Are the Dems on their last gasp of air?

RELH

Long Time Member
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Cornhusker here is a opinion piece from the N.Y. Times. You know that liberal news paper. Not faux news,

RELH
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Credit Chang W. Lee/The New York Times

Sifting through the wreckage of the 2016 election, Democratic pollsters, strategists and sympathetic academics have reached some unnerving conclusions.

What the autopsy reveals is that Democratic losses among working class voters were not limited to whites; that crucial constituencies within the party see its leaders as alien; and that unity over economic populism may not be able to turn back the conservative tide.

Equally disturbing, winning back former party loyalists who switched to Trump will be tough: these white voters? views on immigration and race are in direct conflict with fundamental Democratic tenets.

Some of these post-mortem conclusions are based on polling and focus groups conducted by the Democratic super PAC Priorities USA; others are drawn from a collection of 13 essays published by The American Prospect.


A consistent theme is that the focus on white defections from the Democratic Party masks an even more threatening trend: declining turnout among key elements of the so-called Rising American Electorate ? minority, young and single voters. Turnout among African-Americans, for example, fell by 7 points, from 66.6 percent in 2012 to 59.6 percent in 2016.

JT
June 8, 2017
This article is a terrific example of the Democrats biggest problem by far. They continually lose the forest for the trees. They dive into...


Priorities USA, in surveys and focus groups, studied ?drop off voters,? those who lean Democratic but failed to vote in either 2014 or 2016. By and large, these voters were members of the coalition that elected and re-elected Barack Obama:


people of color (41% African-American, Hispanic, or Asian), young (22% under the age of 29), female (60%), and unmarried (46% single, separated, widowed, or divorced).

Priorities found that drop off voters were distinctly lukewarm toward Hillary Clinton:


Just 30% describe themselves as very favorable to Clinton, far lower than the 72% who describe themselves as very favorable to Barack Obama.

Priorities also studied Obama-to-Trump voters. Estimates of the number of such voters range from 6.7 to 9.2 million, far more than enough to provide Trump his Electoral College victory. The counties that switched from Obama to Trump were heavily concentrated in the Midwest and other Rust Belt states.

To say that this constituency does not look favorably on the Democratic Party fails to capture the scope of their disenchantment.

The accompanying chart illustrates this discontent. A solid majority, 77 percent, of Obama-to-Trump voters think Trump?s economic policies will either favor ?all groups equally? (44) or the middle class (33). 21 percent said Trump would favor the wealthy.

In contrast, a plurality of these voters, 42 percent, said that Congressional Democrats would favor the wealthy, slightly ahead of Congressional Republicans at 40 percent.
 
Some more bad news for you liberals. Bashing Trump is not helping the Democratic party that is controlled by radical liberals.
RELH
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The Democratic Party Faces a Daunting Future

It won't be easy for the party to win back voters lost to the GOP.

Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

Democrats are locked out of power in Washington after losing the White House and failing to win back Congress. Hillary Clinton?s defeat has left the party without a unifying leader, and its hold on state legislatures has eroded significantly during President Obama?s time in office. But as bleak as current circumstances are for the Democratic party, the political landscape ahead may be even more challenging.


To start, Democrats must confront what looks like a punishing Senate map in 2018. The party that controls the White House tends to lose congressional seats in midterm elections, but it seems unlikely that Democrats will regain control of the Senate two years from now, much less the House of Representatives. Republicans significantly outnumber Democrats in the House, and only need to protect eight Senate seats in 2018 while Democrats must defend twenty-five seats.

Adding to the challenge, Democrats have senators up for reelection in states Donald Trump won by double digit margins such as North Dakota, West Virginia, Montana, Indiana and Missouri. Those aren't the only perilous races: Democratic incumbents also need to defend Senate seats in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Florida, states that voted for Obama in two presidential elections before switching to vote for Trump. ?There?s no question the map will be extremely difficult for Democrats,? said Brad Bannon, a Democratic strategist and president of Bannon Communications.
 
Thanks for the laugh tweedie Dee. You may not be worried, but some high ranking Democrats are so worried that they have their panties wadded up in their crack.

You will be the one that watches and will learn a lesson if you are smart enough to understand it.

RELH
 

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