Democratic (Party) Direction

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Yeah, I'm not sure about the salary numbers either -- plenty of households still struggle on an income of $60,000 a year.

the article suggested that the dividing line between affluent and poor was $50K per household, but for a married couple where both spouses work that only comes out to $25K per person, which isn't much once you figure in the high cost of living in america. plus, the article doesn't say who in these salary ranges pay for their own insurance and retirement funds.

stockholm cindy (winter version) (Jody Beth Rosen), Thursday, 19 January 2006 15:43 (twenty years ago)

2) No one actually believes the Dems when they say they'll "create jobs."

read: "we won't send your existing jobs to india."

stockholm cindy (winter version) (Jody Beth Rosen), Thursday, 19 January 2006 15:45 (twenty years ago)

Right, but won't they?

Abbadavid Berman (Hurting), Thursday, 19 January 2006 15:47 (twenty years ago)

it remains to be seen. let's get some dems in office and we'll find out.

stockholm cindy (winter version) (Jody Beth Rosen), Thursday, 19 January 2006 15:48 (twenty years ago)

Well, by not "send your existing jobs to India," I assume you mean "pass some kind of law to prevent companies from doing that." I'd be very surprised if that actually happened under Democrats.

Abbadavid Berman (Hurting), Thursday, 19 January 2006 15:50 (twenty years ago)

I assume you mean "pass some kind of law to prevent companies from doing that."

it could happen, provided the elected politicians don't have any vested corporate interests. and monkeys might fly etc.

stockholm cindy (winter version) (Jody Beth Rosen), Thursday, 19 January 2006 15:52 (twenty years ago)

I wonder how much of this affluence tipping point is skewed due to debtwarp. Take away the credit cards and there are a lot less Republicans, maybe?

Polysix Bad Battery (cprek), Thursday, 19 January 2006 15:53 (twenty years ago)

provided the elected politicians don't have any vested corporate interests

hahahahaHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
hohohohoHOHOHOHOHOHOOH
heheheheheHEHEHEHEEEHEHEEEHEEHAHAHAHAHAHASNORTSNORTSNORT!

sorry

Abbadavid Berman (Hurting), Thursday, 19 January 2006 15:54 (twenty years ago)

OK, this is really depressing! not re: Democrats, but the direction of the country as a whole.

dar1a g (daria g), Thursday, 19 January 2006 15:54 (twenty years ago)

Yeah, it is. I already had this vague fear that Americans were becoming these kind of paranoid, fat, lonely, nihilistic internet addicts who didn't talk to their neighbors.

Er wait, am I talking about Americans, or ILXors?

Abbadavid Berman (Hurting), Thursday, 19 January 2006 15:57 (twenty years ago)

I wonder how much of this affluence tipping point is skewed due to debtwarp. Take away the credit cards and there are a lot less Republicans, maybe?

it is funny how many "affluent" "property owners" are up to their necks in mortgages and high-interest loans. it's like that commercial where the rich white suburban lawnmower dude says "i'm in debt up to my eyeballs!"

stockholm cindy (winter version) (Jody Beth Rosen), Thursday, 19 January 2006 15:58 (twenty years ago)

The most important part of the article is where they reveal that by telling people that you're espousing Christian values because you're actually a Christian, they decide they agree with you, even if they they claim Christian faith as well but are only down with the first half of the Bible.

In the vast swaths of country between the megapolises there are people raising families of 5 on $57,000 a year and doing it relatively painlessly. And yeah, economic issues don't mean a goddamned thing to them.

TOMBOT, Thursday, 19 January 2006 16:00 (twenty years ago)

Plenty of families of five with $57,000 a year would still like a better health insurance system, you just can't win an election on that alone.

Abbadavid Berman (Hurting), Thursday, 19 January 2006 16:03 (twenty years ago)

hey, gabbneb, thanks for posting that article. it takes some time to think about....

patrick bateman (mickeygraft), Thursday, 19 January 2006 16:04 (twenty years ago)

"the American Environics team argued that the way to move voters on progressive issues is to sometimes set aside policies in favor of values"

Wow, what an incredible insight. Very novel!

