition, fighting against systems of mass incarceration, and so much more. But mainstream Democrats aren’t really a central part of any of those battles, and, to be clear, each of those issues have deep networks, energized volunteers, and serious donors, but corporate Democrats virtually ignore them.



More good points and questions at the full opinion piece:

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/king-democratic-party-doesn-unpopular-article-1.2993659

Hopefully, this will be a more popular topic here at the "Occupy" corner of DU than in "General Orthodoxy," er, I mean "General Discussion."

Note: According to Wikipedia, the author, Shaun King, is "an American writer and civil rights activist. He is noted for his use of social media to promote religious, charitable, and social causes, including the Black Lives Matter movement. He is the senior justice writer for the New York Daily News, and a political commentator for The Young Turks. Previously, he was a contributing writer for Daily Kos." Read more about him at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shaun_King

We ignore these important collective cognitive dissonances at our peril.

-app
73 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
The Democratic Party seems to have no earthly idea why it is so damn unpopular (Original Post) appal_jack Mar 2017 OP
More purity test bullshit Charles Bukowski Mar 2017 #1
Yes, democracy is hanging by a thread. appal_jack Mar 2017 #20
Aren't the numbers supposed to add up to 1000? Maraya1969 Mar 2017 #70
Go. Away. we can do it Mar 2017 #2
Yes, that is what voters are, in fact, doing. appal_jack Mar 2017 #21
Not a thing leftofcool Mar 2017 #30
Try to tell any of the party conservatives and they flip out completely Warpy Mar 2017 #3
+1000 nt bananas Mar 2017 #5
Thanks for trying to be part of positive change, Warpy! nt appal_jack Mar 2017 #24
Yes! Thirties Child Mar 2017 #53
A shift to the right but Nixon was still elected in a huge victory. eom guillaumeb Mar 2017 #57
The shift didn't happen until after the 1968 Nixon victory Warpy Mar 2017 #63
Dems Snackshack Mar 2017 #4
Did you forget Clinton's campaign? Her only fault is that she didn't engage a foreign enemy to help. George II Mar 2017 #12
She asked the relevant question herself. truebluegreen Mar 2017 #14
Shaun King... LovingA2andMI Mar 2017 #6
You got that right. ciaobaby Mar 2017 #18
Republicans promise to make you rich like them C_U_L8R Mar 2017 #7
I hope we articulate something both better and more genuine. nt appal_jack Mar 2017 #25
Nothing better to offer loyalsister Nov 2018 #73
Uh, yeah............................ alittlelark Mar 2017 #8
It's not unpopular Applan Mar 2017 #9
Hillary's wasn't the only candidate who lost an election since 2008. truebluegreen Mar 2017 #15
G E R R Y M A N D E R I N G. VOTER PURGE we can do it Mar 2017 #48
BULLSHIT. truebluegreen Mar 2017 #49
hillary won by 2.9mil votes, repubs have gerrymandered states to death. dems got millions more msongs Mar 2017 #10
How do you gerrymander the Senate BlueWI Mar 2017 #11
Amen. truebluegreen Mar 2017 #16
...... LovingA2andMI Mar 2017 #17
Excellent points. Thanks. appal_jack Mar 2017 #26
Agree. nt zentrum Mar 2017 #32
this. Nay Mar 2017 #47
Being wishy washy middle of the road corporatist Democrats- not inspiring Valhallakey Mar 2017 #13
Who do you think the base is? Honeycombe8 Mar 2017 #19
The far left is commies. truebluegreen Mar 2017 #42
I've been around a long time, voted for the first time in 1956. I remember how it once was. Thirties Child Mar 2017 #55
Yes. truebluegreen Mar 2017 #61
I will say this Mountain Mule Mar 2017 #36
Thank you for these first-hand observations Mountain Mule! appal_jack Mar 2017 #38
Thanks for putting in the work. BlueWI Mar 2017 #45
Welcome BlueWI! Mountain Mule Mar 2017 #50
My experience was somewhat the same Phoenix61 Mar 2017 #58
It's the same here Mountain Mule Mar 2017 #59
Doubt this thread will last very long zentrum Mar 2017 #22
Yes on all points! nt appal_jack Mar 2017 #27
I think you're ignoring the phony scandals the RW media pelted is with - and this year they did it bettyellen Mar 2017 #51
Consider the source. And get a grip. TygrBright Mar 2017 #23
My grip is fine, thanks. appal_jack Mar 2017 #28
Get Wild! Get Angry! Go for Republican throats... maddiemom Mar 2017 #29
I wonder if that's why Obama dropped the "Public Option" from the ACA appal_jack Mar 2017 #31
Obama never dropped it. It was Max Baucus and the lack of 60 Dem votes in the Senate. LonePirate Mar 2017 #34
He certainly did not go to bat for it via the bully pulpit. appal_jack Mar 2017 #35
It wasn't just the bipartisinship zentrum Mar 2017 #39
Dems went all out for ACA and then lost the 1000 Dem seats across country delisen Mar 2017 #46
That's it zentrum Mar 2017 #33
Yes, the Democratic Party is so unpopular its presidential nominee lost the popular vote... Rollo Mar 2017 #37
The popular vote meme is a comforting thought truebluegreen Mar 2017 #43
The false equivalency is nonesense. Our candate lost because 11 days still_one Mar 2017 #54
Nonsense indeed. truebluegreen Mar 2017 #60
Nobody is going to be leading by 50 points in today's hyper-partisan Charles Bukowski Mar 2017 #62
It was a rhetorical question. truebluegreen Mar 2017 #66
Your third question is a straw man. Charles Bukowski Mar 2017 #67
Take personal responsibility Rollo Mar 2017 #68
You seem to have missed my point... Rollo Mar 2017 #64
I remember when Obama was running for President in 2008... Rollo Mar 2017 #65
Ronan interview bbgrunt Mar 2017 #40
Eloquent? Lolz JNelson6563 Mar 2017 #41
Trump is wildly unpopular. truebluegreen Mar 2017 #44
BULLSHIT!! We know why we are unpopular njhoneybadger Mar 2017 #52
That campaign slogan should work just great... appal_jack Mar 2017 #69
Every Democrat running for Senate in the swing states lost to the ESTABLISHMENT still_one Mar 2017 #56
Democrats should emulate Bernie Sanders benpollard May 2017 #71
What needs to be done. Maximus Decimus Meri Jun 2017 #72
 

