this post was submitted on 10 Nov 2024
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[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 days ago (1 children)

I used 2020 as a comparison for a few reasons;

  • It was the most recent result prior to the 2024 election, so it will have the most comparable demographics.
  • voting infrastructure from the COVID-era is still largely in place, allowing for more early and postal voting than pre-COVID. So earlier years are less comparable.
  • presidential elections are just as much about voting against the worse candidate, if not more-so, than voting for a preferred one.
  • both 2020 and 2024 could be seen as referendums on Trump’s policies, presidency and suitability for a second term.

Rather than looking at percentages, the individual counts are more important as they tell the underlying story.

The DNC’s GOTV campaign absolutely failed to motivate their base and undecided voters. Perhaps that was somewhat intentional, as a lot of the former GOP aligned ‘never-Trump’ campaign financiers have shifted to the Dems and have used their new-found influence to nudge the party’s platform rightward. The Cheney endorsements certainly didn’t do them any favours!

But looking at how even deep-red states have voted in support of abortion rights, shows that the general US populace is generally slowly drifting leftward - despite what the corporate-owned media narrative would have you believe.

[–] Resonosity 3 points 3 days ago (1 children)

I'll agree with you on the 2020 voting laws carrying forward (although I haven't looked into the state laws, especially the red ones to see if those have been repealed yet because that's what tends to happen).

Also agreed on the DNC's and Harris' messaging. I also blame Biden because if we wanted to prepare to fight against Trump in the election where he was his most popular, the Dems would have ran an actual primary.

Definitely agreed too on the general sentiment of Americans supporting leftist policies. We see this with Bashear in Kentucky, and recently the middle wage and abortion policies in Missouri. Although you might be able to balance that by Florida's outcome with their referendums as well as California.

Ultimately it comes down to messaging and optics. Democrats need to figure out a way to package progressive policy in a way that capture the imaginations and hopes of their base while at the same time not scaring those towards the center into believing those same policies are socialist or communist.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 days ago

I’m not familiar with the California referendum in question, but Florida saw over 57% vote in favour of extending abortion rights.

The only reason it lost was because it required at least 60% to pass; instead Florida now gets to experience the tyranny of minority rule.