"Environics found social values moving away from the authority end of the scale, with its emphasis on responsibility, duty, and tradition, to a more atomized, rage-filled outlook that values consumption, sexual permissiveness, and xenophobia. The trend was toward values in the individuality quadrant."

I've long thought that if the Democratic party would focus their message on individualism (and the resulting freedom it implies) that they might get somewhere.

Today’s average American “worker” is, in short, very much on his or her own -- too prosperous to be eligible for most government assistance programs and, because of job laws that date back three quarters of a century, unable to unionize. Such isolation and atomization have not led to a new wave of social solidarity and economic populism, however. Instead, these changes have bred resentment toward those who do have outside aid, whether from government or from unions, and an escalating ethos of every man for himself. Against that ethos, voters have increasingly flocked to politicians who recognize that the combination of relative affluence and relative isolation has created an opening for cultural appeals.

"Every man for himself" has been an American credo for hundreds of years. It's the essence of competition, of capitalism, of industry. There's a bridge somewhere between individualism and community--is the Democratic party forcing people over a bridge or seeking one?

American voters have taken shelter under the various wings of conservative traditionalism because there has been no one on the Democratic side in recent years to defend traditional, sensible middle-class values against the onslaught of the new nihilistic, macho, libertarian lawlessness unleashed by an economy that pits every man against his fellows.

Maybe they're taking shelter because they don't think it's an economy that's pitting man against man, it's shelter from the resulting culture war. What are "traditional, sensible middle-class values" anyway? The only hint we get from this article is that candidates should talk about religion and that will mitigate their stance on the death penalty (in Virginia.)

I am happy to see the wasteland that is the Democratic Party looking inward. The Republicans wouldn't dare stare into their own dark abyss.

don weiner (don weiner), Thursday, 19 January 2006 16:35 (twenty years ago)

It's amazing to me that people still think that Republicans are better at creating jobs. We've had a Republican president and congress for the past 5 years, and what have we got? A "jobless recovery". The brilliant Republican plan for creating jobs is to give more money back to the wealthy in the form of tax cuts. They are still trying to sell the country on a supply-side economics platform. Look at Gov. Pataki's new budget in NY that came out this week. 24% of the tax cuts going to those who make over $200K per year. His rationale: it will create jobs and boost the economy. I think people need to start to question if that strategy really helps to create the kind of jobs this country needs. The one thing that we can be sure it does is make the rich even richer. I mean maybe if you're a BMW dealer or you sell Piaget watches, then these tax cuts are good for your business, but the average middle class type of jobs are probably not getting much of a boost.

As for the "average American household" that makes $60K a year, it would have been more informative to see the median income, because the average is skewed upwards by those at the top of the scale - ie., less than 50% of Americans make the "average" income.

o. nate (onate), Thursday, 19 January 2006 16:37 (twenty years ago)

Campus recruiting is definitely needed. I went to Rutgers, nicknamed "Kremlin on the Raritan" by some for its supposedly left-leanings, yet the Dems had almost no visibility on campus. Granted I went to school during the Nader years, when being a Democrat seemed like the lamest possible option. But the Dems need to pull talent at that level -- that's where Republicans end up with people like Rove.

Abbadavid Berman (Hurting), Thursday, 19 January 2006 16:44 (twenty years ago)

Hmm, maybe "almost no visibility" is an exaggeration.

Abbadavid Berman (Hurting), Thursday, 19 January 2006 16:45 (twenty years ago)

Re: Lakoff, despite the writer's early dismissal of him, I don't think the article suggests anything significantly different that what he's been talking about for years.