appal_jack

(3,813 posts)
20. Yes, democracy is hanging by a thread.
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 01:42 AM
Mar 2017

With democracy hanging by a thread, we'd better fail to stand for anything. That'll show 'em!!!

I'm sorry, but asking Democrats to engage meaningfully with the most important issues and grassroots movements of the time is not "purity test bullshit."

-app

Maraya1969

(22,441 posts)
70. Aren't the numbers supposed to add up to 1000?
Fri Mar 24, 2017, 12:59 PM
Mar 2017

I've only checked a few


Democrats

357 + 516 + 127 = 1,000


Republicans


369 + 482 + 148 = 999


Elizabeth Warren

342 + 337 +209 = 888


Mike Pense

468 + 354 + 151 = 973



Hillary Clinton

351 + 554 + 94 = 999


Congress

257 + 517 + 223 = 997



leftofcool

(19,460 posts)
30. Not a thing
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 01:52 AM
Mar 2017

Let them not vote for Democrats. Let them be pissed. They can have Trump and people like him from now on. It is obviously that is what they wanted otherwise, 11,000 of them wouldn't have voted for a goddamn gorilla. and another 50k wouldn't have been stupid enough to write in Jill Stein or Bernie Sanders. Hope they are all happy with their protest votes.

Warpy

(110,900 posts)
3. Try to tell any of the party conservatives and they flip out completely
Fri Mar 10, 2017, 10:57 PM
Mar 2017

Of course, much of it can be traced to wall to wall propaganda by the corporate right. However, the party itself does deserve some of the blame for its abandonment of many of its core principles and the shift to the right since 1969.

Conservatives hate it when you say that because I guess no conservative is capable of ever having done anything that doesn't work, like ignoring the grassroots movements and completely failing to tap into their energy because their issues might offend--wait for it--conservatives.

This article raises a lot of good points and says things I've been lambasted for saying for years.

The bottom line is that the party has gotten unpopular in part because it doesn't stand for anything or anyone any longer.

It's a miracle Clinton still won the popular vote even against a horror like Dolt45.

Warpy

(110,900 posts)
63. The shift didn't happen until after the 1968 Nixon victory
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 05:06 PM
Mar 2017

Humphrey had been an old time liberal. The thing that sank him was his continued support for the Vietnam War, something Nixon promised to end. That plus anger in segregationist states over the Civil Rights Acts and a minor protest against scruffy college kids who didn't want to fight a war provided his coalition.

