Among the many theories propounded by pundits with 20/20 hindsight vision: Kamala Harris lost because she was too “woke.” People just got tired of identity politics; they rejected “defund the police,” “protect transgender people,” and every other slogan that made straight white people feel unappreciated.
But they were wrong. Kamala seldom mentioned her race and gender. She always spoke of her great love for this country. She never said “defund the police.” And she avoided the transgender issue. It was the Republicans who kept bringing up issues that made Democrats appear out of touch. Her campaign was stubbornly centrist, even to the point of campaigning with Liz Cheney.
Zeeshan Aleem of MSNBC makes the same argument. I should carry copies of it and hand it out whenever someone claims that Kamala lost because she was too “woke.” (I confessed my personal view that Putin hacked the election. Maybe it’s just my deeply ingrained belief that women would not have voted in large numbers for a man who boasts about taking away an important right.)
He writes:
The Democratic Party is in crisis. In three contests against Donald Trump, it lost one, narrowly squeaked by in another, then lost more decisively than the first time. In Trump’s latest victory, over 90% of counties across the country shifted in his direction. Now people across the left are scrambling to diagnose what ails the party and offer a prescription.
A group of center-left commentators and party operatives have converged on a diagnosis that could be summarized as “the wokes lost it.” This set argues that social justice activists who focus on oppression tied to identity had too much influence on the Democratic Party and helped torpedo Harris’ campaign. Working class people were alienated, they contend, by issues such as defund the police, trans rights, reparations for Black Americans, abolishing Immigration and Customs Enforcement, campus “cancel culture,” diversity, equity and inclusion programs, and the ever-evolving academic-sounding jargon that surrounds these issues. The solution, many of them imply or explicitly say, is for Democrats to become more socially conservative and stop opening their arms to “identity politics” or social justice advocacy.
This narrative is seductive for many veterans in the Democratic establishment, whose instincts have long been to mimic the right when in trouble. But this narrative is mostly wrong. It rests on a fictional account of the past, a handful of indefensible analytic leaps, and easily debunked scapegoating. A more careful reading of the facts helps illustrate how the party would benefit from a wholesale reorientation toward economic populism.
“The wokes lost it” narrative relies on describing a fantastical presidential campaign that never existed. Harris did not run on defund the police or identity politics or any niche social justice issue. Harris brandished her track record as a former tough-on-crime prosecutor. She virtually never mentioned her racial or gender identity. On the hot-button issue of immigration, Harris promised to enact some of the most restrictive immigration and border policies in decades. She also distanced herself from the trans community by refusing to take a clear position when asked if transgender Americans should have access to gender-affirming care in this country. Harris ran mostly on a mix of positive vibes, an anodyne “opportunity economy” program, a pledge to maintain the international order and a promise to defend democracy, civil rights and normalcy. Harris’ efforts came after Biden ran a defensive and visionless campaign that banked almost entirely on fear of another Trump term and never came close to approaching anything “woke”-coded. In sum, there was no evidence of niche activists controlling the party….
There is a way for Democrats to both tap into universalism and into widespread frustration with the economy: aggressive economic populism. Tap into people’s class identity through class-first left-wing politics that pits working Americans of all backgrounds against billionaires, corporations and the 1%. Under this paradigm, bigotry of all kinds is framed as a tool by which elites distract and divide Americans from their economic exploitation. Conversely, anti-bigotry should be viewed as a war cry of freedom-lovers and a weapon for keeping the citizenry’s focus on class war. Economic proposals would not just be about incremental improvement but bringing down costs and reimagining freedom through the offerings of social democracy and cracking down on corporate greed. This would of course cause a bit of discomfort for an actuallyinfluential interest group that somehow the “the wokes lost it” crowd always forgets to mention: economic elites. But it would unite and excite the people and pave the path for a life of greater freedom in every sphere of life.
