stevenkesslar
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The other thing that is clear from early polling is that Walz is wildly popular, as voters get to know him: August 4 - Marist - 17/13 +4 favorable August 6 - YouGov - 32/19 +13 favorable August 7 - RMG Research - 31/25 - +6 favorable August 8 - You Gov - 41/30 - +11 favorable So during this period of time when this is being debated, more people are getting to know Tim Walz. And they like what they see. By comparison, the last polls on 538 on JD Vance from August 5th by Marist show him 35/43 for -8 unfavorable. So now he is about as well known as Walz. 4 in 5 voters have an opinion. They like Walz, and they don't like Vance. Walz has done this incredible job of leaving a trail of loyalty and explanation behind him on three issues, any of which could be fatal to a politician: 1) his decision to leave the military and run for Congress, 2) his handling of the 2020 riots in his state, 3) his loyalty to Joe Biden. I can't find a bigger JPG of that press release Walz put out in 2005. But it was very smart, both at the time and in retrospect. There is a clearer to read version in the Town Hall right wing hit piece I lifted it from. Which is a nice summary of all the reasons the right wing nuts are having an orgasm thinking they "got"Tim Walz. Even though they are just proving how stupid and utterly insensitive they are. Just like when they laughed at how Paul Pelosi was almost murdered. Fucking clueless idiots! It makes perfect sense that in early 2005, when Walz was probably still on the fence, he put it out in public that he wanted to run for Congress, but his unit might be called to service in Iraq. That is what the right wing now wants to relitigate. The bottom line is that the actual order to deploy came much later in 2005, after Walz had clearly resigned. And the actual deployment came in 2006, when Walz was in the heat of his successful run for Congress. In a district I lived in which I know is right of center and very into patriotism. So if you believe Walz abandoned his troops, what you have to believe is that Walz had 0 % right to run for Congress and in 2006 he 100 % had to be in Iraq. No choice. And you also have to believe, as you note, that meanwhile it's 100 % fine for Trump to cop "bone spurs" and JD to be a hillbilly venture capitalist. Only Democrats have to make hard choices! It does make sense to me that some veterans could believe that in a time of war, no military leader should be able to resign - ever. The idea here is that Tim Walz had no moral choice, even though he had served for over two decades. And even though he decided to re-enlist after 9/11 because, like many patriots, he was moved to defend his country from terrorists. But all of this is very extreme and radical. I think very few people believe that military leaders should never be able to resign, like to run for Congress. And that if they do resign they are suddenly traitors. Which is why fellow veterans who don't agree with Walz politically are making a point to defend his service. But what I credit Walz for is he obviously thought that through in early 2005, knowing the kind of district he wanted to win in. So there is no question now about the history. He did it all in public. He talked about it, and he left a paper trail behind. It is probably just dumb luck that Donald Trump is on tape bending over backward to praise how Tim Walz handled the 2020 riots. But Walz had to know that it would be in his interest to not to be the target of Donald Trump's ire at the time. So whatever Walz did, I'd bet money he wanted Donald Trump on his side in that moment. And the same is true for Biden and his staff in the weeks when Biden was being run out of his campaign. I'll post this interview in another thread, but here is Anita Dunn talking about how loyal both Kamala Harris and Tim Walz were to Biden while Pelosi, Schumer, Obama, and Jeffries were forcing him to resign. Walz is a loyal team player, and a very smart one. He earned what he is getting now.
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First, if we want to discuss what real service means, we need to ask some very urgent questions. When Donald Trump was serving his nation on January 6th, 2021, by starting a riot, what was he doing minute by minute? At what point, if ever, did he contact his rioters and instruct them, "Do not try to overturn this election"? At what point, if ever, did he contact his rioters and say "Do not hang Mike Pence"? At what point, if ever, did he contact his rioters and instruct them, "Do not kill Nancy Pelosi"? At what point, if ever, did he contact his rioters and tell them, "Stop breaking the bones of cops"? And if Trump did not call his rioters and tell them NOT to kill Pelosi, hang Pence, break the bones of cops, and try to overturn an election, why not? What is his definition of "service" to his nation? If the Raping Felon and Hillbilly Venture Capitalist want to talk about character and "service", let's go! Man who served under Walz says governor retired before unit had deployment news Unfortunately, Donald Trump did not abandon his rioters or their crimes, even when every Congressional Republican they wanted to attack was begging him to do so. Unfortunately, JD Vance has not abandoned his right wing billionaire venture capitalist friends, who want more tax cuts. Regardless, even though JD Vance had the right to retire from his service to Silicon Valley billionaires to run for Congress to get them even more Trump fat cat tax cuts, they want to litigate the minute by minute of how Walz retired after decades of service in the military to run for US House. So let's talk about character and national service. As Tim Walz likes to say, "Come on!" More lies. Walz does not want to take Donald Trump's guns away. When did Donald Trump ever hold a gun in service to his nation? The only thing we know about Trump is his cult would be fine if he killed someone on 5th Ave. And those are the slime ball felon's own words. And extra credit goes to Chris LaCivita, who has gotten rich packaging lies and hate for a raping convicted felon like Trump. These men have the character of slime.