The shift to the right was to counter his southern strategy after he got in. It has been a spectacular failure since it forced the GOP to become utterly lunatic as they distanced themselves from the center right the Democratic Party was trying to claim.

George II

(67,782 posts)
12. Did you forget Clinton's campaign? Her only fault is that she didn't engage a foreign enemy to help.
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 01:02 AM
Mar 2017

C_U_L8R

(44,891 posts)
7. Republicans promise to make you rich like them
Fri Mar 10, 2017, 11:30 PM
Mar 2017

What's our promise?

Yeah of course the Republicans are full of shit but
still...we have to offer people something better.

loyalsister

(13,390 posts)
73. Nothing better to offer
Mon Nov 19, 2018, 11:41 PM
Nov 2018

Because what they offer is a lie to begin with. The "American dream" is a big like and both parties have been trying to pretend it's real. Get a job, play by the rules, buy a house, raise your families, then retire fat and happy.
The truth is the comppetetive nature of capitalism means there will be losers. Instead of the jobs jobs jobs, roses and sunshine will follow lies, Democrats really need to work on policies that make life just a little easier for those who don't hit the jackpot that will allow us to finance a comfortable life and retirement. Not being real about it has been a betrayal to a lot of people.

 

truebluegreen

(9,033 posts)
15. Hillary's wasn't the only candidate who lost an election since 2008.
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 01:27 AM
Mar 2017

Do all those losses mean nothing?

 

truebluegreen

(9,033 posts)
49. BULLSHIT.
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 12:30 PM
Mar 2017

NOT ALL STATES SUFFER FROM THOSE THINGS YET SOMEHOW OUR LOSSES ARE ACROSS THE BOARD. WAKE UP AND SMELL THE VINEGAR.

AND STOP FUCKING YELLING.

msongs

(67,193 posts)
10. hillary won by 2.9mil votes, repubs have gerrymandered states to death. dems got millions more
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 12:24 AM
Mar 2017

votes for house and senate than repubs but were shut out by gerrymandering. shaun king is an idiot

BlueWI

(1,736 posts)
11. How do you gerrymander the Senate
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 12:50 AM
Mar 2017

or statewide elections? Data is data - review it, and use it to improve. Republicans cheat in elections all the time. It's what they do. What's the Dem response?? After all these years, 2000 election, 2004 - all we have to say at this point is Republicans cheated? That is like saying the sun rises in the east. What is the next move, Democratic Party? More underwhelming campaigns that don't even inspire a whole segment of our own base?? Not being competitive in most of the South and Midwest? Followed by Monday morning excuses, hand wringing, we wuz robbed?? Even after Trump conspired with the Russians and Comey dropped a dime on Clinton, a good percentage of the Dems in Washington were still considering cooperating with Trump rather than resisting!! How completely counterproductive and pathetic is that??? It's either change the approach or prepare to be a permanent minority party, even when we "win."

Nay

(12,051 posts)
47. this.
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 11:02 AM
Mar 2017

Even after years and years of getting our asses handed to us, does the national Democratic leadership realize it must start winning smaller elections in the states and begin developing a stronger nationwide presence??

NOOOOOOO.

And on and on. Many lifelong Democrats are wondering what the hell the party stands for anymore. We should NEVER have to wonder what the party stands for. And frankly, most of us out here have realized that winning the presidency isn't the prize it should be, if the Pubs have the Senate, the House, and most of the state political machines. Look at what happened to Obama -- he was steamrolled at every turn. It would have happened to Hillary, too. It's time to start real local reform with REAL commitment, not lip service.

 

Valhallakey

(70 posts)
13. Being wishy washy middle of the road corporatist Democrats- not inspiring
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 01:14 AM
Mar 2017

I happen to agree with the articles point. The Democrats should have sworn of corporate money, focused on the issues that energize the base while not totally alienating the middle. We really need an FDR type revolution in the party, one that welcomes the hate of the alt-right nuts out there.

Honeycombe8

(37,648 posts)
19. Who do you think the base is?
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 01:39 AM
Mar 2017

You say they should energize the base, but I'm thinking that different people have different ideas who the base is.

One poster referred to them as progressives. I don't think so. The Dem base I think is a spectrum from the far left all the way to left of center.

Young people are more progressive, usually, I've read. But they don't vote as reliably. The "base" means voters.

The base is more of a mix of different types, whereas I think the Repubs are more homogeneous (religious and white...and Ben Carson).