Democrats ought to stop whining about social movements, which are a fact of political life. They also ought to stop implying that movements and subcultures possess power that they don’t, while ignoring how wealthy donors shape the party’s economic agenda. The reality is political leaders and parties will always have to manage unruly coalitions and stake out positions that are in dialogue with but distinct from interest groups. Trump fairly successfully distanced himself from the national abortion ban advocates in the Republican coalition, and he successfully deceived many into thinking he would protect Social Security over the instincts of fiscal hawks in his party. Democrats, as the ostensible party of social change and egalitarianism, will always bear this burden of engaging movements even more heavily than the GOP. But a party must have an identity and that identity should be grounded in an economic sensibility. It’s time for Dems to wake up and build a real economic centerpiece for a party that has failed to establish a clear sense of self since the Reagan era.

Voting is emotional, more akin to rooting for a team than parsing economic data, and, for too many of us a Black woman with a Jewish husband activates the racist DNA, in a sports bar with 20 somethings, I asked why they’re voting for Trump, “He’s tough, doesn’t take any shit, we won’t get pushed around, … “. nothing substantive, an emotional response.
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Making decisions is mostly based on emotion. Not just voting. For everything most people do.
“According to research, a significant majority of human decisions, often cited as around 90% or more, are based on emotions rather than purely on facts, with many studies suggesting that even seemingly logical choices are heavily influenced by underlying feelings.” SOURCE: Google’s AI Overview with lots of reputable links.
Democrats didn’t do anything wrong … unless it was ignoring the repeated lies from the MAGA extremists spreading BS. For decades, I repeat, decades, the rational people haven’t come up with a defense that works against repeated lies that appeal to fear.
“According to many experts, fear is widely considered the most powerful emotion, as it can have a significant impact on behavior and decision-making, often triggering the “fight or flight” response in humans; marketers frequently leverage this emotion in their campaigns.” — AI Overview again with those many reputable links for rational people to refer to.
The other side [I’m not comfortable calling them republicans anymore when they are Christian Natalinis MAGA fascists, better known historically as the Ku Klux Klan, and they are not conservatives.] was better at appealing to emotions by repeating the same lies, overwhelming facts across the board, with help from Putin, too.
The campaign against WOKE is also brilliant because it targets educated people who rely on facts to help guide their decisions as the enemy responsible for all the fear based on those repeated lies.
Get rid of WOKE people and they will feel safer for a while, until another target is needed to stoke more fear.
Once the educated WOKE people have been eliminated, who will be next?
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You left out 1/2 South Asian. A truly winning combination in this Nation.
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“Pushed around” by whom? CBK
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Trump has done a great job of standing up to our allies. He won’t let the UK, or France, or Germany, or Canada push is around.
But when faced with the dictator of Russia or China or North Korea, he crumbles.
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Diane: I am constantly choking on the constant barrage of innuendo that goes for absolute truth in Trumplandia. CBK
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MAGA=Make America Hate Again
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I’ve made this comment several times and I’ll make it again. It’s true that Harris avoided identity politics in her campaign. That was smart. But the argument that voters who associated wokeness with Harris were duped misses two big things.
First, people have memories. Or at least the internet does. People were consistently reminded of Harris’s 2019 campaign, and plenty of other clips from around that time (e.g., her saying everybody needs to be woke, her talking about the difference between equity and equality as if she were reading off an activist script, etc.). Harris came to the VP role with a reputation that was largely formed during the Trump administration and the reputation wasn’t erased by her 2024 campaign.
Second, there is a larger reputations and branding issue that goes way beyond the specific things a candidate says or are included in the official party platform. Voters are largely ignorant when it comes to policy. But party reputation is affected by the entire ecosystem of political discourse in our culture. Trans activists or anti-policing activists, for example, do not speak for President Biden or VP Harris, but when people see them speaking, they have an understanding that they are Democrats (if not further left) and are definitely not Republicans. When people hear local politicians repeating those talking points, they have a good sense of where on the political spectrum the speaker is coming from. Montages of Hollywood actors singing “Imagine” or talking about BLM. Regular everyday people who repeat the social justice views held by progressive, college educated people. All of this has some incremental impacts on the party reputation of the Democratic Party. (The same is true of Republicans, whose party reputation has taken horrendous hits during the last 12 years.).
To again use a quote from a Thomas Edsall column from this week:
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You are absolutely correct!…But I doubt that you will change any minds on this site.