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Most important thing, which you forgot. His penis is bigger than hers. (And his ego.) Why am I not surprised that the loser cry baby felon is whining? Poor little rich rapist.
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“I was very happy with the last couple of days, Tim,”
stevenkesslar replied to stevenkesslar's topic in Politics
I've never tasted simile, actually. But I assume it tastes way more delicious than bowling pins. 😉 Or rioter flambe. 😲 That's a perfect GIF for his comment, by the way. -
Trump praised Walz in 2020 over handling of George Floyd protests I have to imagine the Harris campaign thought through the known vulnerabilities of Walz, as well as Shapiro and Kelly and others. So this is a threefer. First, it underscores that the only time you can't believe what Trump says is when his lips are moving. Second, who was the President when riots were erupting all over America? And who bent over backwards to throw gas on the fire with his hate and divisiveness? Third, who failed to call out the National Guard when he STARTED riots at the US Capitol on January 6th? President Bone Spurs also has JD dredging up more lies to trash Walz's military service. JD Vance, of all people, ought to believe Walz resigned from the military to run for Congress. Since JD left Silicon Valley to run for Senate. And they have more in common. On the Veterans Affairs Committee, Walz was loyal to the veterans he left behind. In Congress, and if elected Veep, JD will be loyal to the right wing venture capitalists seeking tax cuts that he left behind.
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He may. Whether he would or would not, I mostly agree with your point. When Harris wins, she should get what she wants while she can. But the idea that she can win these Senate seats in Montana and Ohio, which she needs just to have 50 votes, is a huge question mark. Everything that follows is just interesting details. I have mixed feeling about this part of Obama. Which is to say, I blame some of it on him. He was never really a legislator, in my view. And, if you believe what Harry Reid told him on the fateful day he called young Senator Obama to his office, Reid knew Obama was more of a rock star than a long term legislator like Biden. Whatever Reid or Pelosi thought at the time, it had to work out as well as expected, or better. They got the Presidency for eight years, and they got a lot of stuff done. 2010 sucked. But to again quote someone very smart, David Axelrod says that he knew by 2009 that the economy was going to get so bad that Democrats would get a shellacking in 2010. Which they did. It's the economy, stupid. 2010 was what opened the door for the Tea Party to come in and thrive and fester. And the Tea Party looks charming and quaint compared to the MAGA cult Trump grew. The Victory of ‘No’ A lot of the reporting done at the time is on your side, an example of which is above. The basic idea was that if we Republicans work with the Democratic majority, we will always be the minority. So we have to block them, and make them fail. Arguably, it worked. Republicans were extinct in 2008, until they came roaring back in 2010. Although I think the argument is weak. Democrats did do a lot in 2009 and 2010, because they had the votes. So some would argue they lost badly in 2010 precisely because of what they did. Like Obamacare, which was unpopular at the time. Not because of Republican obstruction. But I agree with Axelrod. It is the economy, stupid. And the price Democrats paid for winning so much in 2008 is that they had to own the economic mess in 2010. Republicans didn't have to do anything other than just wait. So the question is, once the Republicans took back power in 2010 through no fault of Obama and Democrats - who simply inherited the global financial crisis - what could Obama have done to make deals with The Party Of No? Your answer would be, nothing. Which may be true. But, objectively speaking, Clinton and Biden both got things done that Obama did not. So I think you can make a good argument that if Obama viewed his Presidency differently, and were a creature of the Senate like Biden or a Bubba deal maker like Clinton, he might have had more success in a second term. But I recognize you can make a great argument that Mitch McConnell was going to kill anything that could possibly be born under Obama from 2010 to 2016. Here's the irony. If you buy The Gospel Of Allan Lichtman, which I do, "The Victory Of No" did not occur in 2010. It happened in 2016. Again, I think the Democratic shellacking in 2010 was about voters who were pissed about a really bad economy. The reason a red wave did not happen in 2022 and seems very unlikely to happen in 2024 is that we don't have 10 % unemployment and a national foreclosure crisis, like we did in 2010. Prosperity sure sucks, doesn't it? Which is why Lichtman thinks Harris will win. His view of what worked against Clinton in 2016 is she had exactly six keys turned against her. Which was just enough to seal her fate. And one of those six keys was Obama's lack of any real accomplishment in his second term, like Obamacare in his first term. So you can argue that if Obama had made it his single most important priority to make any deal he needed to make to get something big and bipartisan done in his second term - let's say an infrastructure bill like Biden did - that alone would have made Clinton POTUS in 2016. Bridges and roads are inherently popular to Republican House members and Senators. So it's a counterfactual that can't be proved. But I think Lichtman's whole model is based on common sense. It would not have hurt Clinton if she could say that she and Obama were bending over backwards to get stuff like roads and bridges done, even if the Republicans were a hard sell. If you agree with this logic, it means we are both right. But under different circumstances. If Harris manages to win