Lakoff's extensively written about the need for Democratic candidates and progressives in general to start explicitly talking about values. Also, for campaigns to work at creating more of an overall narrative for a candidate than just a laundry list of policies. It's only his work on the framing aspect that's received attention lately, not so much his work on defining the values systems that right/left folks tend to hold(e.g. "maintaining authority" vs "care & responsibility").

He's offered up Schwarzneggar's campaign as an example of a guy who ran entirely on narrative & perceived identity, and expressively refused to offer up any policy suggestions. Most folks don't have the time/energy/inclination to get into policy specifics, but if they trust your guy, they're trust him to take care of the details.

As he says,

"The pollsters didn’t understand it because they thought that people voted on the issues and on self-interest. Well, sometimes they do. But mostly they vote on their identity -- on persons that they trust to be like them, or to be like people they admire"

which connects to that aspirational bit that the article mentions.

Jim Wallis has talked about several of these same issues over the last year as well, especially with on the whole "onslaught of the new nihilistic, macho, libertarian lawlessness unleashed by an economy that pits every man against his fellows" bit.

kingfish kuribo's shoe (kingfish 2.0), Thursday, 19 January 2006 16:52 (twenty years ago)

Also, re: the poorer folks freaking out more about culture, I don't see the article acknowledging that it was a deliberate multi-year campaign on the part of conservertive politicos to get folks so het up about cultural issues that they didn't worry so much about the economics. It's a causal thing similar to Ethan's thread yesterday about outrage used for political gain.

Wallis has written about conversations his group has had with Frank Luntz and some other Repub pollsters who were quite open about their m.o. being to get voters so caught in such intense issues that they vote against their economic interest.

As other folks have pointed out, the Republicans have been better that bring the polls to them(gay marriage is the biggest thing you care about) vs the Democrats moving to where the polls now seem to be(well i guess we need to move rightward on gay marriage).

kingfish kuribo's shoe (kingfish 2.0), Thursday, 19 January 2006 16:53 (twenty years ago)

interesting stuff. i don't really believe a lot of it, but i believe it's what people say, which still makes it significant. (i.e. a lot of people allegedly alarmed by the culture are also watching "desperate housewives" and "E!") it's not so much that the moral center is disgusted by the out-of-control culture, it's that a lot of people feel guilty about the very things in the culture that they participate in. massive moral cognitive dissonance, which the republicans exploit by convincing people that it's all someone else's fault (hollywood liberals, big-city elitists, gays gays gays). i'm not sure how the democrats can effectively tap into the same thing, and i sort of hate the idea that they need to, but maybe they don't have a choice.

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Thursday, 19 January 2006 17:01 (twenty years ago)

It's amazing to me that people still think that Republicans are better at creating jobs.

That's the thing, innit? If you build up an entire apparatus to both promote & reinforce certain narratives, people will believe them even if they have no basis in fact. George W. Bush is steadfast & strong, Kerry's a weak-willed flip-flopper, Republicans are all about a smaller government, supply-side economics works, etc

kingfish kuribo's shoe (kingfish 2.0), Thursday, 19 January 2006 17:06 (twenty years ago)

massive moral cognitive dissonance

oh fuck yeah this is a major bit of it, too. But since when did we start promoting self-reflection and critical thought?

kingfish kuribo's shoe (kingfish 2.0), Thursday, 19 January 2006 17:07 (twenty years ago)

hard to promote self-reflection and critical thought when you're fighting hand to hand and desperate for power.

don weiner (don weiner), Thursday, 19 January 2006 17:39 (twenty years ago)

Well, is John Edwards' "Robert Kennedyization" for real? Making corporate / lobbyist theft vs. poverty / economic struggle a moral issur for Church People hasn't worked so far.

For real despair, look at how Sen. Rodham Clinton is pandering to libs and righties on alternate days. "Congress run like a plantation," "I'd bomb Iran," etc.