 

truebluegreen

(9,033 posts)
42. The far left is commies.
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 08:24 AM
Mar 2017

I think there are 3 in the entire country and I guarantee there are none in the Democratic Party.

And as the right has grown ever more extreme, the ever compromising, bipartisany Democrats have followed them, so that now the party occupies center-right territory and the left wing is out in the cold.

Bernie isn't a socialist, he's an FDR Democrat...and his positions are not extreme, either in our own historical context or when compared to center-left parties in Europe.

I wish the Party was center-left; it would be a lot easier to generate enthusiasm and votes.

Thirties Child

(543 posts)
55. I've been around a long time, voted for the first time in 1956. I remember how it once was.
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 02:00 PM
Mar 2017

The Republicans have gone the way of the John Birchers, and the Democratic Part has replaced the moderate Republicans. The FDR wing of the party? Disappearing. Sigh.

 

truebluegreen

(9,033 posts)
61. Yes.
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 02:46 PM
Mar 2017

The biggest mystery to me in this past election was why Bernie chose to label himself a socialist, which he isn't, instead of the social democrat that he is. Too nuanced? Then why not hark back to FDR? Why not call for a Green New Deal, in exactly those terms? A costly mistake, I think...for all of us.

Mountain Mule

(1,002 posts)
36. I will say this
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 02:10 AM
Mar 2017

This is only my personal experience in one small corner of the country. I had never tried to become involved in party politics at the local level before the Traitor stole the election with the help of the Russians and the Electoral College. Sure I went out and did canvassing in previous elections, and I've done a number of activist type things on behalf of Americans with disabilities. But this year for the first time I went down to the local county Democrats to see if I could offer my services in a more sustained and cohesive manner. The first meeting I attended was all about electing new chairs and vice chairs for the various precincts and officers like the treasurer, etc. OK, fine. The second meeting I attended, it was announced that this was the time and place for the heads of the precincts and other elected officers of the local county democratic party committee to meet with one another and decide what priorities would be set for the next couple of months or so. Anyone else was welcome to sit in, but our participation was not encouraged. Now maybe that's the common practice everywhere. I wouldn't know. But it did turn me off. Here I was dying to help and it felt like my help was not wanted. Quite a few people left at the break and I was one of them.

In between those two meetings, the Montezuma County Alliance for Unity (largely a grassroots women's group with loose ties to the "official" dem party) staged a highly successful march in support of the Women's March in Washington The Alliance plans another march for "Women's Her Story" tomorrow, and I hoping to attend, but none of this has had more than token support by the "official" dem party.

Another interesting thing that I discovered at official meeting 2 was that in our overwhelmingly republican county, there was one precinct that had voted 100% for Clinton. There was not a single person who voted for the Traitor in that precinct. Guess who the people of that precinct were? The members of the Ute Mountain Ute Nation whose tribal boundaries run along the southern part of the county. I immediately thought of Standing Rock, yet there was not a single Ute in attendance as either a precinct head or just an interested observer like myself. I sat thru the remainder of the meeting until the break when I left, wondering why no one suggested making some sort of outreach attempt to tribal members. If we could engage the Utes, we would be running this county with the Utes leading the charge instead of sitting around in a little room in the town library, bemoaning the fact that all the county commissioners are republicans.

Now maybe my experience was atypical or maybe being so new, I didn't understand all the ins and outs of local party politics (I'm sure the latter was at least partly true). Still, it sure seemed to me that the local dems were ignoring the chance to get in on and become a part of several already strong grassroots movements. But what do I know?

 

appal_jack

(3,813 posts)
38. Thank you for these first-hand observations Mountain Mule!
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 02:25 AM
Mar 2017

Regardless of whether your experiences are atypical or nearly universal, the fact remains that you tried to engage for at lease 1.5 meetings, and felt rebuffed. Hopefully one of your Democratic Precinct chairs are reading this an paying attention.

The fact that you remain engaged with your local Alliance for Unity speaks to King's important point that Democratic organizers need to engage grass roots movements as true allies,because that is where the energy and passion will originate and build.

-app

BlueWI

(1,736 posts)
45. Thanks for putting in the work.
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 10:46 AM
Mar 2017

Local party structures tend to have their own entrenched people and procedures and do not always welcome new participation. Something to work on, for sure.

Mountain Mule

(1,002 posts)
50. Welcome BlueWI!
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 01:31 PM
Mar 2017

Yes, it felt a bit like being in high school and trying to crash a seat at the cool kids' lunch table. I understand very well how inbred small towns can be, but the leaders of the local dem party all came off as very intelligent people, and many are folks who originally came from more sophisticated parts of the world. Maybe they think we native Coloradans are just a bunch of hicks - beats me.