a Senate and House majority, which means a clean sweep of all these difficult Senate seats like Ohio and Montana, Lichtman would agree with you that she absolutely should do whatever it takes to win what she can. So she has a record of victory to run on in 2028. Even if she gets zero Republican votes, like Obama did. But if she does not have a legislative majority, your logic suggests she will have zero policy victories. So what's she gonna do? To me it is just common sense to think that centrist voters will reward her in 2028 if they see her making whatever deals she has to to accomplish things they care about. If instead there are four years of party line votes, all of which she loses when it comes to anything important, it makes sense that she would have a harder time in 2028. Another example of this is Bill Clinton. He was forced to meet in the middle because of 1994 and Gingrich. One very granular point I am not sure I agree with Lichtman on is that he says Clinton had no significant policy achievement in either term. For sure, Hillarycare failed. But at least in my view Bill Clinton was rewarded by voters in 1996 for the fact that he did compromise with Republicans after 1994 and he did get things done. Like that led to a budget surplus. It may be him believing his own bullshit, but the night welfare reform passed Dick Morris said in his book he called President Clinton and said, "Congratulations, Mr. President. You just won re-election." Of course, if that is true, it was because Clinton triangulated in a way that drove liberal Democrats crazy. Regardless, Lichtman predicted Clinton would win in 1996 despite any major policy victory, in part because he was the incumbent. When Gore then ran in 2000, again with no major Democratic policy achievement and also not being an incumbent, he lost. So, again, it's a counterfactual. But you can argue that if Clinton had been able to get something significant and bipartisan done between 1996 and 2000, it would have been enough for Gore to win in 2000. I love my Lichtman. So one final point that again mostly reinforces you are correct. Lichtman has predicted 11 elections in advance, starting in 1984, if we include his likely prediction that Harris will win. In only 4 of those elections did he give the party in power the "major policy change" key: Reagan in 1984, Obama in 2012, Trump in 2020, and now Harris in 2024. (Meaning, they could all run on a policy accomplishment made in the last four years.) Again, do we really believe there was no major policy change in the US from 1984 to 2012? Not sure. But if we go with Lichtman, the only one of those 4 major policy changes that were bipartisan in any way was Reaganomics after his 1980 landslide win. And that required a Republican Senate majority and being able to muscle down on Southern Democrats in the House whose constituents voted for Reagan, or supported his tax cut ideas. So it speaks to your point. Harris will not win in a landslide. And if she wants to do something like raise taxes on the rich to help the middle class, or reform SCOTUS, or Voting Rights, DC statehood, or anything else on your list, she's unlikely to be able to pressure any Republicans to agree, like Reagan could. So she should get it while she can.
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60. If we are talking a functional majority. But 57 Democrats, technically. Add two Independents that voted Democratic and Arlen Spector who flipped to Democratic, providing a brief 60 vote supermajority. Recall that Ted Kennedy's death and his replacement by Scott Brown almost derailed Obamacare, because of the 60 votes. You are being slightly unfair to Obama. A friend of mine who was a CEO had met most Presidents. Either because of the work he did, or because he happened to live in Iowa where it is all very retail - or was. More than anyone else I know, he's the guy I view as a true Independent (voted for Bush, Bush, Obama, Romney, Clinton, Biden) and also an early warning system. By no later than March 2009 he was apoplectic that Obama had promised to bring people together, and unify. But he turned out to be just another partisan hack. We had many debates about that. But his perception that Obama promised to be a unifier and failed to deliver is a broadly shared verdict. So, yes. One way to look at it, 16 years later, is if Harris has 50 votes (with no Manchin or Sinema, plus Walz) and a House majority she should get rid of the filibuster and get anything she really wants as fast as she can. Then prepare for two things: America probably won't like it, and may react badly in 2026. And Republicans will do the same the first chance they get. There is something else about Obama you didn't mention, but should. He was the guy who said the "fever will break" after some election or another. Well, we're still waiting. Trump just took "the fever" and turned it into what about half of America sees as a plague. I don't think there is any getting around it, as long as it lasts. Steve Kornacki on MSNBC did an excellent factual take down of Walz yesterday. Specifically, about all the talk about how Walz maybe helps with red America. One small problem is there is absolutely no evidence of that in 2018 or 2022, when he was elected Guv. Walz ran up huge majorities in the Twin Cities, and got clobbered everywhere else. Including in his old Congressional district in southern Minnesota, which I know well since I went to college there. He's an excellent poster child. Since you have two versions of the same guy. When he was a moderate US Rep with an A rating from the NRA, he did just fine in a slightly right of center House district. But as a progressive Guv, he lost the love. The lesson I take from that is that if Kamala Harris really wanted to send a signal, she might have chosen Mark Kelly. Better still, choose Joe Manchin. That matters in terms of your point. If Democrats want to win 60 Senate seats, the facts suggest they will have to