Aseahawkfan wrote:I think Kamala will be dangerous in debates. She's not just a politician lawyer, she's argued in the trenches and she's not shy. I'd rather see her against Trump honestly. Hilary looked weak against Trump in my opinion many times. I think Kamala would hammer Trump.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:I figured that was coming, but no one actually has photos of Trump doing that. Photos of Creepy Joe abound.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:Pence is definitely the better option to go up against Harris. Trump would no doubt get flustered and defensive pretty quick.
Sleepy Joe isn’t they only thing he has to worry about. Creepy Joe will also be on the table. He has backed off of that behavior, but Trump is most definitely going to bring it up.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:Not stumping for Trump on this; I am just equally turned off from Joe Biden because of both the sleepiness and the creepiness. And now is an even worse time for a 3rd party candidate.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:The degrees that people are turned off of each candidate is obviously subjective, so I don’t expect everybody to see this as a toss up. The creepy Joe isn’t nearly the issue for me as the sleepy Joe is.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:For me Trump’s bluster and shooting off at the mouth seems like something he is fully aware that he is doing, though his inability to shut it off is problematic. I don’t know that is a cognitive decline issue or just a perpetual a-hole issue. Biden just seems lost to me like he’s not sure what is going on.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:And I appreciate your comments River. I am always lurking but not commenting very often. I get to listen to older and wiser heads debate and reflect on y’all’s past and present experiences.
RiverDog wrote:Trump would be well advised to leave that sleeping dog lay, and he and his campaign know it. The only thing they'll touch will be Kamala Harris's hypocrisy in grilling Bret Kavanaugh while giving Biden a pass.
Trump has paid 6 figure hush money to two pornstars, an act that has led to the legal problems he's currently facing in SDNY, he's been videotaped rubbing elbows with a former buddy of his Jeffery Epstein, has just in the past couple months given comforting words to Epstein's pimp that is currently awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges, and no less than 16 women have formally charged Trump of various forms of sexual assault over the past 3 decades. If Trump were going to bring up Creepy Joe, he and his campaign would have done so long ago.
If Biden's opponent was anyone else this side of Harvey Weinstein, Creepy Joe would be a huge problem for him. But not when it's Donald Trump.
RiverDog wrote:OK, fair enough. But I'll bet you a tall cold one that the Creepy Joe issue isn't raised by the Trump campaign unless it's somehow related to Kamala Harris's scathing remarks she directed at Bret Kavanaugh during the confirmation hearings, which IMO is a very legitimate point.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Even if Trump's campaign doesn't use it ("Creepy Joe"), don't worry some group supporting Trump will. Just like group supporting Biden will push all the Trump material.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Trump supporters don't seem to care about his indiscretions or associations. We'll see if Biden supporters feel the same way.
RiverDog wrote:Sure, somewhere someone will push it. But it won't have legs. They have a lot better chance making "Sleepy Joe" stick.
Unless some new accusation surfaces, Biden's supporters, if they did care, seem to have put it aside. "Creepy Joe" has weathered the storm.
Biden's lead, currently at 7.6% in the nation wide RCP average, has held steady for the past several weeks between 6 and 8 percent, an indication that he didn't get much, if any, bump from his VP selection, which supports my contention that people don't give a rip about the #2 on the ticket. It will take another week to see if he gets a bump out of the convention, but my guess is that he doesn't get much from that, either. There just aren't that many people that are undecided, which is one of the big things that differentiates this election from 2016. Most people seem to have their minds made up, and it's going to take something pretty significant to change them.
The other thing that's different from the last election is that there isn't a viable 3rd party or independent. In 2016, the Libertarians had a well known former Governor on their ticket, Gary Johnson, that was polling between 8% and 10% at this time in 2016. Johnson eventually saw his support dwindle in half as the election approached, the implication being that his support went to either Trump or Clinton, a key factor in a close election. This year, the Libertarians are running a virtual unknown that hasn't won an election in her life and doesn't even register a blip on the radar.
Given that there's so few undecideds and no significant 3rd party or independent candidate, there's no place for Trump to go to mine voters. He's going to have to flip Biden voters, a much tougher proposition than convincing a non Biden voter to switch.
Aseahawkfan wrote:A good VP pick wasn't for a bump, but the negative effect of a bad VP pick would have impacted him greatly. Kamala was a smart, safe pick.