Phoenix61

(16,951 posts)
58. My experience was somewhat the same
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 02:16 PM
Mar 2017

Never involved in party politics until the awful thing happened. I missed the meeting where elections for chair etc were held. Then the next two months there was no meeting so the first one will be in April. Really? There are other groups that have sprung up such as Indivisible but the Dem party has been conspicuously absent. If I'm looking for them and can't find them how are they ever going to attract new people to the party.

Mountain Mule

(1,002 posts)
59. It's the same here
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 02:36 PM
Mar 2017

I searched the Net, the social media and the local paper, seeking to find activities and meeting times for the local dem party. Their activities are conspicuously absent from all three. The paper will print announcements of any local group's meetings for free and it's certainly easy enough for them to update their FB page. Nada. Yet they want to create a groundswell of enthusiasm for their efforts. Good luck with that.

zentrum

(9,865 posts)
22. Doubt this thread will last very long
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 01:42 AM
Mar 2017

.....but I think King is asking a vital question.

According to Data from the US Election Project, Census Bureau:

19.8% Voted for Clinton
19.5% Voted for Trump

29.9% Did Not Vote

28.6% Were Ineligible to Vote

That 29.9% should be easy pickings for the Dems, and there's something wrong that the Clinton percentage is so close to DT's. I don't believe the election was stolen by "Russia". I think we lost it. People just stayed home, un-enthused about either candidate.

It's crazy that the majority of ordinary people are not enthusiastic about the Democratic Party. That's a Party failure---not anyone else's.

I think embracing neo-liberalism has made it hard for people to feel enough trust that they'll inconvenience themselves to go vote.

Why haven't the Dems fought for weekend voting? Automatic registration? The end of gerrymandering? Why only now are they returning to an in-touch 50 state strategy? Why couldn't they ever explain the ACA better? How, in God's name, did DT manage to appear the "populist" compared to any Democrat?

Bernie is popular. Warren too. There's a reason for this.






 

bettyellen

(47,209 posts)
51. I think you're ignoring the phony scandals the RW media pelted is with - and this year they did it
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 01:45 PM
Mar 2017

With a huge assist from Russia and Wiki working with GOP operatives. Clinton's were certainly the biggest victims of this, but it's been a thing for years, manipulating the press into assisting their attacks on Dems. The media loves this shit, much more than they love talking about actual policy. And it killed us, not for the first time.

 

appal_jack

(3,813 posts)
28. My grip is fine, thanks.
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 01:50 AM
Mar 2017

Any time you would like to raise actual questions or concerns about the source, I'd be glad to delve into them.

-app

maddiemom

(5,106 posts)
29. Get Wild! Get Angry! Go for Republican throats...
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 01:50 AM
Mar 2017

and rip them out! The years of "working across the aisle" was a total loss for President Obama. Previous Democratic presidents were sabotaged in the last few decades. BUT... If the Repugs hated Clinton, they despised Obama. Mitch McConnell is the truly racist (yes,he is) destroyer of effective government for petty and partisan reasons. I see him as the most obvious example of the "vast right wing conspiracy" that Hillary was ridiculed for "outing". McConnell and Paul Ryan are the coldest House/Senate leader we've ever dealt with.

 

appal_jack

(3,813 posts)
31. I wonder if that's why Obama dropped the "Public Option" from the ACA
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 01:53 AM
Mar 2017

Maybe it was crass calculation purely within the Democratic Party (who were the ones who did finally do all the heavy lifting to pass Romneycare writ large, i.e.- the ACA). But maybe it was yet another sacrifice to the illusory "Maybe they will like us if we bend a little more" god of bipartisanship. Whatever the reason, we are reaping a poor harvest at the moment.

-app

LonePirate

(13,386 posts)
34. Obama never dropped it. It was Max Baucus and the lack of 60 Dem votes in the Senate.
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 01:58 AM
Mar 2017

I guess it is easier for the far left to reframe Obama as a villain, much like their close cousins on the far right.

 

appal_jack

(3,813 posts)
35. He certainly did not go to bat for it via the bully pulpit.
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 02:02 AM
Mar 2017

How many "Pass the Public Option!" speeches of Obama's do you recall?