moderate. That may be happening, organically. I liked Cori Bush. But she was objectively extreme, just like JD Vance is. Now Cori Bush is history. So the Democrats are cleaning house in a way Republicans are not. And I say that as a progressive who wants someone like Claire McCaskill to be able to win in a state like Missouri again. One would hope, in theory, that voters in Missouri would not think that it is radical to have paid family leave. Or have fewer White children that are hungry or poor. But, again, there is no evidence that actually helped make Tim Walz more lovable in rural Minnesota. If anything, it just helped brand him as one of those radicals. I actually think the best model we have is Joe Biden. And, had he been a decade younger, he would have run for re-election and won. He won some big compromise victories on things that really matter. So whether Harris has 48 Senate votes or 50, that is probably the best model for now. Walz can only help, especially in winning House seats and working them for votes if there is a Democratic majority. Two long terms ideas of what solves the problem you are identifying. Which is THE problem. My theory is that Obama may eventually prove to be right. If Trump loses in 2024, one can at least hope that Republicans will finally realize he led them to a dead end. I mean, it does seem so simple. He won once, barely. And we got tax cuts for the rich, a close call on making health care much worse, a 30 % murder spike, and repealing Roe v. Wade. That's not an agenda most Americans long for more of. Then he lost in 2018, 2020, 2022, and presumably 2024. And Trump himself is just old and senile. Is there really no hope for the Grand Old Party? My oldest nephew has a theory that is a bit more brutal, but perhaps true. Old people just have to "age out". Demographically, he is correct. He is Gen X. And the MAGA crowd, who he finds distasteful even though he is slightly right of center, is heavily focused on Baby Boomers and Gen X. If the only people who voted were Millennials and Zoomers, Harris/Walz would win in a landslide. So as Trump and his cohort age, my nephew is probably right. But it's going to take a long time. The good news is I never bought Trump's bullshit that somehow young voters and Blacks and Hispanics are falling in love with MAGA. Some Blacks and Hispanics, like Tim Scott and Marco Rubio, are conservative. And always have been, And now they are at home in a Republican Party that used to exclude them. I'm happy for them. But it is also now clear that Kamala Harris will crush Trump among voters who are younger and not White. So I think eventually the problem will solve itself. And in the meantime Democrats should be able to at least cobble together narrow majorities and compromise victories.
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As much as I would hope to be the oldest and wisest whore in the room, we still have to deal with political whores like Sean Trende and Allan Lichtman. Lichtman, having just won some senior Olympics race in Maryland, is for sure older and wiser. Kamala Harris' Puzzling VP Pick by Sean Trende Sean probably answered his own question. If Rule #1 is do no harm, Walz probably objectively made the most sense. There were strong voices inside the Democratic Party that did not particularly like Kelly (unions) or Shapiro (the Gaza crowd, and John Fetterman, loudly). Walz just continues the love fest. Just on a tactical campaign level, I can't wait for Walz or Harris to ask Trump or the Couch Potato what is so right about a 30 % murder spike under Trump, and a 20 % murder decline under Biden/Harris. I mean, if the issue is violent protests in 2020 - THAT HAPPENED WHILE TRUMP FROZE AS PRESIDENT AND PRESIDED OVER A REIGN OF MURDER, BLOOD, GUNS, AND HATE - wouldn't Trump and his do nothing but get rich Couch Potato be happy that the prosecutor helped reverse the gushing flow of murder and blood and horror and hate that Trump brought to America, lovingly and with joy, in 2020? Coach Walz will say it almost that bluntly. If Trump wants to talk about what happened in the Summer of 2020, I don't think people liked him much then. What am I forgetting? Meanwhile, reading Sean Trende reminded me of Lichtman. Who is ranting about how whoever Trump or Harris picked as Veep makes absolutely no difference to the final outcome. Which I am 95 % sure will mean Lichtman predicts later this month (after the DNC) that Harris will win. Lichtman also keeps saying that where the Veep does matter greatly is something Sean Trende doesn't even mention: that, somehow, elections have something to do with actual governing. Who knew? What a weird idea! 😉 Now that it has had a day to sink in, and I saw The Philadelphia Story on the big screen last night, I think Walz makes even more sense from a governing perspective. The thing Shapiro, Kelly, and Walz all had is a record of being White men who were able to reach across the aisle. And a belief in "One Minnesota" or "One America" where we are all neighbors. Trump will say that's bullshit. But with any of the three that just makes it clear that Trump is for divide and conquer, which is all he's good at. Except he still loses. Poor mess of a weird thing. What Walz has that is unique to him is both an actual relationship with senior and powerful House members he served with, and a track record that is a model for some of what Harris plans to do. What is it about supporting parents with paid family leave or having kids not be hungry or poor that is radical? And when they say that's not the issue, the issue is that you are for crime and chaos, that leads us right back to Trump's very unique 30 % murder spike. Not to mention all the blood and horror and hate he spewed in Summer 2020. We know Walz knows how to say, "Come on!" This is going to be fun. Trende doesn't seem to think governing matters. Lichtman does, which is why he is likely about to predict Harris and Walz will win. I'm lovin it.