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 19 January 2006 17:47 (twenty years ago)

very true. and I think that the number of folks who have to struggle is increasing.

xpost

kingfish kuribo's shoe (kingfish 2.0), Thursday, 19 January 2006 17:49 (twenty years ago)

The Democrats are fucked - a weak, demoralized, decentralized party with no unifying political will, no narrative, and no reliable bases of power. The only thing keeping them around is the fact that the two-party system is so heavily institutionalized and entrenched. They're coasting on past glories and slowly squandering away all of their political resources so that they can become the eternally emasculated "opposition" party.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 19 January 2006 17:54 (twenty years ago)

For real despair, look at how Sen. Rodham Clinton is pandering to libs and righties on alternate days. "Congress run like a plantation," "I'd bomb Iran," etc.

Please God, take Hilary quietly so she won't fuck up the party with a presidential campaign. WORST POSSIBLE CANDIDATE EVER.

elmo, patron saint of nausea (allocryptic), Thursday, 19 January 2006 17:54 (twenty years ago)

i think something that's still missing from a lot of this is an understanding that the current republican base was built from the ground up. it wasn't just a matter of coming up with the right code words or whatever, it was a long and systematic takeover of the party by various interest groups with overlapping or at least complementary agendas. the democrats at the moment seem disconnected from whatever constitutes their base, and even suspicious of it. it seems very top-down.

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Thursday, 19 January 2006 17:55 (twenty years ago)

Well, is John Edwards' "Robert Kennedyization" for real? Making corporate / lobbyist theft vs. poverty / economic struggle a moral issur for Church People hasn't worked so far.

Huh? He's only been going this stuff in the press for about two years. Second, there are plenty of other folks who have made the connection, but have gotten shit for coverage(not fitting in with "religious = rightwing conservative" media narrative?), even when they got arrested for it on the Capitol steps.


For real despair, look at how Sen. Rodham Clinton is pandering to libs and righties on alternate days. "Congress run like a plantation," "I'd bomb Iran," etc.

DLC-candidate-in-centrist-message shocker

kingfish kuribo's shoe (kingfish 2.0), Thursday, 19 January 2006 17:56 (twenty years ago)

i think something that's still missing from a lot of this is an understanding that the current republican base was built from the ground up. it wasn't just a matter of coming up with the right code words or whatever, it was a long and systematic takeover of the party by various interest groups with overlapping or at least complementary agendas.

very much otm. The change will come from the outside.

kingfish kuribo's shoe (kingfish 2.0), Thursday, 19 January 2006 17:58 (twenty years ago)

I think values do matter to a lot of voters, and I agree that Democrats are going to keep losing national elections until they figure out how to participate in the values conversation. This doesn't necessarily mean they have to move to the right on cultural issues - I think it does mean they need to convince voters that they are people with integrity and mainstream values. Monica-gate did a lot of damage. People like to savor the voyeuristic souffles cooked up in Hollywood, but they won't buy Hollywood people preaching to them about values. I think the Dems need to take an antagonistic stance towards some of the amoral trends in our society. Evincing a sense of decency and morality is not the same thing as being conservative - but as long as the voters think it is, the Dems are going to have a hard time winning elections.

o. nate (onate), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:00 (twenty years ago)

Clinton is the worst. I'd stay home before I'd vote for her. Jonathan Tasini, who is pretty great on a lot of issues, and is a pretty good speaker as well, is running against her in the primaries. I really hope he has an impact.

Re the direction of the party, past actions indicate the party will be quicker to line up behind someone with Clinton's politics as opposed to Tasini's. I'm not too hopeful when it comes to the future of the Dems.