-app

zentrum

(9,865 posts)
39. It wasn't just the bipartisinship
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 02:33 AM
Mar 2017

...problem. Insurance companies basically wrote the ACA. They threatened to destroy him with a fierce counter campaign and they had unlimited PAC money. I think as a new President, he felt he had to back off so he could have a win, and what emerged was this weak compromise.

But too, I think one of the main problems was that he invested so much political capital on the ACA, as soon as he was in office, and right in the middle of the Bush recession. It should have been jobs, jobs, jobs. The Dems should have been seen as the Party of Jobs. He was seen as doing this health care thing which was important but not the crisis at the middle of people's lives as unemployment went up to nearly 9% and they lost their houses and then, on top of that, the health bill was never explained well. It was confusing and the roll out was a mess. And people were forced to pay money they didn't really have.

So 20million got covered in an expensive way (expensive compared to single payer), insurance companies did pretty well, but how many millions were unemployed or underwater in their homes? I really think the ACA was not the best the Dems could have done at that time. Considering Obama's huge mandate and momentum. If he'd gone back to the people who voted for him and said "I need your help--let's do single payer"---he'd have gotten it. But he was cowed by the PAC's and the relentless tactics of the Repugs.

I think the problem goes back to the Democratic Leadership Council, established in the early 90's, and decisions they made about starting to accept corporate money as much as the Repugs did. That really changed the party.
Wish they had solved their low electability problem in another, more populist, way.

delisen

(6,039 posts)
46. Dems went all out for ACA and then lost the 1000 Dem seats across country
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 10:51 AM
Mar 2017

That first election after the ACA was critical because it in many states it gave the power of reapportionment to Republicans.That local strength does indirectly influence who wins the statewide and national elections. An almost decade long loss of seats not being addressed or addressed ineffectively has taken a toll. The strength of the party in 2008 was quite different from 2016-

There is no barrier to people who want to staff the Democratic Party. There is no barrier to telling people who attend rallies to bring their energy to the Democratic Party and to lead the way oneself.

In the old days the nuts and bolts work of the party was done by women-you know all the societal reasons that is no longer happening and is not going to happen.

I keep hearing reformers give analyses of what is wrong with the Democratic party. What I am seeing however is the unwillingness to build the party-nuts and bolts-and an unwillingness to focus opposition on the nationalistic white supremacist and anti-worker Republican Party.

White supremacism is a powerful movement and it is international , a good % of voters aligning themselves with it are authoritarians. If we waver on human rights we will only earn their contempt, not their votes. I don't see the point in fishing for their votes. They don't even want more equality of income. They approve of the concentration of wealth in the hands of the few.

We can get the non-authoritarian votes-but we won't get them by being Trump-lite. We still have to stand on principles of human rights-unapologetically.

Union strength was in steady decline way before the 1990s. Many union members seemed to vote "against their own economic interests" in the 1980s.

Maybe more unions needed to follow the runaway shops south in the sixties and confront the anti-union forces then-but they didn't and mainly kept fishing in the same pond, catering to the same voters who eventually decided that their interests were with corporate America and not with other workers.

The Democratic Party of the nineties was just reactive to the events of the 80s.
























Rollo

(2,559 posts)
37. Yes, the Democratic Party is so unpopular its presidential nominee lost the popular vote...
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 02:22 AM
Mar 2017

...in the last election...

Oh, wait...

No, it didn't.

As for the poll cited in the OP, it doesn't really cite any poll. It links to a largely illegible PDF file on Suffolk U's website, but a search of the website proper shows no such poll being reported upon. Suspicious to say the least.

Even if we accept there WAS a poll, the figures show that the Republican and Democratic Parties are pretty much running neck and neck in terms of popularity and unpopularity. Hey, guess what? Maybe it's POLITICIANS who are unpopular these days. Certainly the figures for Congress are worse than those for either of the two main political parties. And Congress is chock full of politicians.

OK, I've wasted enough time on this nonsense.

Let's gat back to something slightly more constructive.

 

truebluegreen

(9,033 posts)
43. The popular vote meme is a comforting thought
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 08:35 AM
Mar 2017

and a pointless one. There were a lot of other races lost, this year and going back to 2010, that have left the Democratic Party in tatters. When push came to shove our candidate lost to DFT.

Democrats and Republicans are equally unpopular? We know why they are, why are we? That is not a nonsense question.

still_one

(91,945 posts)
54. The false equivalency is nonesense. Our candate lost because 11 days
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 01:58 PM
Mar 2017

before the election Comey sent a letter to the republicans in Congress, which MSNBC was the first to report as breaking news that the email investigation had been reopened. THAT WAS A LIE. MSNBC then proceeded to parade every right wing politician across their screen for the next hour and a half perpetuating that LIE. Within two hours the other networks followed suit with the same LIE.