Aseahawkfan wrote:And I do believe in the quiet Trump vote. It's become too much of a danger to speak openly of supporting Trump. The left hates him and attacks anyone that supports him publically. I have seen almost anyone that publically supports Trump vilified and attacked by the left. None of these people are changing their minds, they're just shutting up and waiting to cast their rage votes at the left. The left has literally forced Trump supporters and conservatives into hiding or to areas where they can be safe, but they haven't changed their minds at all.
Aseahawkfan wrote:This thing is just getting started as far as the campaigning and mudslinging. Biden just picked his VP. You act like the campaigning won't change anything. It most assuredly will. DNC just finished and your touting these polls like the next 3 months won't change anything. Ridiculous. Any polls now will not tell you who will win in November.
Aseahawkfan wrote:So we'll revisit this polling come Mid October. See where this is at. That will at least be more accurate. And we'll have seen the debates and see if any more craziness happens like secret tapes. I'm still waiting for the Dems to release the racial slur tape of Trump. That will be a real killer for him with swing voters. I know the Dems gotta be sitting on that waiting for just the right time. We'll see if the Republicans are sitting on any bombshells about Biden to release the last few weeks before the election.
I'm not even sure who the police unions usually go for, but I'm betting a lot of police and pro-police people will be casting their votes for Trump without giving Biden a second thought. The left hasn't given them much of a choice in that matter. No one is buying Biden doesn't support defunding the police when so many cities and Democrats obviously support it.
Then there is Kanye West. That will be interesting if he even pulls a small percentage of the Americans of African descent vote from Biden.
Crazy time is just getting started and you're making it seem like November is a few weeks away.
Hawktawk wrote:Neither Biden nor Harris supports defunding police which takes that hammer away from the trumpanzees for the most part.
Hawktawk wrote:Neither Biden nor Harris supports defunding police which takes that hammer away from the trumpanzees for the most part. Biden raced to the center in his remarks like any smart politician as has Harris. Short of massive russian interference somehow changing votes or a collapse of the mail system, Biden passing away or something Biden Harris are winning in Nov.
Trump winning was a perfect storm, hes clearly been the worst president in history and hes never made a single attempt to broaden his base. As James Carville said a few months ago when Trump was daily becoming more of an incompetent fool and ass clown regarding the virus and racial unrest" The american people are not signing up for another 4 years of this". They won't and somewhere around 40% can go have their TDS as we sanitize the swamp Trump filled up full.Its really sad he has 1% support by now. It's a cult. Its the only way to explain it.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Doesn't take that hammer away at all since Biden and Harris represent the Democrats, not just themselves. You don't get it do you? The defund the police movement may divide the Democrats and minority vote. If Biden and Harris come out too strong for defunding the police, then it may hurt them. If they don't support some radical defund the police agendas, they may drive off some Democrats.
..analyze this movement among the Dems from a purely political standpoint. They have a strong number of Democrats in highly liberal cities backing defund the police all over America. You have a strong movement among minority voters pushing some kind of radical police reform. The risk for defund the police has nothing to do with Trumpanzees who are firmly against it. But if you believe it's not a minefield of division among the Democrats the Trump team will push, you're not paying attention.
Aseahawkfan wrote:If I were the Democrats, I would focus the entire campaign on Trump's terrible Federal COVID19 response, his idiotic tweets, and when speaking in front of minority voters his push to protect Confederate Statues and obvious desire to protect racist history. If I were speaking to big businesses leaders, I would focus on selling a less steep tax hike, a return to normalcy in the White House, and focus on companies that do heavy business in China ensuring business knows that the hostility towards China would not be continued.
Aseahawkfan wrote:As much as I lash out at China, here's the reality: they are 1.4 billion consumers. Them growing into a prosperous nation is good for the entire world and especially good for us. If their economy becomes an economic power, they will be a market for American goods that will drive increases in manufacturing jobs in America because we will become a lower cost option. They are the main market for growth as India has yet to show they have the culture and focus to build into an economic powerhouse like China leveraging their manpower and consumer base into a desirable market to invest in.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I would also court the Latino vote as they are a strong, growing, financially potent, and varied voting block with a lot of conservatives waiting to support the Republican Party if they can show themselves to be more friendly to those of Latin ancestry.
That would get a lot of support across a wide spectrum.
I-5 wrote:I agree with asf that his absolute disastrous response to Covid-19 is going to be the culmination of everything that is wrong about Trump, and he'll be playing defense the entire time, so that's where Joe should keep attacking him. We've heard every spin he has for how he has handled it great, including two separate interviews that he fell apart in, and it doesn't sound or look good.