TRG (TRG), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:02 (twenty years ago)

I think values do matter to a lot of voters, and I agree that Democrats are going to keep losing national elections until they figure out how to participate in the values conversation. This doesn't necessarily mean they have to move to the right on cultural issues - I think it does mean they need to convince voters that they are people with integrity and mainstream values. Monica-gate did a lot of damage. People like to savor the voyeuristic souffles cooked up in Hollywood, but they won't buy Hollywood people preaching to them about values. I think the Dems need to take an antagonistic stance towards some of the amoral trends in our society. Evincing a sense of decency and morality is not the same thing as being conservative - but as long as the voters think it is, the Dems are going to have a hard time winning elections

do you think it's necessary for dems to use the religious right's language ("morals" and "values")? would a less-loaded word like "ethics" skew too liberal?

stockholm cindy (winter version) (Jody Beth Rosen), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:03 (twenty years ago)

I think values do matter to a lot of voters

my question is, when do they not? unless a voter has completely descended into some cynical nihilism, of course.

i mean, yeah, "values" has come to signify a very specific set of values, which just goes to further show that democratic types do need to start talking about theirs.

kingfish kuribo's shoe (kingfish 2.0), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:05 (twenty years ago)

haha "what's the difference between morals, and ethics..."

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:06 (twenty years ago)

The population is consistently to the left of the Dems on so many issues. It'd be nice if the party caught up with everyone instead of worrying about being "soft" on terrorism or too pro-gay or whatever stupid thing Lakoff tells them they need to speak correctly about.

TRG (TRG), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:07 (twenty years ago)

would a less-loaded word like "ethics" skew too liberal?

I don't think it's necessarily too liberal, but it definitely lacks the primal grip of "values"

I mean, we all value things, right? We value ethics, for example, since honesty, fairness, & justice are core principles.

kingfish kuribo's shoe (kingfish 2.0), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:08 (twenty years ago)

do you think it's necessary for dems to use the religious right's language ("morals" and "values")? would a less-loaded word like "ethics" skew too liberal?

not necessarily, but quite possibly, and yes, respectively.

gabbneb (gabbneb), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:09 (twenty years ago)

The population is consistently to the left of the Dems on so many issues.

name one

gabbneb (gabbneb), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:09 (twenty years ago)

The war, for one

TRG (TRG), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:10 (twenty years ago)

elaborate

gabbneb (gabbneb), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:11 (twenty years ago)

do you think it's necessary for dems to use the religious right's language ("morals" and "values")? would a less-loaded word like "ethics" skew too liberal?

I don't think they need to use the words "morals" or "values" at all, but on the other hand I don't think "ethics" is necesarily what we're talking about either. "Ethics" to me connotes a branch of philosophy - ie., sterile debates which have little to do with people's daily lives. What they need to communicate is that they are decent people who voters would admire/like/agree with. If the voters think you're a good person, then they will gloss over lots of little policy details. If they don't think you're a good person, you can promise them the moon, but they won't believe you. Unfortunately, things like abortion and gay rights have become a short-hand for some voters on figuring out whether a candidate has values. That is probably a moral fundamentalist fringe whose votes the Dems will not be able to win and probably shouldn't even want to win. But they do need to capture the votes of more moderate voters who worry about rampant sex on TV and loose values among their childrens' friends.

o. nate (onate), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:11 (twenty years ago)

whoever said the problem is the Dems are disconnected from their base = OTM. All of the Democrats modern successes were built on the absorption of newly politicized portions of the population into the party. The labor movement, the civil rights movement in southern churches, the anti-Vietnam/post-Watergate reform movements. The Democrats did not build any of these bases, but they were sharp enough to integrate them and capitalize on their voting power. When was the last time the Democrats did this? 30 years ago?!? The leadership is totally lost, isolated - they don't get that they have to continually work to bring new demographics into the party, they're too scared of the Republicans' mastery of narrative and are afraid to make a move. Just look at how they've dealt with the anti-war movement on Iraq. Its fucking pathetic.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:12 (twenty years ago)

i think on the morals and values stuff, they oughta be out there all the time, using those words and defusing them. talk directly about how the gop likes to talk about "morals" and "values" but promotes policies that actually undermine them. take the karl rove approach of going straight at an opponent's alleged strength; swift-boat the gop on "morals and values".