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Well, two positive things I can say. One, I am neither as old nor as senile as Trump. Two, when I first read a book on male escorting, written by a male escort, I was 40 years old. And the book said that with plastic surgery a male escort can have a shelf life as old as 40 years these days. Since I had just started escorting, that did not seem to bode well for me. Anyways, I had a great run that lasted well over a decade, and I left escorting on my own terms. On what was Bill's site, I had close to 100 perfect reviews. And I made some very nice money, and some very nice friends. Some of my friends, who are not particularly young, still escort and still enjoy it. Others hire escorts, but not me, and still enjoy it. So if this is a tender and sensitive age joke - making fun of people's age on a site like this is of course ALWAYS funny and tasteful ha ha ha ROTFL - I don't think the joke's on me. 😉
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Two points related to this: why Harris picked Walz, and perceptions of Israel among Democrats. My takeaway is the main reason Harris picked Walz and not Shapiro came down to one word: "loyal". To add a second word, it is proven loyalty. Democratic House members said we know Walz and he is a team player. We like this guy. He can help us win. Democratic Governors said Walz is a team player. We like this guy. One article pointed out that Walz was one of the few Governors who defended Biden when he was under fire. So the Biden people think of him as "loyal". It's interesting that the two people who rose to replace Biden - Harris and Walz - were conspicuous about defending Biden until the moment that Biden gave up. For that matter, I'll add [name any prominent Black Democrat, like Rev. Al] to the list. For days on TV when Biden was being publicly called on to resign Black talking heads like Rev. Al and Bakari Sellers and Van Jones defended him on MSNBC and CNN. Probably knowing that when Biden fell Harris would benefit. It was a shrewd play, I think. The other interesting and arguably unfair thing that was present but somewhat muted yesterday was the perception, it seems like among some Jews based on online chatter, that Shapiro was perhaps the victim of anti-Semitism. Walz, who seems to view Israel the same, and has a picture of him embracing Netanyahu floating around online, was not tagged with being in the middle of that whole thing. Shapiro was. The quote I read several times from some anonymous source in the Harris campaign was that no one wanted to open the door to a debate about Gaza. It's toxic, and divisive. Let's talk about kids, paid family leave, and health care instead. Again, arguably that is unfair to Shapiro. But it speaks to a real and deep conflict in the Democratic coalition. Older Democrats, like me, are Clintonians who grew up seeing Israel as this scrappy underdog that was surrounded by people out to get them, with The Holocaust always looming in the background. Younger Democrats see Bibi The Butcher, genocide, and a fanatical right wing country that keeps electing a butcher who seemingly loves to kill Muslim women and children. Period. "What part of genocide do you not get?" is how many of them feel. The polls make that clear. And those young people are going to be the majority some day. I'm not defending either position. My point is that Democratic Jews are going to have an increasingly hard time wanting to thread the needle of being for Israel but against what the government of Israel keeps doing. Because the people of Israel elect them to do it. And there's nothing anti-Semitic about it. Chuck Schumer is not anti-Semitic. Nor is Bernie Sanders. And they are the ones calling it out publicly. It's a problem that is clearly going to fester as long as Israel keeps doing what it is doing. Even if what they are doing is a response to a bloodbath against Israeli Jews. I also love how the Republicans suggest maybe Kamala Harris is anti-Semitic. What faith is her hubby? And how many Republican Jewish Senators are there ? (Answer: none. There are nine Jewish Democratic Senators.) The point about American Muslims makes sense. They may not like what Biden says or does. But the alternative is what they would likely see as their worst nightmare: just go ahead and blow the fuck out of Gaza
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And Vox took the truth and ran with it. Asking a logical enough question: why would it be so easy to think such rumors are true? J.D. Vance didn’t have sex with a couch. But he’s still extremely weird. The rumors were easy to believe, especially when the potential VP has such terrible ideas about sex. There was another great 2Way chat with Mark Halperin tonight in which a theory came up about Tim Walz. Alex Castellanos, the Republican political hack I have cited in posts, said some candidates are Teflon and some are Velcro. He suggested that, watching Walz at that rally tonight, Walz may have a coat of Teflon. He hunts, he fishes, he smiles, he laughs, he hugs kids who hug him when he signs a bill giving them free lunches. Meanwhile, JD says women without kids suck. And women with abusive husbands need to man up. Too early to tell. But Walz may be the Teflon candidate, and JD may be the Velcro one.