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LisaM,
Did you see the photo posted by Teaching Economist? It was a photo of a trans man (born female) who now has a beard and a rugged physique.
You didn’t answer the question: would you feel comfortable seeing this rugged guy in the ladies’ restroom?
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It’s Patricio Manuel and I feel sorry that a woman felt the need to have a mastectomy and go on Testosterone (does anyone remember the “roid rage”) in order to compete in a sport or that being a butch type lesbian(?) (regressive stereotyping by clothing choice)is looked down upon. Unfortunately, she will have to up her dosage to keep competitive and her manly looks which will likely disqualify her from boxing in any category. Just the fact that being on Testosterone has long term side effects that will likely lead to her having to have a hysterectomy, high cholesterol, heart disease, bone loss and mental health issues. She is a woman and doesn’t have a penis….so yes, she can use my bathroom.
There are transvestites and there are transexuals (very few) and no one is born in the wrong body and sex is NOT assigned at birth and sex cannot be changed. Yes, there are people with DSD (again……VERY few!).No one can change sex….they have plastic surgery and take hormones to simulate the opposite sex.
This just proves flerp!’s point. The educated are so educated that they fail to see how uneducated they are in certain areas. But keep your echo chamber churning!
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Is the lesson for Democrats, then, to abandon their core commitments to social justice and to compete with Republicans for the police brutality vote?
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You’ve loaded up your phrasing, but where warranted, yes, the Dems absolutely should change their messaging and positions on social justice issues where their recent messages and positions have been way out of sync with mainstream opinion.
No, the Dems shouldn’t be in favor of police brutality. But they never should have leaned so strongly into BLM, going back to Michael Brown in 2014/2015 and onward. They should not be so pro-diversity that they are (accurately) seen as the party whose DOJ will go after police departments, fire departments, and school districts for disparate impacts arising from basic competency tests. They should have retreated on affirmative action a long time ago. They should have long ago branded themselves on cultural stuff like sexism and racism as the party that believes discrimination is unacceptable and will be rooted out aggressively, but based on the principle that people should be judged individually on their merit, and not based on the principle that differences in outcomes are unacceptable. Dems should have coupled a strong pro-legal immigration stance with a strong anti-illegal immigration stance many many years ago. It was good that Biden ultimately took the migrant situation seriously but it was too late. Dems should not have kissed the ass of trans activists and embraced the idea that being trans is just like being gay—i.e. a perfectly normal thing that relates to a person’s “true gender identity” and the civil rights issue of the 21st century. Across the board they need to have an approach to cultural stuff that is more in tune with the median voter and less in tune with the median Harvard grad.
Just one man’s view of things.
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Thank you, Diane.
Dems WON when they supported BLM in the summer of 2020 (despite many of these same naysayers saying they would not). Trump won conservative Republican votes in 2016 when Ted Cruz specifically cited Trump’s trans-friendly opposition to NC’s bathroom bill and tried to make “wokeness” a negative.
People are twisting themselves into knots to make the issue about what THEY personally found most unappealing in the Dems campaign, without any credible evidence that was the issue. Even voters didn’t cite trans issues.
A good example of this is NYT conservative Bret Stephens’ column on November 9, 2020, lecturing to Republicans about how Trump lost because he was “unrepentantly immoral”, and because conservatives did not check Trump’s immorality.
The Republicans and Trump DOUBLED DOWN on exactly what Bret Stephens told them was the reason they lost, and they won in 2024.
(That Nov. 9, 2020 column is worth reading as an example of the Republican party doing exactly the opposite of what a Republican NYT columnist said they had to do and winning.)
As much as I despise Bret Stephens, and as wrong as he was, his advice to Republicans in 2020 reflected his own disgust with Trump’s immorality and the Republicans enabling that immorality (at least at that time.)
Just like the advice I see from certain Dems – whether it is wrong – reflects that TO THEM, the Dems being “too woke” (i.e. standing up for the vulnerable people being targeted by far right bullies and haters) is something that they dislike, something that bothers them, and they project the fact that it bothers them so much on other voters. It reveals a lot about the values of the people giving that advice.
