I think you're in denial as to the full extent of it, superficial reasons for it, ulterior motives behind it, and the implications of it for the party moving forward.I'm not being ambiguous. I'm well aware that the Democratic Party is self-sabotaging and irrational. I'm not sure why you're hammering on that point as if I'm denying it.
As I said, this started with Reagan and reached a fever pitch with Clinton. The post-Clinton party dynamic was never sustainable to begin with, being focused on wedge issues and negative partisanship. 2016 was the year the chickens came home to roost, and rather than acknowledge past mistakes and those who made them to reform the party, the very same people who are the source of the Democratic party's woes took it upon themselves to declare war on their own left flank rather than try to come to accord.The shifting of the Democratic Party to the economic right is not a new phenomenon: it's been shifting, sometimes gradually and sometimes less so (and with occasional minor backsliding) for about half a century. And that covers a great number of elections.
I don't need to talk about "critical points" that "will" happen. For Republicans it happened ten years ago; for Democrats, four. Republican self-immolation and rejuvenation, and Democratic complacency, led to the biggest electoral gains since Eisenhower: a thousand legislative seats across state and federal government, 13 governorships to become the majority party on the state level in a redistricting year, the Presidency, and the Supreme Court. That's not hypothetical, that's history.
And again, you need to look at post-2016 demographic research. Let me give you a starting point.And there's no "old hat reasoning" at play: nothing I've said relies on these old assumptions and conventional demographic wisdom. What I've been saying is that the self-described "moderates" do not automatically vote Democrat as you seem to believe, and that progressives do not form a viable electoral coalition on their own.
The Moderate Middle Is A Myth
Graphics by Ella Koeze Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: Independent voters will decide the election. Or better yet: Moderate voters will decide the elec…
fivethirtyeight.com
An Unsettling New Theory: There Is No Swing Voter
Rachel Bitecofer’s radical new theory predicted the midterms spot-on. So who’s going to win 2020?
www.politico.com
Hell, look at pre-2016 demography.
No one’s less moderate than moderates
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