With Trump being political dead wood
Ha sorry, got to face it, the Republican nominee in 2024 will be either Trump himself, one of his children or someone explicitly endorsed by him.
Either we conclude that his base is brainwashed, a bit dim, and voting along narrow personal interest lines (low tax, traditional values etc) ignorant of the wider consequences, or we conclude that his base are as smart as most and they are perfectly aware of what they are voting for; namely, a racist demagogue. I conclude the latter at this stage and hold them accountable as I would anyone else.
Quote from: spidermonkey09 on November 06, 2020, 04:05:26 pm... and that is why populists will continue to win.
Quote from: spidermonkey09 on November 06, 2020, 04:05:26 pmEither we conclude that his base is brainwashed, a bit dim, and voting along narrow personal interest lines (low tax, traditional values etc) ignorant of the wider consequences, or we conclude that his base are as smart as most and they are perfectly aware of what they are voting for; namely, a racist demagogue. I conclude the latter at this stage and hold them accountable as I would anyone else. ... and that is why populists will continue to win. When the liberal left look down their noses at people who regard themselves as ordinary (and they are) they get pissed off very understandably, and vote with a middle finger. People who voted trump did so for a thousand different reasons, some reasonable, face it. Its perfectly possible to vote for a politician while disliking them because you agree with some of their policies, that does not make you a bad person or culpable for their actions. It's not just some base of deranged activists, though they certainly exist, its millions of normal American people.
Quote from: TobyD on November 06, 2020, 11:02:45 pmQuote from: spidermonkey09 on November 06, 2020, 04:05:26 pm... and that is why populists will continue to win. Or notAnother very definite assertation there and a total dismissal of the notion that, you know, maybe populists wont continue to win.
Newt Gingrich, the former Republican Speaker, said: "I'm the angriest I have been in six decades. You have a group of corrupt people who have contempt for the American people trying to steal the presidency."[/qoute]Yeah, they're called the Trumps! Quote from: spidermonkey09 on November 06, 2020, 11:53:29 pm populists have literally just lost. They've just lost and somehow it's already about what the moderates, who lest we forget have just won, handily, need to think about. There is not a single piece out there loftily opining that the populist right need to think about whether they are being too racist/sexist /fascist to ever win the popular vote again.I sort of agree Jim, the problem though is a) how completely the left underestimated the level of Trump's support, and b) their complete inability to understand why those people vote for him (and in fact, how many of their policies actually push people towards the right). Yes they've won this time, but by a far tighter margin than expected and, again, 70m people voted for Trump in spite of everything that's happened. If that doesn't deserve some introspection then I don't know what would.
populists have literally just lost. They've just lost and somehow it's already about what the moderates, who lest we forget have just won, handily, need to think about. There is not a single piece out there loftily opining that the populist right need to think about whether they are being too racist/sexist /fascist to ever win the popular vote again.
That said, the way he's going could reduce his influence if he ends up destroying his credibility.
It's interesting that all the Rupert Murdoch owned press are now starting to imply that he needs to do the decent thing and concede.
I think Jim’s point is that Trump’s rhetoric has done the exact same thing in reverse and that Republicans/populists should now be doing some introspection.It can’t be overstated how rare it is for the incumbent not to win a second term (I think 3? presidents in the history of the US).
Precisely. This thread is useful in that regard. https://twitter.com/seth_j_hill/status/1324733142091984902?s=19
, at least he could be bothered to speak to these people and give them some hope that things might change. Even if he had no inclination of making good on his promises.
But large swathes of USA, are not going to be jumping for joy like British liberals are. They know from bitter experience what Biden’s politics are. He will forget about them and not improve their material circumstances or job prospects. While Trump is clearly a liar and a charlatan, at least he could be bothered to speak to these people and give them some hope that things might change. Even if he had no inclination of making good on his promises. Populism tends to flourish when representative democracy is failing. And while both parties prop up neoliberalism while it lurches from one crisis to another, I can’t see the appetite for populism diminishing to any significant degree. I’m still of the opinion that ultimately people will vote in economic self interest. Not for who has the best manners.