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:14 (twenty years ago)

I don't buy the notion that America is just a bunch of crazed born-agains who will only listen to crazed right-wing moralizing speeches. Quick - how many evangelicals voted for Bush? Probably not as many as you think -about 66%. How does Feingold get elected by a landslide in a state that nearly goes to Bush? People are obviously interested in things that fall outside Rove's limited range of concerns.

TRG (TRG), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:15 (twenty years ago)

the left of the Dems

also, we should probably clarify who we're talking about here. "Dems" includes everybody from DLC types like Clinton & Biden to guys like Feingold...


Also, it seems like we're only limiting this to talking about a very specific range of national politics(akin to referring to states as "red" or "blue"), but this doesn't address the other aspects, like state elections(e.g. Montana electing a Democratic governor and Democratic State House & Senate)

kingfish kuribo's shoe (kingfish 2.0), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:16 (twenty years ago)

xpost on myth of the populace's rightward drift:

There was some major (spring?) 2005 poll all the progressive press was reporting on that found Americans favor Canada-style healthcare, taxing the rich, full domestic rights for gays, etc. Was it Quinnipiac? Can't find it...

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:16 (twenty years ago)

elaborate

It's pretty simple - the population is much more interested in pulling troops out asap. The Dem leadership is not - in fact, many still appear to be trying to out tough Republicans. You know things are odd when it's people like Murtha who are the furthest left on an issue like the war.

TRG (TRG), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:18 (twenty years ago)

How does Feingold get elected by a landslide in a state that nearly goes to Bush?

yeah, exactly. I think these things just get talked about in some simplified media narrative(again, "your state is RED," etc), and this narrowing just plays into the hands of guys like Rove who are pretty good at taking advantage of such limitations.

kingfish kuribo's shoe (kingfish 2.0), Thursday, 19 January 2006 18:20 (twenty years ago)

And the predicted sources are freaking out about her carefully modulated response on I/P.

boners for bombs (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 13:57 (one week ago)

haa

Mar 19, 2026

Rep. DeGette gets heated with a constituent pressing her on why she voted to send bombs to Israel:

"If this the only issue that you care about is this issue, then you should not vote for me"

https://bsky.app/profile/sunrisemvmt.bsky.social/post/3mhguzxtin52z

lag∞n, Wednesday, 1 July 2026 14:16 (one week ago)

From Axios: DeGette's loss in the Denver-based district came despite a deluge of outside spending in her favor from groups tied to the Democratic establishment and AIPAC.

I don't think "despite" is the right word there.

paper plans (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 14:18 (one week ago)

why do leftists hate donors so much

boners for bombs (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 14:21 (one week ago)

And naturally the two big arguments are already being deployed:

"This only works in a deep blue district - it's not replicable in rural Alabama." and "Now the Republicans are going to tar every Democrat with the DSA brush - they're going to call us all communists and this will cost us winnable seats in rural Alabama."

wipes chooser (unperson), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 14:22 (one week ago)

almost gotta feel bad for the dems with how fast the israel sitch shifted under their feet haha jk kicks rocks dummies

lag∞n, Wednesday, 1 July 2026 14:25 (one week ago)

it's really not fair how much rural voters in Alabama love Israel

rob, Wednesday, 1 July 2026 14:27 (one week ago)

No, we certainly can't risk unfair accusations against Alabama Democrats.

https://www.al.com/politics/2026/06/tommy-tuberville-blames-residency-hoax-on-doug-jones-being-taken-over-by-marxist-mind-virus.html

“In 2020, I ran against a liberal Doug Jones, but he has since fallen deep into the socialist, Marxist mind virus taking over half of our country,” Tuberville said.