Dems don’t lost because they are “too woke”, just like Republicans don’t win because they refuse to embrace racism and white supremacy and hate and spurning the Constitution.
Events prove it’s just the opposite. But the one commonality is that when the liberal media amplifies the false narratives that positively reflect on Republicans and falsely present the Dem as someone who can’t be trusted who is offering nothing to regular people, the Dems lose.
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Trump offered nothing to regular people other than hate and racism and smears of a better qualified woman. No plan to keep any of his promises other than the inhumane project of rounding up, seating and deporting 11 million people.
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What things that are under the control of Dem politicians and the Dem party can be done to ensure this doesn’t keep happening?
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I agree with DEI programs in principle in a diverse society. I believe it is harder for people of color and handicapped people to get fair treatment in the job market due to discrimination. That is why we see so many minorities working in government and for non-profits. I support anything we can do to give people that often get overlooked access to opportunity, and I support DEI in education as well. I don’t see it as a “radical idea.”
chance a positive policy.
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Diane,
I agree that Trump offered nothing to regular people other than hate and racism and smears of a better qualified woman.
But even if Trump DID offer something, Trump had a long history of being untrustworthy that wasn’t even disputed! He conned people into attending his fake university. He conned people into believing that he had Obama’s fake birth certificate. He cheated his subcontractors, drove his companies into bankruptcy, and the only campaign promise he kept was to give a tax cut that benefited billionaires and drove the national debt sky high. Trump incited an insurrection.
But all that didn’t matter. Imagine a world where even our side justifies attacks on Kamala based on supposedly sounding “too woke” 6 years ago and misses what is right in front of their faces — Trump did far, far worse over and over again and it didn’t matter.
It’s the media. And we’ve all been propagandized by the mainstream media’s amplification of false right wing narratives to some extent. But many of us try to check the reality of those false messages we have been bombarded with. Diane, one reason I like your blog so much is that you do that all the time. You don’t just repeat talking points. You DEFEND what you are saying with credible arguments, whereas too often I see the other side resort to attacks if they are challenged instead of making a convincing argument defending their views.
Too many people just repeat that Dems are too woke, but if they are actually asked to elaborate on what that means, they can’t. Probably they think they are victims of woke culture for even being expected to have to support the right wing talking points they so quickly repeat.
And the Trump rise has done a lot to make that kind of discourse now acceptable.
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NYC public school parent
https://www.cepr.net/did-bad-economic-reporting-doom-harris/
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Joel,
Thank you. It’s nice to read an article that actually reports on the obvious!
“…the media didn’t remind people that the inflation was due to the pandemic in the same way they always reminded people that the withdrawal from Afghanistan was “disastrous.”
That particular line really resonated with me, since it speaks to the other favorite false narrative that the NYT’s right wing infested reporting turned into “truth” (because “polls show people believe it’s true!”): that Biden’s withdrawal from Afghanistan was an unmitigated nightmare of incompetence and failure, because Biden didn’t pursue the perfect (but super secret) Republican withdrawal plan that would have resulted in peace and happiness for all. (the NYT reporters apparently believe that super secret plan is locked up with the other super secret Republican plan to replace Obamacare with a cheap but Grade AAA plan that covers anything and everything for free!)
And I am glad that the article also addressed the other claim that NYT defenders often make: That the NYT is not just rabidly anti-Trump but it wouldn’t matter if it was pro-Trump because NYT readers aren’t the ones voting for Trump.
“Most people are not getting their news from the New York Times or Washington Post, but the information presented in these outlets does spread to other news outlets and to social media. When people hear the bad economy story in the elite media they help its spread elsewhere.
It’s true that most regular consumers of these outlets supported Harris, but that misses the point. I may root for my favorite football team and insist that they are the greatest, even though I thought the quarterback had thrown 20 interceptions last year. I would be making a much better case, if I had known that the quarterback had actually not thrown any interceptions.