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https://www.facebook.com/GovTimWalz/videos/393678466713436 When he was in the US House, Walz represented the district I went to college in. Northfield, MN is a liberal enclave with two liberal arts colleges in an otherwise red part of Minnesota. I was a student there when the only other Democrat House member elected in a century, Tim Penny, flipped the seat. Much like Walz did, by knowing how to play to the center and connect to rural and small town America. I remember back in my college days going door knocking for my college professor Paul Wellstone in the first campaign he lost, for State Auditor. A conversation I will never forget is knocking on the door of some Gay guy with AIDS in an apartment building. This was the 1980's, back when AIDS was a death sentence. He basically said something like, "I could give a shit about your candidate. I am Gay man and I have AIDS and no politician gives a shit about me." So I told him Paul supported LGBTQ rights, blah blah blah, which he eventually did as a US Senator. Walz is already being attacked as a "radical", basically because he stands up to bullies. This shows how much has changed. And how much political leadership makes a difference. Nancy Pelosi and the Ryan White Act. Joe Biden and being one of the political leaders in the forefront on same sex marriage, who made it the law of the land on his watch. I'm a Californian who went to college in Minnesota. I could not be more proud of these two leaders, and how they have our back. And speaking of rural and small town America: Why Pelosi and other House Dems were privately pushing Walz I was leaning to the idea that Shapiro was probably the best choice. Because it would have made a statement about moderation. And it would have helped Pennsylvania. But now that I know about him, Walz seems like a bigger bet with a potentially bigger reward. Especially if I imagine Walz can help candidates in swing states and swing House districts, which they apparently think he can. He knows the House, he is respected in the House, and a Harris/Walz team - if elected with a Democratic House and Senate - could get a lot of shit done. This will be an epic and good fight for the future.
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In terms of these labels like "radical" and "socialist", I think we're already getting a glimpse of how shallow and ineffective they will ultimately be. Just like they were with Obama. If you watched the Kamala/Tim show in Philly, you heard this already. I think this may have been Walz's best applause line at the rally: How radical is that? 😉 One thing Walz said three times, in complimenting Harris, is "joy". He talked about how Harris fights for what she believes in with joy. As does he. I think he is showing off his well earned emotional intelligence. I feel the same way about both of them. And I think that conveys itself to people, and will help them. Team Raping Felon will of course give it their best shot, as Mr. Rich Felon and Mr. Silicon Valley Hypocrite argue that they stand for Middle America and its values. But I think it is all bullshit. Even Ohio voters knew when, when Hillbilly Bullshitter dramatically underperformed just about every other Ohio Republican. And I am increasingly confident the bullshit and lies and hate and filth and sex scandals and tax cuts to billionaires and bullying and cruelty and meanness and just abhorrent weird creepy shit that is everything Trump stands for is going to be flushed down the toilet, where shit belongs to go. There is a lot to be said for joy!
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Why Tim Walz Was the Guy Another great article on why Walz was picked. There's another phrase that has been used by a few smart political operatives that makes sense: "work horse versus show horse." Instead of gradually learning Walz is a socialist, to the degree that people even give a shit about him what they will probably learn is that, like Shapiro, he cares about getting shit done. It matters that Walz heads the Democratic Governors Association. And that he flipped a rural centrist Congressional seat blue. And that he actually could get popular left-of-center laws passed involving things like education, health care, family leave, abortion rights. This is what a party that is NOT focused on a personality, but instead is focused on winning and governing, actually does.
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Of course, to comment on my own post, why am I not surprised Newt Gingrich does not agree? Hope apparently does spring eternal with Gingrich. He was a real somebody in 1994! So he can keep calling Harris and Walz "radical" all he wants. Walz won by 54 % in 2018 and 53 % of the vote in 2018. How radical is that? By comparison, the former Democratic Guv Mark Dayton, who was a scion of a rich liberal Minnesota family, won by 44 % in 2010 and 50 % in 2018. Minnesota has been accurately described as Iowa, with the Twin Cities - which is what makes it blue. So Walz has been battle tested. And survey says he is not radical. This does set the tone for the election, I think. Democrats have to do one extremely difficult thing. They have to open their mouths and tell voters what they believe from the bottom of their hearts. Meanwhile, Trump and Vance have a very easy job. They just have to lie, rape, steal, and break laws. Lies are not lies. It is Donald Trump being regal and explaining the truth to us morons. Rape is not rape. It is Donald Trump being kind enough to fuck America. Stealing is not stealing. It is just Donald Trump letting Mike Pence have fun being hung for once. And Republicans who break laws are just standing up for law and order. I will happily vote in a way that I really never have before. It will be like flushing the toilet of all this nasty hate, shit, and bile that Trump brought to America. It's time to clean out the asshole.