“Let’s hear Doug talk about men competing in women’s sports, DEI instead of merit-based hiring, child mutilation in the name of ‘transgenderism’, expanded welfare instead of workforce training, or open borders and defunding the police - which he has consistently supported - putting Alabama families at risk. Alabama’s streets need to be safe.”

jaymc, Wednesday, 1 July 2026 14:36 (one week ago)

So we have an interesting situation locally. The Democratic candidate for county mayor is a decent-seeming guy with an organized labor background. Hasn't really been involved in local politics much, but allowed himself to basically be the sacrificial candidate so the party can say it's contesting the race. (The odds of any Democrat getting elected countywide here are low.) Well it turns out that five years ago he was a member of the Freedom Road Socialist Organization, a labor-adjacent group that explicitly describes itself as Marxist-Leninist.

Since this came out, the guy has kind of gone to ground and has not done a good job of talking about or explaining his involvement with the group. Which I find frustrating — and not only because he keeps saying he's going to call me to talk about it and hasn't yet done so. I think if you're going to run for office with that in your Googlable recent past, you should have a narrative prepared about it. Instead he's reacting to the predictable GOP barrage by being evasive, which is too bad.

But what's most interesting to me about it is that I bet that it won't dramatically affect his vote share, which countywide for Democrats is usually in the 40-to-45 percent range. If he does get 40 or even 35 percent of the vote, it will be by far the largest vote share of anyone with a Marxist-Leninist background in our local history.

paper plans (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 14:38 (one week ago)

dude should totally go for it, become the revolutionary vanguard leading the masses to communism

Illegal Algae (Boring, Maryland), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 15:07 (one week ago)

the phrase county mayor is killing me

lag∞n, Wednesday, 1 July 2026 15:24 (one week ago)

Miami-Dade has one! Probably the state's most powerful Democrat.

boners for bombs (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 15:26 (one week ago)

my gf is in Dekalb County (Decatur) GA and they fucking call it the “CEO”. The goddam Dekalb County CEO. Makes me want to fly a plane into a building tbh

OG Bobby Sacamano (will), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 15:29 (one week ago)

An interesting piece on institutional Democratic frustrations with Schumer.

Democratic frustration with Schumer goes far beyond Maine. To a previously unreported degree, the longtime Democratic leader, acting through the DSCC, has struggled to navigate a series of tumultuous primaries, beset by an angry base of voters, insurgent candidates and party officials who complain that he’s alternately done too little or too much to influence races.

The result has been the messiest collection of Democratic primaries in decades. The Senate minority leader faces another fraught primary in Michigan in August, where a Schumer-backed candidate is struggling to best lefty favorite Abdul El-Sayed. The DSCC tried and failed to hold off a third candidate, state Sen. Mallory McMorrow, mirroring the scramble — and ultimately the failure — to shape the primary in Maine.

The tumult has amounted to a stunning rebuke of Schumer, who is seen by many Democrats as having controlled most primaries in battleground states with an iron grip for the last decade.

“The thing about iron is it rusts,” El-Sayed told NOTUS in a recent interview. “I’m proud to be the only candidate in my race that the Senate minority leader has said that he would not be OK with.”

wipes chooser (unperson), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 16:39 (one week ago)

I’m proud to be the only candidate in my race that the Senate minority leader has said that he would not be OK with.”

niiiiice, that’s the way to do it

…at Cordell and Cordell. Cordell and Cordell is... (z_tbd), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 18:47 (one week ago)

that is pretty interesting stuff

lag∞n, Wednesday, 1 July 2026 18:50 (one week ago)

yeah, I think at one point in time "Pelosi hates this candidate" might have been enough to tank a campaign, but "Schumer hates this candidate" is worth about +7 points these days.

every person shall be spared in whose home a jazz band is in f (President Keyes), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 19:06 (one week ago)

schumers gotta be done right

lag∞n, Wednesday, 1 July 2026 19:09 (one week ago)

I mean, Elissa Slotkin -- nobody's idea of a fire-breathing leftist -- basically implied the other day that Schumer and Jeffries have to go.

jaymc, Wednesday, 1 July 2026 19:42 (one week ago)

If the Democrats do win the House in November, I have to imagine there will at least be a challenge to Jeffries and not a coronation (even though I'd bet on him becoming speaker).

