(fucking character limits)
Personal story time: I live and vote in Washington (the state). I was a Warren girl since November 9, 2016 as she was the progressive technocrat who clearly understood how the administrative state works and how it can be changed in ways that you almost never see in any politician of either party. I was going to vote for her even if she couldn't win so long as she was in the race. I didn't like Biden because he's of a political generation that doesn't seem up to the task in front of us and I didn't like Sanders because he and particularly his campaign and his supporters often engaged in the very authoritarian politics that gave Trump the White House, even if I generally agreed with their policies (Trump, Clinton I, and Nixon are prime examples of why personal traits are extremely important to the presidency, often more than policy and Sanders' often absolutist and non-collaborative approach to politics over 30+ years has been a massive red flag for me).
And then, about two weeks before, she dropped out. I spent the following week in an existential crisis trying to decide between two politicians I absolutely loathe (and my enthusiastic Sanders supporting husband really didn't help). I eventually ended up voting for Sanders, with a not unsubstantial screed attached to it about my deep concerns with the campaign's messaging and approach to politics that I ended up posting on Twitter and a form of which got posted in the Primary thread on the previous forums. But once I made the decision, it was a weight off my shoulders, one less thing I had to think about, just as COVID-19 was becoming the dominant force in all our lives. I had made my decision and I didn't need to grapple with it any more.
So selling the idea of Biden as settling, as giving voters of all stripes just a fucking break after four years of non-stop chaos out of the White House so they can coast and focus on the more immediate problems, is not a terrible pitch. It's not a good pitch, it's not a great pitch, but, honestly, there is definitely a subset of voters that just want it all to go back to normal and it's not a bad pitch if you're just targeting them.
Personal story time: I live and vote in Washington (the state). I was a Warren girl since November 9, 2016 as she was the progressive technocrat who clearly understood how the administrative state works and how it can be changed in ways that you almost never see in any politician of either party. I was going to vote for her even if she couldn't win so long as she was in the race. I didn't like Biden because he's of a political generation that doesn't seem up to the task in front of us and I didn't like Sanders because he and particularly his campaign and his supporters often engaged in the very authoritarian politics that gave Trump the White House, even if I generally agreed with their policies (Trump, Clinton I, and Nixon are prime examples of why personal traits are extremely important to the presidency, often more than policy and Sanders' often absolutist and non-collaborative approach to politics over 30+ years has been a massive red flag for me).
And then, about two weeks before, she dropped out. I spent the following week in an existential crisis trying to decide between two politicians I absolutely loathe (and my enthusiastic Sanders supporting husband really didn't help). I eventually ended up voting for Sanders, with a not unsubstantial screed attached to it about my deep concerns with the campaign's messaging and approach to politics that I ended up posting on Twitter and a form of which got posted in the Primary thread on the previous forums. But once I made the decision, it was a weight off my shoulders, one less thing I had to think about, just as COVID-19 was becoming the dominant force in all our lives. I had made my decision and I didn't need to grapple with it any more.
So selling the idea of Biden as settling, as giving voters of all stripes just a fucking break after four years of non-stop chaos out of the White House so they can coast and focus on the more immediate problems, is not a terrible pitch. It's not a good pitch, it's not a great pitch, but, honestly, there is definitely a subset of voters that just want it all to go back to normal and it's not a bad pitch if you're just targeting them.