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Hope slings eternal? 😉
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I think Tim Walz just solved the label problem. What a monster! I'm lovin it!
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Or not. I love the pick! I'm of course the guy that communicates in longs blocks of boring text. I'm no Tim Walz. But it sounds like part of the reason he was picked is he lit up the internet as the old White guy calling Republicans "weird". And roasting how they are mean bullies who love tax cuts for billionaires and punish and scapegoat queers and have nots. Jab those hypocrites, rapists, and felons with your pitchfork, Tim! And how could you NOT love this guy? I think his appeal is he's the anti-JD Vance and anti-Donald Trump. He did things that are real, and that people really care about. He is a real person who speaks like a real person. I think what stands out to me is that I am very proud of my party, the Democrats. First, they got the old White guy, Biden, out of the way. He needed to go. Second, they let the dynamic Black woman rise. The base of the party loves it, and Harris is leading Trump by 2 points in the 538 average! Third, this decision process speaks well for Harris. She got lots of heavy hitters to vet, think through, and interview the finalists, then met with them. If the reporting is correct, Shapiro had reservations about giving up his job, which he is basically pretty new at. Walz has been Guv for six years, has a great record, is an excellent communicator, and does have the Biden appeal to old White guys. And probably is the most progressive on lots of issues. And the state and style are very Midwest: Wisconsin, Michigan, western Pennsylvania. If there is a downside to this it is the path of least resistance choice. Since no one disliked him the way some people disliked Shapiro (Jewish/Israel) or Kelly (not strong enough on unions). But frankly that's okay. Because Walz could be POTUS, and so he should stand for the ideals and values of his party. He does. I'm lovin it!
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I'm saying she's a liberal, based on Senate career ranking. And she is perceived as a liberal by voters. If we want to use Senate career rankings, Obama was the 7th most liberal Senator during his time, whereas Harris was the 3rd most liberal. Or, in short, they were both pretty liberal. Clinton, Kerry, and especially Sanders were ranked as slightly more liberal than either Obama or Harris. So if we are just going by the facts, you can have a debate about whether any of those people are "too liberal" to win. Obama obviously did win, twice. Clinton came close. So I don't think Harris is too liberal to win. I'll add this. She is already making space between herself and "progressives" on issues like fracking. That makes sense to me. Stu Stevens, who was Romney's politico, made a good point. You can argue based on 2020 that Harris is a failed politician at the national level. But Stevens argues the opposite. She won every race she was actually on the ballot for. And she has deftly played her cards and been vague and obtuse when needed to get in position to be Veep, and now POTUS candidate. So her blurring of lines, much like Obama did, may be helpful. She can own being a liberal, which is better than being a flip flopper, but also be vague when needed and let people think what they want. Meanwhile, "San Francisco radical" is the phrase Newt Gingrich coined recently, and Alex Castellano is throwing around, too. The idea is basically that she can be portrayed as so "radical" that she'll lose badly. Gingrich is the one who specifically said this will be like McGovern/Nixon in 1972. I think he is full of himself. By this point in 1972 McGovern was already losing in a landslide in polls. So I think the better comparisons are Obama, Clinton, and Kerry. That includes one win, one landslide win, one popular vote win that was the narrowest of electoral college losses, and one loss. Unrelated but related, RFK has melted down in the polls. So that matters due to Allan Lichtman's keys. Unless something changes - namely, a recession - he will very likely predict Harris will win after the convention this month. According to Lichtman, she has three of his keys against her for sure: not incumbent, 2022 midterm losses, not charismatic. It sounds from his YouTube weekly talks like Lichtman will turn both foreign policy keys against the incumbent party. That's five keys against Harris. And his system says it takes six keys against you to lose. One other interesting fact. The only times Lichtman has been wrong, both predicting in advance since 1984 and predicting retrospectively since the Civil War in his book, is when a candidate with five keys against him - meaning he supposed to win - actually lost. Lichtman judged Grover Cleveland to have five keys against him in 1888. Meaning he should have won. And he did win the popular vote, 48.6 % to 47.8 %. But he lost the electoral college to Benjamin Harrison. Sound familiar? Same thing in 2000. Al Gore had five keys against him, and Lichtman did predict in advance he would win. Again, he did win the popular vote. But he lost Florida. Sound familiar? So I think that is the worry. All of this suggests it will be a close race. And it could end like either 2020 (Harris squeaks by in the electoral college) or 2016 (Harris wins the popular vote but narrowly loses the electoral college). On this point of "liberal" or "radical", some moderate Republican politico in Pennsylvania who is on TV a lot is also saying that even if she picks Shapiro he just thinks Harris is too liberal to win the state. Especially due to fracking. Which also hurt Clinton in 2016, of course.
