this post was submitted on 15 Dec 2023
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[–] [email protected] 17 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (3 children)

I'm still finding it extremely unlikely he's electable. Not saying we shouldn't take it seriously, though.

Over the years many conservative anti-vaxxers have died from covid, boomers are dying off, and anyone who wasn't already a trumper isn't exactly lining up.

Most economic indicators are trending very well; meanwhile the abortion topic continues to backfire tremendously.

2022 proved polls don't sufficiently capture millennial and zoomers.

[–] [email protected] 26 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (2 children)

I'm GenX, and I wouldn't answer a poll if you paid me. I will vote, and I will never vote for a Republican for the rest of my life. If there's no Dem candidate on the ballot for a specific office, I leave it blank so they can see how many votes they're not getting when they don't run a candidate.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

My plan for the next year is to answer every opinion poll.

I’m going to tell every pollster who will listen I’m not voting because I won’t vote for republicans, and Democrats haven’t done anything to deserve my vote - because they had 60 years to make abortion access federal law, they have had numerous opportunities to unwind Medicare Part D, and in 2021 they should have made the ACA better, overturned Citizens United, fixed the Voter Rights Act, and worked to improve turnout by mandating federal voting holidays (amongst other things), but they didn’t, and instead their whole modern platform is that they will slow walk the U.S. into corporate and theocratic ownership slower than the Republicans.

And then I’m going to vote anyway, because I’m not a child. But I won’t be telling pollsters that. The Democratic Party needs to fear what their milquetoast policies have wrought.

[–] [email protected] -5 points 11 months ago (2 children)
[–] [email protected] 4 points 11 months ago

It's not, but evidently polling isn't capturing these groups effectively. Again, as 2020 and 2022 proved.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

I don't answer polls as a GenX, but I sure as hell vote in every election. I will never vote for a Republican. Polls won't capture voters like me, and voters like me are not just millennials and zoomers.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

Polling isn't as simple as adding up responses and reporting the percentages.

They use complex methodologies to account for inaccuracies exactly like your good self.

That's not to say that polls are necessarily accurate - clearly they aren't, but to say "polls won't capture voters like me" is incorrect.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Over the years many conservative anti-vaxxers have died from covid,

I disagree with this assessment affecting voting in any way. Mortality rates are very low outside of very vulnerable and elderly population that totals much less than 2%. Even if you're left only half way there mentally after a severe infection your vote is still a vote, and the majority republican areas are not affected by this in any way.

Even if 20% of republicans died from a disease in most of the red states voting wouldn't change much. Between gerrymandering, propaganda news and winner takes all electoral college configuration even if republicans lose the popular vote they will still keep basically all of their electoral college votes.

Most economic indicators are trending very well; meanwhile the abortion topic continues to backfire tremendously. I don't know a single person who doesn't feel like we're in a recession and that the economy is in the toilet. The smart ones understand some of the nuance but the republican party will just blame it all on Biden.

The abortion topic still gets religious votes, and votes for those who want a poverty stricken lower class full of cheap labor workers. They won't bend on cheap POC immigrant labor, they only want more white labor. I don't think voting for abortion will beat out voting for what the church says and what all the peer pressure for voting red says. If pro-abortion won votes in red states we would have seen many more democrat and independent wins than we've seen in the house and senate. Local legislature seems to not be greatly affected by this either.

The fact that polls put him close to a majority means it's a major threat. The problem is that the democrat majority unfortunately is clustered in small areas where even if they win a popular vote in a district of a red state are unlikely to win the overall vote for all districts.

Finally, Biden as a candidate is practically worthless. Trump would lose hard to Obama, but he can never be president again. Why anyone worth electing didn't run for 2020 is beyond me but here we are.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 11 months ago

So I think you raise some good points but bear in mind my overarching premise in my comment: Nothing improves conditions that Republicans didn't already have in prior elections. Now, there is if anything diminishing returns across all vectors which tend to benefit the GOP. That being said:

Regarding COVID, I'm not referring too much these days but of the early post-vaccine era where last I tried to best calculate we saw a ratio of about 4 or 5 conservatives dying for every Democrat. Yes, it doesn't particularly impact an amount on a state-by-state basis, but the key point is: Did this help Republicans? Absolutely not; it has only hindered them. Does this matter in red states? Of course not. But in purple states and certain districts it could mean the difference of turning red or blue. We of course saw outcomes decided by literally a handful of votes. Considering this elderly Republican population most at risk is also a group that is most likely to turn out to vote for Republicans, then that hinders their most loyal base.

Yeah, right-wing rhetoric is heavily pushing an alternate reality that the economy is going to shit and everything is bad. Yeah it may stick to some people, but the reality is these words are largely hollow. Whether the economy is good or bad, it's true that there will be people who just find a reason to blame Biden because he's a Democrat. You can't stop that but you don't have to; for they were always going to vote Trump anyway. The key point is that these arguments -- permitted people like us raise our voice at dinner-tables and social media -- can be quickly dismissed because the data that Republicans normally tout negatively are pretty positive.

Look at what overturning Roe said. Even in an interview with a GOP Strategist I saw on PBS -- they said the Republicans had no idea that overturning Roe be this unpopular even amongst part of their own base. FWIW my mother-in-law is a lifelong Republican who even voted for Trump and because of this reversal of Roe and how protective she is of her kids, she is now vehemently anti-Republican. Basically, it took away the choice of her daughters and now she's pissed. Meanwhile it has been a major rallying cry for Democrats -- and 2022 again proved that. Religious voters will likely continue voting Republican, but that's largely a constant. If anything, they will feel less compelled to vote as they may feel their duty is done and they may get careless.

Don't get me wrong: I think polls should be some marker for concern and we should always assume the worst and hope for the best. However, and I say this again because literally nobody has remotely countered this point: The polls were deeply wrong for 2020 and especially 2022. One key facet of this was younger generations not sufficiently represented in polling.

I also agree that Biden isn't that great of a candidate. He's just -- dare I say -- the "lesser of two evils." Both candidates are old and largely useless; the only difference is that Biden isn't corrupt and his cabinet is full of competent experts. I'll vote for him, but you're right that he does not remotely inspire. If Republicans nominated anyone younger, Democrats would guaranteed be fucked.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

The problem is that's only half the battle. What do you do when his legions of supporters decide they don't like losing and take it out on the rest of the country?

[–] [email protected] 0 points 11 months ago

Let them string themselves out. They will lose. It will backfire as did January 6th.