The polls begin to fall immediately after that. Then a few days later, Bret Baier from fox news came out and said "his sources within the FBI said an indictment was pending on the Clinton Foundation". That was also a LIE. 48 hour later Bret Baier came out and apologized that he made a mistake, but various news outlets including Google news, spewed that garbage, and the damage was pretty much done by then. It didn't mater that in the 11th hour Comey came out and said there was no need to reopen the investigation into the emails.

Then we had Jill Stein imploring her folks not to vote for Hillary under any circumstances, even if they lived in a swing state, and spreading the LIE that Hillary was worse than trump.

Hillary lost Michigan by .3%. Jill Stein received 1.1% of the vote. Similar results in Wisconsin and the other critical swing states.

Every Democrat running for Senate in a swing state lost to the ESTABLISHMENT, incumbent, republican, and that included Russ Feingold and other progressives.

The election was lost because of the FBI interference, and the polls indicated that without a doubt.

One small fact that is also ignored. 99% of Hillary's supporters would have voted for Bernie if he was the Democratic nominee. The reverse was not true, and Noam Chomsky made that very clear:

Progressives who refused to vote for Hillary Clinton made a ‘bad mistake’

"Legendary linguist and activist Noam Chomsky thinks that progressives and left-wingers who didn’t want to vote for Hillary Clinton this year have badly miscalculated — and will now pay a very dear price."

.....

“I think they [made] a bad mistake,” said Chomsky, who reiterated that it’s important to keep a “greater evil” from obtaining power, even if you’re not thrilled with the alternative. “I didn’t like Clinton at all, but her positions are much better than Trump’s on every issue I can think of.”

Chomsky also attacked the arguments made by philosopher Slavoj Zizek, who argued that Trump’s election would at least shake up the system and provide a real rallying point for the left.

“[Zizek makes a] terrible point,” Chomsky told Hasan. “It was the same point that people like him said about Hitler in the early ’30s… he’ll shake up the system in bad ways.”

http://www.rawstory.com/2016/11/noam-chomsky-progressives-who-refused-to-vote-for-hillary-clinton-made-a-bad-mistake/







 

truebluegreen

(9,033 posts)
60. Nonsense indeed.
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 02:38 PM
Mar 2017

She asked the question herself: "why aren't I 50 points ahead?" Against DFT.

That is the question that is begging for an answer.

 

Charles Bukowski

(1,132 posts)
62. Nobody is going to be leading by 50 points in today's hyper-partisan
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 03:31 PM
Mar 2017

environment.

The Republicans could run an old shoe and it would get 60 million votes.

 

truebluegreen

(9,033 posts)
66. It was a rhetorical question.
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 10:19 PM
Mar 2017

Thing is, registered Democrats are (at best*) 30% of registered voters, Republicans are less than that, independents are 40% or so.

The point is our opponent was Donald Fucking Trump, who by ANY measure was unsuited, unready and incapable--why was he even within shouting distance? Why did the blue wall collapse? And why the F was Hillary campaigning for moderate Republicans?...if you are paying attention, you can see that the third question answers the first two.

We need to stop pointing fingers at everyone except ourselves. There's plenty of blame and we have our share.



*we lost ground in this election cycle, did you notice? As much as 5 points, which we have only--partly--regained as Trump demonstrates his true abilities and views.

 

Charles Bukowski

(1,132 posts)
67. Your third question is a straw man.
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 10:37 PM
Mar 2017

HRC NEVER campaigned for any Republicans. She made appeals to NeverTrumpers, yes, but that's not the same thing. By all accounts her platform was the most progressive we've yet seen at the GE level.

We lost because Putin, Assange, and 30+ years of GOP propaganda took their toll on HRC. It turned off just enough voters to allow Trump to squeak out a victory.

Rollo

(2,559 posts)
68. Take personal responsibility
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 11:16 PM
Mar 2017

We lost because we as Democrats, as progressives, as Hillary or Bernie supporters, did not take responsibility for counteracting the lies, fake news, and other dishonest propaganda emanating from the Trump-Bannon-Putin Deluda Triangle.

If you're upset and disappointed about the election results, then starting now spread the truth about Trump-Bannon-Putin, as well as spreading the Good News about the Democratic Party agenda, its leaders, and any and all local or state candidates in your area.

