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2020: The Two Year Long Election


Cartmann99

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From Jennifer Rubin: "Buttigieg doesn’t raise his voice. Thank goodness."

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We have heard over and over again that voters ready to kick a president or a president’s party out of the White House want the opposite of the president they want to boot out. Presidential candidate Andrew Yang jokes that he is the opposite of President Trump: an Asian who is good at math.

South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg has a good claim to be Trump’s opposite. Trump found a way out of the draft; Buttigieg volunteered to serve. Buttigieg is married to his one and only spouse, Chasten; Trump has had three wives, apparently more than one adulterous relationship and a list of more than a dozen accusers who say he sexually assaulted or harassed them. Buttigieg speaks multiple languages; Trump’s English grows noticeably more incoherent with the passage of time. Buttigieg is 37 and looks even younger; Trump is 73 and looks older.

In Iowa, voters say Buttigieg is “intelligent,” “humble” and decent. He’s optimistic and sunny. Yup, Trump’s opposite. One report recorded voters’ reactions:

“I really like Mayor Pete,” said Lisa West, as she packed up her lawn chair after the Fairfield [Iowa] event. “He just stands for the values that we have, which is people first, not money, getting corporate interests out of government — all the basics. We need to take our country back. As a people, we need to be more active in the political structure, and he sounds like somebody who knows that.”

Buttigieg’s resistance to dwelling on Trump appealed to West and her husband, John.

“You got to restrain yourself from giving him the attention that he is seeking,” said John West, of Fairfield. “There’s no question we got to get him out of there, but if you put too much focus on the negative and not the positive and the policies and plans that you’re going to do, it’s not going to work.”

In some ways, Buttigieg is also the opposite of many of his opponents, and therefore stands out, a real advantage in a field that tops 20 people. Buttigieg is composed and speaks in quiet but firm tones. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) yells for no apparent reason. Former vice president Joe Biden is extraordinarily wary (even for a politician) of admitting errors. Buttigieg took ownership of the police shooting in his city. Most of the other contenders seem allergic to talking about foreign policy or talk in sound bites. He gave a nuanced, thoughtful speech on foreign policy.

The more we see Trump unravel — blaming everyone and everything from Google to Federal Reserve Chair Jerome H. Powell — for a looming recession precipitated by a tariff war (nearly universally cited by real economists as a factor in slowing down the economy), the more I suspect voters are getting sick of the act. The wild accusations, the ugly tweets and the word-salad explanations are tiresome, and easily recognizable as clumsy efforts to avoid responsibility.

It’s for that reason that Sen. Michael F. Bennet (D-Colo.) got a few plaudits when he suggested that if we elected the quiet, wonkish Coloradan we could forget about politics for a two-week stretch and not wonder about anything bad happening to the country.

Likewise, Buttigieg’s promise to “turn the channel” offers the hope of getting Trump’s voice and face off our screens. It’s not unreasonable to pine for someone who tries to get the facts right and feels bad when he messes up. Whatever ideological differences the non-cultists in the Trump era have, we’re bound by a desire for normalcy, calm, reason and respect. If nothing else, it has reminded many Democrats and just about all the NeverTrumpers I talk to that we share not only a concern for the rule of law, a free press, an independent judiciary and a values-based foreign policy, but also a yearning, as George H.W. Bush said (perhaps the last president to enjoy broad, bipartisan affection), for a kinder and gentler America.

If that’s the dominant mood, then Buttigieg, Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and other less rhetorically high-flying candidates may enjoy a resurgence of support. There are a lot of voters out there who’d like to make “Iowa Nice” into “America Nice.”

 

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Does anyone know how the chances are that Mark Kelly kicks McSally out in AZ? Personally I have a soft spot for him because retired astronaut and he's a strong advocate for gun regulation. 

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On 8/18/2019 at 3:35 PM, RosyDaisy said:

Democrats get your shit together. Everyone except the top 3 candidates should withdraw from the race now rather than later. You need to support each other and talk about issues without mud slinging. Personally, I prefer a Sanders/Warren or vice versa. But, any Democrat will do.

I get what you're saying, but the top 3 right now would be Biden, Sanders, and Warren, and I think there are more top tier candidates who still have room to rise and influence the conversation for the better (I'm a Buttigieg fan but Harris should certainly stay in the race too). I think Biden and Sanders' support will fall a little as more and more people realize who some of the other figures in the race are. Though I will vote blue no matter who, I do not want it to be Biden or Sanders and I think the current debate rules are currently doing a good job of de facto winnowing the field. 

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Not sure where to put this. My apologies if I missed it in another thread. 

  https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/elections/faithless-elector-court-ruling-just-changed-how-we-pick-our-n1044961

Tag line: The decision could give a single elector the power to decide the outcome of a presidential election — if the popular vote results in an apparent Electoral College tie.

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2 hours ago, WiseGirl said:

Not sure where to put this. My apologies if I missed it in another thread. 

  https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/elections/faithless-elector-court-ruling-just-changed-how-we-pick-our-n1044961

Tag line: The decision could give a single elector the power to decide the outcome of a presidential election — if the popular vote results in an apparent Electoral College tie.

Wait a minute- I didn't think the movie Swing Vote was supposed to really happen, although, in this case, in the electoral college.

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