This is largely the story with the elite media outlets and their coverage of the economy. They helped to advance a bad economy story that was at odds with reality. Given the importance of perceptions of the economy in people’s voting, it would have been all but impossible for Harris to overcome this negative economy story, and she didn’t. “
It’s not a coincidence that “polls showed” people believed that the economy was bad under Biden, that the Afghanistan withdrawal was an unmitigated disaster and that Biden was a cognitive vegetable unable to perform the duties of his office – even though none of that was true. All just happened to be favorite right wing narratives the NYT legitimized and amplified, along with HRC being corrupt, Gore and Kerry being untrustworthy.
But somehow the NYT could not get around to doing the same for true narratives, like Trump is corrupt, is cognitively impaired, or that it was the Republicans, not Biden, who were blocking attempts to give economic help to middle and working class Americans, and despite that blockade, Biden was able to get some good things done.
I know we are going to hear the NYT reporting on how great the economy is for the next 4 years. Inflation, unemployment, national debt never are “newsworthy” when reporting on the amazing Republican economy. Neither are any people suffering under a Republican economy – those folks were invisible from 2017-2020, and they will be invisible from 2024-2028.
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NYC public school parent
“Republican economy – those folks were invisible from 2017-2020, and they will be invisible from 2024-2028.”
That is also a problem with the Democrats. Had Trump been in office every Republican would have shouted from the roof tops and every Church Pew preaching ” Prosperity Gospel ” that this was the Greatest economy in History.
Starting in fall 2021 Democrats ran from Biden like he had the plague. Unable to make the simple statements that most Americans are doing very well . That the lower paid workers have finally seen the bulk of wage increases. But that there are people always left out and we won’t rest until we stop Republicans from blocking reforms to pull them up.
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Not buying it. These are the same pundits that loudly declared after Jan. 6 that Trump was finished. These people? The economy? What happened two years ago post Covid when everyone was out of work and inflation was at 8%? The Blue Wave. How soon everyone forgot about that. The Economy is codespeak and a convenient excuse for “I can’t vote for a woman”. Or a black woman. While the Dems are falling all over themselves analyzing exit polling data, did it ever occur to them that voters lie, even to themselves to make themselves feel better about their choice? Textbook cognitive dissonance. People have memories? No, they don’t. What they conveniently “remember” is whatever toxic waste Elon Musk spews at them via Twitter. Low-information voters are low-information by choice, protected in their cozy silo by a non-stop brain-washing torrent of Fox Newstertainment.
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Exactamundo !!!
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Oakland Mom,
I agree. Kamala lost because 10 million people who voted for Biden did not vote.
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It’s closer to six or seven million now. Harris now has 74.4 million votes.
I’m also not sure that the gap between Biden’s vote total and Harris vote total can be fairly attributed to people not showing up to vote. A lot of people who voted for Biden in 2020 may have voted for Trump this time around. Trump is currently at 77 million votes, up from 74.2 million in 2020.
Why would anyone who voted for Biden in 2020 vote for Trump in 2024? Search me. Most people are not very smart. Many people are very stupid. Many people will vote against any incumbent when they don’t like how things are going. Search me.
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Polls today show that 2/3 of Trump voters thought the economy was terrible before the election. Now Trump voters think the economy is very good.
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I think the same polls show Harris voters also reversing their views on the economy. Part of it may reflect voters’ views on where the economy will be heading under new stewardship. I know my feelings about the future of the economy today are less positive than they were a few weeks ago. Presumably people who think the economy stank on November 5 but believe Trump will fix everything are now feeling more positive about things.
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Anectodally, often Trump voters were found to be contrarians in their views and they don’t deviate from that tribe. There MO was to play the game “I’m not touching you” just to get a reaction out of people. Voting for Trump was just another version of that game. Explains why no matter how nasty Trump became in public, the more “support” he got. Watch how we can get this dirtbag criminal elected no matter what he says or does. Ha ha, isn’t that funny, look at us! Stupid, dangerous, and childish, but it explain a lot.