He's going to paint Biden as a president who will create the darkest moments of the country...unfortunately for Trump, I would venture to say for americans on both left and even some right, the darkest times are right now. So his promise to be the guy to pull us out of the darkness just rings empty.
RiverDog wrote:I don't think that Biden needs to do a lot of work on that group. Most, if not all Latinos I know or have spoken with can't stand Trump. And it's not just the Latinos. All of the minority immigrant communities are scared or confused with Trump's rhetoric.
Donald Trump has a very narrow core of supporters, the largest of which are white males over 50 w/o a college degree, but they will turn out and vote for him no matter what. Biden needs to get his supporters to the polls, especially in the swing states. It's that simple.
Aseahawkfan wrote:We'll see how the Latino vote goes for Biden. He should be able to do better than Hilary. I think Biden being a Catholic might help him with the Latino vote. Latinos aren't as slanted towards the Democrats as folks of African descent. They definitely have more independents that can be swayed one way or the other. I wonder if Trump will keep his immigration rhetoric quiet this time around and actually court the Latin vote? Wouldn't that be funny.
https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2016/11/29/hillary-clinton-wins-latino-vote-but-falls-below-2012-support-for-obama/
Florida: https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2016/11/15/unlike-other-latinos-about-half-of-cuban-voters-in-florida-backed-trump/
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2016/2016/11/09/hispanic-vote-election-2016-donald-trump-hillary-clinton/93540772/
RiverDog wrote:I agree that Latinos aren't as committed to Democrats as blacks are. Bush 43 got quite a bit of support from Latinos when they found out that he speaks fluent Spanish and that one of his brothers married a Hispanic. And I can see why Cubans aren't as put off by Trump as Mexicans or those from Central America. They didn't take offense to his border wall and being called thugs, drug runners, and rapists like he labeled the Mexican immigrants. I have friends from Peru that do not take nearly as much offense to Trump as do those from Mexico.
But Hispanics have been hit disproportionally hard by the coronavirus, especially in this neck of the woods. Agriculture is considered an 'essential' job, many of the jobs they hold, such as in meat packing plants, were shoulder-to-shoulder, they live in denser neighborhoods with typically large families, etc. Many have a friend or loved one they lost to the virus. My guess is that they'll see Trump as the villain in the pandemic response and they'll break towards Biden. Remember, Trump was telling companies like Tyson to stay open when the pandemic first broke out.
I-5 wrote:Most latinos I know, and especially the older generation, tend to be conservatives. Trump again effed up by picking on latinos over the years. There are still a lot of latino conservatives who will vote for him I’m sure, but he needlessly pissed off a sizeable chunk of the latino voters, even if many of them are not mexican or puerto rican (two of the more visible groups he has said things about).
I-5 wrote:Most latinos I know, and especially the older generation, tend to be conservatives. Trump again effed up by picking on latinos over the years. There are still a lot of latino conservatives who will vote for him I’m sure, but he needlessly pissed off a sizeable chunk of the latino voters, even if many of them are not mexican or puerto rican (two of the more visible groups he has said things about).
I-5 wrote:Most latinos I know, and especially the older generation, tend to be conservatives. Trump again effed up by picking on latinos over the years. There are still a lot of latino conservatives who will vote for him I’m sure, but he needlessly pissed off a sizeable chunk of the latino voters, even if many of them are not mexican or puerto rican (two of the more visible groups he has said things about).
Aseahawkfan wrote:Yep, dumb. Then again Bush Jr. was one of the few smart Republicans to court the growing Latin vote realizing they are extremely conservative as a group. If Republicans could get the racist moniker off their neck, they would find the vast majority of minority and immigrant groups are conservative. Whenever I chat with immigrants from other nations other than Europe and some Asian nations, they make American religious conservatives look like liberals.
But I do agree that most immigrants can be more easily bought, politically, than other demographical groups such as women and blacks. They are a blank slate and are relatively naïve of of the history and traditions of American politics.
I-5 wrote:Talk about gross generalizations. That's assuming immigrants don't pay attention to what's happening in the world outside of the countries grew up in. I get your point, but no one is truly a blank slate unless they willfully ignore the news of the world.
But I do agree that most immigrants can be more easily bought, politically, than other demographical groups such as women and blacks. They are a blank slate and are relatively naïve of of the history and traditions of American politics.
I-5 wrote:Talk about gross generalizations. That's assuming immigrants don't pay attention to what's happening in the world outside of the countries grew up in. I get your point, but no one is truly a blank slate unless they willfully ignore the news of the world.
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