General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: This message was self-deleted by its author [View all]creeksneakers2
(8,018 posts)You aren't going to drive the party left with disloyalty. You'll drive them further to the right. Look at 2000. The far left shaved off 3% of the vote that made the difference in the presidential election. Did the Democrats go left to try to get back the 3%? Of course not. Going that far left would lose support from moderates and middle voters needed to win. The Democrats responded to Nader with 6 years of caving in to Bush and barely even responding to GOP outrages.
You could also look at Congressional voting records. Representatives from the safest Democratic districts are the most likely to vote liberal. Representatives from swing districts vote more conservatively. When a representative can't count on a strong Democratic vote, he turns to Independents and Republicans to try to make up the difference.