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Diane, I too go along with your feeling of Russian interference and that will come out when there are people in the media who investigate it and expose it. How is it though, that a candidate likenTrump can get any votes at all. All he does is appeal to emotional issues while Democrats appeal to the rational. He keeps them simple and constantly repeats them regardless of their absurdity, no matter how false. Simplify and repeat is the name of the Republican strategy and it worked. Even though people saw fuel prices crashing, they perceive that they are rising, that the Biden administration is causing egg prices to rise, not bird flu, that immigrants are eating their pets, etc. Democrats in the meantime deal in details and there are a lot of them. The Press expects them but ignore the Republican lack of specific, easily intimidated. At the basis of Fascism is the belief that human beings are motivated by emotion and they exploit it, any lie will be believed if people hear it over and over again. Democrats need to stop complicating issues in campaigns, avoid the theoretical detail. Why can’t the “simplify and repeat” tactic work with the truth even better than with falsehoods? >
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BPollock,
I share your sense of outrage.
Historians rated Trump the worst president in American history. His bungling of COVID cost many lives. Even when he did the right thing–like spending heavily to get a vaccine–he sided with the conspiracy theorists who refused to take it. I believe he and his family were vaccinated but they kept it secret.
Trump ran a campaign of smearing Kamala Harris as “the most extreme radical” in history. He blamed her for “open borders,” which she does not favor. He spent over $200 million demonizing trans people and making Kamala the reason for their existence.
The anti-Trump ads were truthful.
Trump will inherit an economy that Europeans say is “the envy of the world.”
Trump will take credit for the new jobs created by Biden’s infrastructure bill and his CHIPS Act.
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I refuse to give him credit for MRNA Vaccines. He spent money to secure a supply of the Vaccine . Yet had no plans for mass distribution.
The basic prototype of the Vaccine was available back in January or February 2020 days perhaps hours after the Chinese released the genetic sequence of SARS-CoV-2 Virus. That was 15 years of Federal funding. Before Pharma took it on in about 2013 . Waiting for more Federal funding to test against other viruses.
Pfizer had approval for testing in the EU (first) and the US weeks before the announcement of Warp (ed ) Speed.
Pfizer took no US money for the testing and development. They did take a guarantee from the US to buy a quantity of the Vaccine . (before it had been tested. ) In exchange for a guarantee to give priority to supply Vaccine to the US.
The Virus provided the Warp Speed of testing . The Pandemic itself created both the volunteers and the infections to test the vaccine at a fast pace.
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Dr. Ravitch,
As you suggested, I looked up “Spoonamore” and came across an entry in Snopes. I also voted for Kamela Harris and was disappointed in the election result. Unfortunately, it looks like people just didn’t show up for Harris in the same numbers they did for Biden in 2020. As a country, we are decades behind other countries (e.g. the UK, Israel, and Pakistan) when it comes to electing highly qualified women for our highest elected office.
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Joe,
Thanks for checking with Snopes.
I found it hard to believe that most voters preferred a charlatan, serial liar and convicted felon to a highly qualified and experienced woman.
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It seems to me that the more plausible reason why fewer people showed up is because Republicans have spent enormous effort to disenfranchise as many likely Dem voters as possible.
It would be nice to see some more comprehensive reporting about how supposedly voting increased so much in certain Republican areas of Pennsylvania, but declined significantly in Democratic areas.
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Democrats should adopt “economic populism,” but probably will not unless they can politically unify the party. The only way to achieve economic populism is through having enough political power to pass legislation that gets the money out of politics. Otherwise, both parities will continue to work for billionaires and corporations, accept the money, and do their bidding. The House just passed bill 219-184 which will allow the Treasury Dept. to go after non-profits it deems “terror groups.” It is shocking that several Democrats voted for this bill, which when it becomes a law, will be a dangerous tool in the hands of the Trump administration. This is an anti-freedom of speech bill that may be used against non-profits that dare to criticize the actions of the Trump administration. Democrats should not be playing ball with the radical right to pass a law that will undermine democracy. https://abc11.com/post/house-passes-bill-would-allow-treasury-target-nonprofits-deems-support-terrorism/15573203/
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What does economic populism mean? I have a friend who says this a lot and when I press him on it, it doesn’t sound that different from what the Dems are already doing.
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To me economic populism is an economy that will consider the interests of working families by writing laws that will not allow powerful corporations to take advantage of working people. Today the majority of the laws and tax codes favor the interests of the wealthy with teachers and fire fighters paying a higher tax rate than billionaires. Lobbyists work for the 1%, and they buy political will. The little people get some consideration from Democrats. However, if the economy were more balanced, the middle class would not be in decline while we have over 800 billionaires.