Many people don't want to listen to politiicans giving them well-rehearsed speeches. But they WILL listen to someone they know, in their family, workplace, social group, etc. You don't have to get into a debate or argument. Just tell the truth and let people make a more informed decision.

Rollo

(2,559 posts)
64. You seem to have missed my point...
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 08:23 PM
Mar 2017

The near equal unpopularity of both Reps and Dems leads to a logical conclusion: the unpopularity is linked not to partisan stances, but to politicians in general.

There are clear ideological differences between the R and the D. The Tweeddle-Dee-Dum meme is invalid. As long as people despise politicians, both parties will suffer unpopularity.

But this doesn't mean that the D's can't put on their big girl panties and come back fighting with an agenda AND candidates that appeal to the masses in the face of powerful manipulation by oligarchs and billionaire Mussolini imitators. It means hard work, honesty, and dedication not only by our party leaders, but by every registered Democrat (and many independents) to spread the word at home, at work, at church, at school, at social events: everywhere. Unless we do that, we're doomed to be crushed under the thumb of wanna-be dictators like DJT.

Resist is far more than a bumper sticker.

Rollo

(2,559 posts)
65. I remember when Obama was running for President in 2008...
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 08:32 PM
Mar 2017

A co-worker (who happened to be Hispanic) made the comment to me (white) that he wasn't going to vote for "that n****r". I put aside my revulsion at his choice of words, and calmly told him that Obama was smart, educated, and inspiring, and the one candidate who could unite our citizens and bring hope back to the nation.

He didn't say much, but his eyes got a little bigger.

A few days later he came up to me and said, "You know, I looked into it, and I'm voting for Obama.".

I'd like to think those couple of minutes I spent on the job reasoning with a co-worker helped Obama to win.

We can all do the same with future local and national elections. Speak out, tell the truth, let people make up their own minds with the FACTS.

JNelson6563

(28,151 posts)
41. Eloquent? Lolz
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 03:33 AM
Mar 2017

It reads like a primary screed. It's also contrary to the large turnout at Dem mtgs & conventions. Big donation surge, members, volunteers.

Yeah, wildly unpopular. In your dreams.

 

appal_jack

(3,813 posts)
69. That campaign slogan should work just great...
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 11:23 PM
Mar 2017


Look, I'm not saying we have to kowtow to Trump voters. But when "unaffiliated" or non-voting dwarfs either the Trump or Clinton voters (~50% larger than either of those camps), there's something that you and the DNC are both missing with that glib explanation there.

-app

still_one

(91,945 posts)
56. Every Democrat running for Senate in the swing states lost to the ESTABLISHMENT
Sat Mar 11, 2017, 02:00 PM
Mar 2017

incumbent, republican, and those Democrats, were mostly progressive

benpollard

(197 posts)
71. Democrats should emulate Bernie Sanders
Sat May 6, 2017, 12:24 PM
May 2017

Bernie knows how to get a message out in simple terms that appeal to people's emotions and common sense. He fights for what he believes in and tells it like it is.

Democrats could also take some pointers from Stephen Colbert:

"Mr. President, you're not the POTUS, you're the 'gloat-us.' You're the glutton with the button. You're a regular 'Gorge Washington.' You're the 'presi-dunce,' but you're turning into a real 'prick-tator," Colbert said.'

Sir, you attract more skinheads than free Rogaine. You have more people marching against you than cancer. You talk like a sign-language gorilla that got hit in the head. In fact, the only thing your mouth is good for is being Vladimir Putin's c--k holster."
72. What needs to be done.
Tue Jun 6, 2017, 09:30 AM
Jun 2017

The Democrats need to be running a non-stop charm campaign for the next couple of years (and hopefully permanently) to win as much support as they can from as many groups as they can , and try to avoid alienating any supporters they already have.

They need to play cleaner than the Republicans and be seen to be doing so. And they need to create a movement , Trump has his centipedes (this is what trump supporters call themselves on reddit) , and the democrats need a similar movement. And it needs to be a positive movement that makes people feel good about themselves, people respond more to the carrot than to the stick and if one side is promising a massive pile of carrots while the other side has a great big stick that they wallop all and sundry with then it doesn't take a genius to work out which side people will go to. And this is part of the not so big secret of why Trump got elected, he was able to make people feel good and have hope (even if it was only an illusion). It is also why Obama was elected (what was one of his campaign slogans again? it was the iconic hope poster, that made people feel good)

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