General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Who more "progressive" do you want nominated, then explain just how he/she gets 270 electoral votes. [View all]Summer Hathaway
(2,770 posts)- and while it sounds good on paper, it is unrealistic to the nth degree.
Assuming your model, we "lose a couple of elections". We saw what devastation can be done by losing a couple of elections - we got W for eight years. People truly suffered, and continue to suffer now thanks to the economic meltdown under his watch, along with setbacks in any number of other areas.
You might be willing to see that happen again - most people don't.
Continuing with your model, you assume that a truly democratic party will be "swept into power in a landslide".
If the country survives a couple of conservatives in the WH, the Democrats would be even MORE likely to nominate a centrist or conservative Dem, thinking that they'd have more of a chance of winning back the WH with someone somewhat more progressive than the last two POTUSes, but not SO different that voters are scared off.
After seeing GOP nominees win twice or more, a VERY centrist Dem would be considered just different enough to be an alternative to the Republican nominee, but still able to capture enough middle-of-the-roaders to win a majority.
Parties will always nominate who they think can win, not necessarily who they think will make the most sweeping changes once in office.
That's not political prescience. It's a recognition of human nature, and common sense.