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Given what I have read of pointed attack ads and the enormous expenditure Musk and the Dark Money supporters spent in specifically chosen areas, I think we can accurately suggest that we cannot have democracy and unfettered spending. It favors the oligarchs. Who cares if Democrats are woke or not. It is the perception casual political conversation fixes on them that matters.
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Diane
This piece is one of many reasons I will always follow you. Your references to other people on your posts is wonderful. I read the full article you excerpted and found it highly insightful. Thanks for including additional perspectives in your posts. They are enjoyed by this reader. Greg
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Thanks, Greg. I post what interests me and hope readers agree.
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“a party that has failed to establish a clear sense of self…” — Yes, that’s the problem. Dems keep looking for new leaders to tell them what to think. That’s why Kamala in 2024 could backtrack from some of the more “woke” positions she took in her (to me, excellent) 2019 book and Dems seemed not to think much of it. But as she shifted views, she was defined by the Rs, and the Ds had nothing to point to, no stable governing board, no lasting statement of principles, to demonstrate their “clear sense of self.”
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But the Republican party does that all the time, and no repercussions. Trump was pro-choice, then rabidly anti-abortion, then suddenly not rabidly anti-abortion anymore. Are the Republicans now anti-free trade? Somehow, the lie that Republicans stick to their principles and Democrats can’t be trusted is a liberal media truth. If anything, the Democrats do stick to principles far more than the Republicans. But then again, I don’t see a huge difference between Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders, even if it’s possible to find differences in their policies. Biden supposedly was NOT progressive, and yet after 3 1/2 years, it was the progressives with the most principles (Bernie, AOC) who were the ones who most strongly supported Biden’s re-election. (And the neocons and corporate Dems who wanted Biden replaced.
Republicans do act in unison to pass tax cuts for the rich and to block progressive policy. But that is not at all what most of their voters think when they hear how the Republicans have “principles”, because the so-called liberal media likes to minimize the Republican qualities that the Republicans want to minimize and maximize the false right wing narratives that Dems have no principles at all.
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Yes, quite right! I think the big differences were: 1) Trump spoke (and speaks) for what the Rs believe in; as you say, that can change, but everyone knows who is the decider and proclaimer of R truths, however transactional. 2) The Rs were much better at the publicity game; Ds seemed incapable of giving an overview of their own principles and blasting R inconsistencies.
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The Republicans ran vicious smear ads about Kamala. The Dems never stooped as low as the Rs.
The Rs spent over $200 million for ads claiming that Kamala would impose transgenderism on innocent children. Of course, she never did. But they drilled that message in repeatedly, esp at sports events.
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I dunno, but I do think the Dems have a “clear sense of self.”
I would define it in terms of respect for the dignity of all Americans, a celebration of the diversity that defines us, efforts to ensure that everyone has good education, good healthcare, and a decent standard of living, belief in civil rights, belief in the right to vote and choose our leaders. Stuff like that, which is all connected.
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Figures on the left from AOC to Pelosi, from Schumer and Newsom to Sanders, Warren, et al., have fallen for the seductive swan song of racial discord, blood libel against European blood, and a bevy of imagined spoils to be liberated from their oppressive, capitalist kulak opponents, repressive in their retrenchment to God and arms.
The swing counties and general national populace have seen beyond the veil.
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The real problem with “wokeness” is its often a smokescreen for politicians to govern as centrist/right-wing while campaigning and virtue signaling as some kind of social justice warrior. Harris is a right-wing hack prosecutor Zionist hawk wall street shill. Being a “woman of color” doesn’t negate that. This is partly why people don’t like “woke”. Remember the Democrats lost more than Trump won, a lot of usual Dem voters refused to support an administration actively carrying out a genocide.
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Bryce,
Those Democrats who refused to support Kamala can sit back and enjoy the disruption, bigotry, and hatred that Trump has unleashed.
Pete Hegseth’s first phone call was to Netanyahu, reassuring him that the Trump administration would give him whatever he needs.
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