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I've been watching a lot of Mark Halperin's daily 2 Way conversations, which is exceptionally good political reporting and rapport by the Game Change co-author. Some of the Republican regulars keep insisting that when voters find out about how liberal Harris is, she'll tank. Newt Gingrich, always a flame thrower, got out early in predicting this sets Democrats up for a McGovern style loss. Since Gingrich likes to talk history, one would guess he'd know that by August 1972 the polls showed McGovern was in fact headed to a landslide defeat. The polls now show Harris tied. Whatever! Harder to dismiss is Alex Castellanos, a more moderate GOP type who usually doesn't make such far out predictions. But so far he's holding tight on the idea that Kamala is like Wile E Coyote, running on air. Look out below! If that's true, voters don't know it yet. The polls and momentum and money make that clear. Gingrich is calling Harris a "San Francisco radical" and is banking on the fact that her record will indict her. Funny to think about Harris being indicted. 😉 One of the first factoids that was used is that Harris is more liberal than Bernie Sanders. Three points on that. Sanders denied it. And according to GovTrack, the source used, Sanders is and was the most liberal Senator of all. But the third and most interesting point is that Harris's liberal voting record is almost exactly the same as this guy named Barack Hussein Obama. Remember him? President Barack Obama Voting Record Vice President Kamala Harris Voting Record They don't give either a numerical score. But if you look at that chart as having ten lines with 5 meaning center and 0 meaning most liberal, Obama and Harris would both be right at about 0.7. That's liberal, for sure. Obama had eight Senators more liberal than him, including Clinton, Kerry, Sanders, and Sherrod Brown - who manages to keep getting elected in now red Ohio. Harris had three Senators more liberal than her, including Sanders. (Brown moved from about 0.5 to about 1.5, probably to keep getting elected in Ohio, I'd imagine.) Needless to say, the national voting history of Obama, Clinton, and even Kerry and Sanders does not suggest landslide losses. Kerry is the only one of the four who actually lost the national popular vote. The polls in Summer 2016 said Sanders would have beat Trump had he been nominated. Kamala Harris Is Unburdened And Has A Prime Opportunity To Define Herself That article is the most substantive one I have seen so far on voter perceptions of Kamala Harris. And trust in her, versus Trump. Sounds like Harris is being helped by excitement, not ignorance. Voters know where she stands on abortion, health care, climate, democracy, and rights. No wonder women, young voters, and non-White voters are flocking to her. Harris actually does a little bit better than Trump on those issues. Which may be why she is tied, and in place to open a lead soon. The attack ads will no doubt find Harris's vulnerabilities and pounce on them. But the idea that she will be branded as a radical doesn't seem likely - anymore than it led Obama, Clinton, Kerry, or Sanders to landslide losses. Harris now has the momentum of Obama in 2008. He won, right? 😉 And then there is this: Sure, Obama had "Dreams Of My Father" and that whole birtherism mystique. But a book on crime written by a prosecutor seems more down to earth, and moderate. Harris is more like Road Runner than Wile E Coyote, I think. She will likely outpace the Failing Felon, who polls say voters believe is old and lacks mental acuity. Poor loser!
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It's just a bad time for genocide, isn't it? 😒 A month ago, Genocide Man Russia and Genocide Man Israel could look forward to The Raping Lying Felon being elected POTUS, so they could proceed with their genocides. Now Harris is giving genocide a run for its money. And they say she isn't tough? Putin will not alter course. Being the macho murdering he man he is, he may think it will be easier to deal with a woman. Bibi is a different matter. President Harris has a Jewish husband, and is likely to have a Jewish Veep. That will make it easier for her to push the Genocide Jew. Not to be confused with "Genocide Joe", of course, who is basically history. Specifically, it will strengthen Biden's hands in negotiating with Bibi the Butcher, since Bibi will have to calculate that things may get worse for the genocidal asshole under Harris. That said, Israel - unlike America - truly seems to be going further and further right. Bibi is now tied or slightly leading in the polls again. And he's using US opposition to his butchering to stir up right wing support. Same thing Genocide Vlad does in Russia, the soon to be failed and disinetgrating state. So Bibi the Butcher, like Genocide Vlad, may just do whatever he wants.
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And was her first "Black" job the one where she was dangerously radical - practically murderous as well as very low IQ - and she freed raping Black hordes who murdered and were the nastiest people you ever saw? Or was that the first "Black" job where she mercilessly threw gentle loving kind Black men in jail because she is a mean ruthless bitch who will do anything for power? In addition to using every racist trope they can think of and being really stupid, the Trump campaign seems confused about which Kamala Harris they are trying to beat. They are flip flopping on social media. On the one hand she's the radical who doesn't believe in borders or jail. On the other hand she is the not Black woman who Black man should not vote for because she will throw their ass in jail. None of it is moving the needle. Except to prove, yet again, that Trump goes to stupid and racist when he is losing. Meanwhile, there's this. She's probably the only person to run for POTUS who has written a book about being smart on crime and safety. Which is bad luck for Trump, seeing as how he is the first racist felon rapist to run for POTUS.