General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: How do we make peace with Blue Dogs without giving them their way? [View all]MineralMan
(151,653 posts)The past? That's gone. We're thinking about now and tomorrow.
I offered an exercise in my post 21, just above. Try it on anyone you consider to be a "blue dog." Unless you're willing to look at the entire individual and the entirety of that person's votes, you're not saying anything really. There's not a single politician in the US with whom I agree on every issue. there are a lot of politicians I will vote for, though, despite that.
In post #21, I look at Lois Capps, a California house member of long standing who represented my district when I lived there. I know her well, both personally, and through campaigning for her. Go look at her, as I suggested. I'm sure you'll find areas of disagreement with her. I do. And yet, I not only voted for her, but worked to get her elected, starting with the first time she ran. Why did I do that, do you suppose, despite disagreeing with her in some areas?
Every last elected official has to be elected by the voters in their particular district. What that takes varies widely, and may or may not coincide with your personal political positions. I suspect that it will not coincide with them in about 75% of all congress members. So, what to do? I cannot vote only for those who agree with me on everything, nor can I vote based on a single issue that is important to me, because that is not the only issue that matters.
Life is real. Life happens. Vote like you understand that, and things will work out.