Hawktawk wrote:So what if it is Bernie? What are his chances at winning? James Carville says zero. Republicans down ballot are salivating.He leads in the primary polls in many states and also leads Trump right now.
I've kind of been in denial just like I was when Trump was ascending but I've started to pay a little more attention to this guy. His policies are not 51% policies vote wise but how bad do people want to be rid of Trump? The only observation I would make is that I dont think this grumpy old man is going to take a lot of lip off of Trump. As unpopular as many find his policy idea he defends his position well and is an expert at juxtaposing cries of socialism for the masses against socialism for the very wealthy.He drew a clear contrast with his strong condemnation of Vlad Putin while Trump was playing the buffoon Putin ass clown too which I liked quite a bit. Perfect answer.
Frankly Im depressed. Its looking entirely possible it will be the second presidential election with 2 very poor choices but this guy doesn't have either the negatives or the enthusiasm issue of HRC so time will tell
RiverDog wrote:Here's the latest RCP poll on the Democratic nomination:
https://www.realclearpolitics.com/epoll ... -6730.html
Sanders has a double digit lead nation wide, but if you look at the graph, you can see how it's fluctuated over time. It shows how one candidate's rise is tied directly to the fortunes of another. Sanders rise corresponds with Elizabeth Warren's fall...which is why she's being such a Hillary lately and hassling Bernie for his medical records as she wants those voters back....and Biden's decline matches the timeline of Bloomberg's spike. That means that Sanders isn't changing anyone's mind as Warren's ideology is very similar to his. They're just re-dividing the liberal slice of the Democratic pie. Same goes with the moderates Biden and Bloomberg.
If one of those candidates were to back out and throw their support to the other sharer of the slice, it could change everything. Likewise, if they all stay in the race, none of them will get a majority of delegates and won't be able to win on the first ballot. I've never seen a nomination in either party where the winner wasn't decided on the first ballot.
Hawktawk wrote:The doo doo is going to hit the fan for Sanders tonight if the rest of these candidates know what's smart. There's a treasure trove of radical Bernie praising dictators and communist regimes that's popping up now including him at a rally in Nicaragua as Ortega chants "yankees must die".Although the voters in his state have heard it all before and keep sending him back to the senate.
Hawktawk wrote:But the party better figure it out. The don't seem to get it yet, much like republicans in 16. They spent the Nevada debate bashing a guy not yet on the ballet. Warren in particular with her high minded attacks on Bloomberg crude comments in her shrill naggy voice may have boosted her temporarily but did nothing to dent the lead of the one guy she needs to compete for liberal votes with while hurting a far more preferable electable candidate with coattails and UNLIMITED MONEY he has spent freely on democrats![]()
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!!!! Klobuchar and Buttigeig attacking one another over names of foreign presidents etc...it's ridiculous.
I did see a poll on Drudge this AM saying Sanders Warren beats Trump Pence by 2 right now,48-46. Matt Drudge is no liberal but who knows. If Trump had a chance in 2016 it had to be Hillary. The same is true for Trump in 2020 IMKO but also true for Sanders. Can anyone really conceive of him being within 10 points of lets say, Jeb Bush or Marco Rubio with 3.7 unemployment? Anytime you run against a candidate mired in the mid 40% range his entire term with very high "strong disapprove"#s and a lower reelect # than job approval, far lower than approval of the economy. Generic he trails and specific reelect the trails every major Democrat, again with some very strong pulses in his favor, things that would have the typical candidate on cruise control to reelection. This time it isn't the economy stupid. Its the guy it's a referendum on.
We shall see...
RiverDog wrote:Here's the latest RCP poll on the Democratic nomination:
https://www.realclearpolitics.com/epoll ... -6730.html
Sanders has a double digit lead nation wide, but if you look at the graph, you can see how it's fluctuated over time. It shows how one candidate's increase in popularity is tied directly to the fortunes of an opponent with a similar idealogy. Sanders rise corresponds with Elizabeth Warren's fall...which is why she's being such a Hillary lately and hassling Bernie for his medical records as she wants those voters back....and Biden's decline matches the timeline of Bloomberg's spike. That means that Sanders isn't changing anyone's mind as Warren's basic philosophy is very similar to his. They're just re-dividing the liberal slice of the Democratic pie. Same goes with the moderates Biden and Bloomberg.
The front runner status is a curse as much as it is a blessing. It's always better to be ahead than behind, but it puts a big target on your back as the others start taking aim. Bloomberg, Biden, and Buttigieg have all begun to release attack ads taking aim directly at Sanders as Super Tuesday approaches, and as stated above, Warren has adapted a much more caustic attitude in her campaign.
We'll see what happens on Super Tuesday. If Sanders holds onto his current edge, he could build up enough delegates to make his lead nearly insurmountable. But if he starts to falter and the others stay in the race until the convention, we could see a situation where no one has enough delegates to win on the first ballot, something that I personally have never witnessed in my lifetime.
RiverDog wrote:Another factor in both the nomination and the general election is the stock market. It tanked yesterday, losing nearly 4% of its value in one day. They're attributing it to the coronavirus, but I'm not so sure if that's the only reason. There are some numbers that indicate that we could be heading for a major slow down if not a recession. If that happens, then a Sanders candidacy could really take off as he's an anti Wall Street socialist that will argue the benefits of a more controlled economy that's not as subject to stock market fluctuations.
idhawkman wrote:Either way you are going to have half of the dem voters depressed on Election Day resulting in low dem turnout. None of the dems are talking about why you should vote for them other than "Trump is bad" which never wins elections. You have to have something to vote for not just something to vote against.
Aseahawkfan wrote:As I see it we are in Crazy Town right now. Trump is crazy. Bernie is crazy. America seems to have a taste for some radical crazy moves right now. I say let's live in Crazy Town this election and let Bernie go at Trump. See what happens.
RiverDog wrote:If nothing else, Bernie's hair makes him look crazy. I recently saw a clip of him from 40 years ago and his mop looked as bad as it does today. Add that frizzy white hair to a jabbing forefinger with that perpetually angry look on his face and a hunchback posture and all you need is a set of boiling test tubes to complete the quintessential image of a mad scientist hard at work creating Frankenstein.
Gawd, I can imagine the SNL skits if Sanders gets elected President. I wonder what Christopher Lloyd is doing nowadays.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Who usually plays Bernie on SNL? I can't recall. Alec Baldwin is making a career of playing Trump on SNL. Pretty hilarious.
Aseahawkfan wrote:As I see it we are in Crazy Town right now. Trump is crazy. Bernie is crazy. America seems to have a taste for some radical crazy moves right now. I say let's live in Crazy Town this election and let Bernie go at Trump. See what happens.
RiverDog wrote:
If nothing else, Bernie's hair makes him look crazy. I recently saw a clip of him from 40 years ago and his mop looked as bad as it does today. Add that frizzy white hair to a jabbing forefinger with that perpetually angry look on his face and a hunchback posture and all you need is a set of boiling test tubes to complete the quintessential image of a mad scientist hard at work creating Frankenstein.
Gawd, I can imagine the SNL skits if Sanders gets elected President. I wonder what Christopher Lloyd is doing nowadays.
Hawktawk wrote:Dude....Bernies hair makes him look crazy???![]()
Sure it does but it is no more ridiculous a do than Trump's helmet of hair spray affixed combover
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https://www.vanityfair.com/news/photos/ ... rumps-hair
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