But Schumer, what I don't get is, aren't there other ambitious Democrats in the Senate? Some of them should start making moves.

paper plans (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 20:00 (one week ago)

the thing about senate dems is theyre the most apathetic people in the world thats why they love schumer he doesnt make them do anything

lag∞n, Wednesday, 1 July 2026 20:02 (one week ago)

Minority Leader is kind of a shitty job. Majority Leader just a little less so.

every person shall be spared in whose home a jazz band is in f (President Keyes), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 20:04 (one week ago)

the phrase county mayor is killing me

The backstory to this is kind of funny. In Tennessee they used to be called county executives, which is a better description of the job than mayor (they don't control schools or cops, they're mostly there to manage general services and put the budget together). Knox County where I live is the 3rd largest county in the state, and the largest with a Republican voting majority (the larger 2 being Nashville/Davidson and Memphis/Shelby). So Knox County is a logical launch pad for Republicans seeking state office, because they already start with a sizable base of voters and donors. And 25 years ago, we elected a Republican as county executive who really wanted to run for governor. And he thought it would sound much more impressive to his future gubernatorial campaign to have "mayor" on his resume. So he got Republicans in the Legislature to change the title of the position statewide, just to further his ambitions. Of course, that all fell flat when his county tenure ended in assorted scandals and he has had to make a living as a mildly disgraced lobbyist ever since. (Our current county mayor, the pro wrestler, is however the odds-on favorite to be our next senator after Marsha Blackburn gets appointed governor. He and Marsha seem to have a deal worked out where she'll appoint him to finish her term.)

Which is more than you want to know! But just an example of how much personal ambition tends to drive everything in politics.

paper plans (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 20:09 (one week ago)

that is pretty funny

lag∞n, Wednesday, 1 July 2026 20:11 (one week ago)

Oops I meant after Blackburn gets elected governor, although for all that everyone assumes it as a given it might as well be an appointment.

paper plans (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 20:17 (one week ago)

why do leftists hate donors so much

― boners for bombs (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, July 1, 2026 7:21 AM (six hours ago)

because they have shit-tons of money and don't give us any

i will be frank and say that my attitude towards donors, as a leftist, is "fuck you, pay me". i understand this is a hard sell. i guess "replace all workers with AI slop" is an easier sell for the donor class?

Kate (rushomancy), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 20:43 (one week ago)

...because the thing is i don't actually want them to give us tons of money, my radical leftism is about, like, _wanting a fucking job_. highest level of tzedekah. that's what i fuckin' want.

Kate (rushomancy), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 20:44 (one week ago)

Kate, I was joking.

boners for bombs (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 20:53 (one week ago)

I mean

boners for bombs (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 1 July 2026 20:53 (one week ago)

what was jeffries’ “legacy”?

…at Cordell and Cordell. Cordell and Cordell is... (z_tbd), Thursday, 2 July 2026 00:07 (six days ago)

and also, who would have been better, in the exact same timeline and history?

…at Cordell and Cordell. Cordell and Cordell is... (z_tbd), Thursday, 2 July 2026 00:07 (six days ago)

AND WHY

…at Cordell and Cordell. Cordell and Cordell is... (z_tbd), Thursday, 2 July 2026 00:08 (six days ago)

me, im cool

lag∞n, Thursday, 2 July 2026 00:11 (six days ago)

i’d vote for you

but first you have to move to south stl

…at Cordell and Cordell. Cordell and Cordell is... (z_tbd), Thursday, 2 July 2026 01:31 (six days ago)

well come on over! the arch turns out to be the 50th or 60th best thing about the city. you sure can see it though

…at Cordell and Cordell. Cordell and Cordell is... (z_tbd), Thursday, 2 July 2026 01:32 (six days ago)

i stayed in st louis for a couple days once i liked it cool old brick row houses and whatnot

lag∞n, Thursday, 2 July 2026 01:35 (six days ago)


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