• davelA
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    6 minutes ago

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHnJp0oyOxs

    Well we’re living here in Allentown
    And they’re closing all the factories down
    Out in Bethlehem, they’re killing time
    Filling out forms, standing in line

    Well we’re waiting here in Allentown
    For the Pennsylvania we never found
    For the promises our teachers gave
    If we worked hard, if we behaved

    Every child had a pretty good shot
    To get at least as far as their old man got
    But something happened on the way to that place
    They threw an American flag in our face

    Well I’m living here in Allentown
    And it’s hard to keep a good man down
    But I won’t be getting up today

    That was over forty years ago, and ever since Bill Clinton’s triangulation, the Democratic party has only further abandoned the working class. Gore, Obama, Hillary Clinton, Biden, and Harris are all of this unbroken neoliberal Clintonian dynasty.

  • UsernameHere@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    I don’t buy this. In Nebraska there was an election between an independent union leader and a career politician. The union leader lost.

    The consensus seems to be that people that voted democrat in 2020 voted republican this time because they experienced inflation under Biden that think it was his fault.

    • njm1314@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      People don’t vote for numbers they vote for stories. They vote for their feelings. Do they feel like they’re in a better place today and they were the four years ago. Do they feel like they’re better off financially. Do they feel like the economy is stronger. And the answer for most of us is no of course not. So regardless of the reasons for that they’re going to vote that way. That’s just a harsh reality of elections and economics.

      • SoManyChoices@lemmy.sdf.org
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        21 minutes ago

        Four years ago you couldn’t buy toilet paper. Are some people worse off than under Trump 1.0? Of course. Is more than half the country worse off? Fuck no. People have goldfish memories and Dems did a terrible job touting their wins that did make Americans better off under Biden.

      • UsernameHere@lemmy.world
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        1 hour ago

        I agree. Which is why I don’t believe the narrative that Harris lost because she didn’t go far enough left. Even though I wish our politicians would. I think too many voters don’t feel the same way.

          • UsernameHere@lemmy.world
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            57 minutes ago

            Biden was calling out price gouging throughout his presidency.

            Harris said she would make billionaires pay their fair share and they literally bought votes for Trump.

            Scapegoating democrats for going up against the billionaire class seems like exactly what the billionaires would want.

        • njm1314@lemmy.world
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          1 hour ago

          I don’t know if it’s that she didn’t go far enough left in so much as she didn’t go and far enough left on certain issues. As odd as it might seem there is a populist movement in the Republican Party. They do appeal to the working class for some odd reason. Their policy decisions don’t always reflect it but their rhetoric oftentimes does. After all a number of Republican states passed fairly economically Progressive ballot measures.

          • UsernameHere@lemmy.world
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            59 minutes ago

            It seems to me that she had a hard fight to win by saying she would tax billionaire their fair share. I’m sure they were all working together to pull strings against her.

            • njm1314@lemmy.world
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              30 minutes ago

              Frankly I didn’t see nearly as much of that as I expected. I don’t think she was pushing all that hard to be honest with you. However I was speaking more to labor issues. To healthcare. She was certainly to the right of Joe Biden on all three of those issues I’d say. Lord knows she was far to the right on him when it comes to Consumer Protections issues. Her cow-towing to her billionaire donors and preparing to push Lena Khan out show that pretty strongly I think. Most voters heard her and smelled a rat.

  • BananaTrifleViolin@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    This is a good article calling out the true problems with the campaign.

    I keep seeing people blame voters, but the only group to blame is the Democratic Party. Parties exist to serve and represent voters, not the other way round.

    The Dems failed to address the genuine concerns of their traditional base - primarily the economy - and that left the race open for the Repulicans.

    The Democrat message on the economy seemed to basically be “things are not as bad as you think and we’ve already done what was needed”. Instead they focused on abortion and a threat to democracy as the main issues of the election.

    Yet for many lower income households, they rent and have been hit doubly hard by inflation. Home owners have been shielded from the rent portion of the cost of living crisis, and experienced less hardship. The dems did not seem to understand that and effectively left the field open for the republicans.

    Looking at the numbers, Trump hasn’t significantly grown the Republican vote or if so, it’s a relatively small increase. Yet the Democrat vote is way down on where it was in 2020.

    There are lots of other failures on the part of the Dems - allowing Biden to run essentially unchallenged, the leadership aggressively pushing back against concerns about his suitability, Biden waiting until very late to step back and Harris being coronated and having to use Bidens existing campaign. Harris was a decent enough candidate but she was given an impossible task thanks to an out of touch and poorly led party.

    The Dems lost this election, rather than Trump winning it.

    • SoManyChoices@lemmy.sdf.org
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      17 minutes ago

      If you choose not to decide (or vote) you still have made a choice. Biden voters who refused to vote Harris chose to let the rest of the country decide for them. They will be worse off for it. Hopefully they learn from this but I doubt it.

    • FatCrab@lemmy.one
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      3 hours ago

      No, Trump won it. He got votes and those votes were from people who cast them. Yes, democratic party has problems, but the far bigger problem is that enough people voted for Trump when given other options.

      • davelA
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        2 hours ago

        Trump won the election because he won the election is a tautological argument. It’s not false, but it elucidates nothing.

      • iAmTheTot@sh.itjust.works
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        3 hours ago

        It’s wild to me how many excuses people are willing to make for the tens of millions of Americans that actively choose Trump.