2024 U.S. Elections | Trump wins

This sucks, there won't be any path to Dems holding senate if Tester loses (GOP will easily get West Viriginia with Manchin retiring). Still, Tester like Manchin has the ability of winning in deep red states, so probably might turn things around.

NB: To be fair, there is no chance Dems keep the senate. No GOP seat is threatened, West Viriginia will go GOP, effectively making it 50-50. Then Dems will need to hold Montana and Ohio, both deep red / red states, keep Nevada, win Minnesota, Arizona, and to a lesser degree Penn and Wisconsin.
I would love us holding the senate, but that’s going to be very difficult even if Tester wins.

For me, winning the Presidency would be a great achievement and would qualify for a successful election. This would end the era of Trump as a serious contender. We can figure out the rest later.

The House is definitely in play, and so we can win that one, which would be a bonus.
 
She responded to reckless in a manner that shut them up / a manner that engaged the rest of the crowd. The hecklers could have been griping about anything & it would have elicited the 'Trump is worse' line, it's not a response exclusive with pro-Palestinian protesters.

'Trump is worse' isn't policy, but it is handy to have in her quiver to use to shut down hecklera.

Well, yes, and that is what I say, I expect more than handiness on berating your opponent and lift your qualities. But we are going on circles. You find it find, I don't. Agree to disagree
 
Of all the critiques of Harris, this is a perfectly legitimate one. Not a single person has voted for her to be nominated as President, and yet she finds herself in a situation where she is being fast tracked through all the usual checks and balances every other candidate has to go through to be considered for the job. She has to therefore start doing interviews that challenge her policies, otherwise she will quickly risk being perceived as an empty vessel that is being undemocratically imposed on the electorate, who are being instructed to look the other way because the alternative is Trump.

One obvious counter point to this is that Americans vote on a presidential ticket made up of the presidential candidate and the vice presidential candidate, not solely on just a presidential candidate. Therefore Harris has already been vetted and checked and debated and interviewed as a Vice Presidential candidate, and then won an election as a Vice Presidential candidate. It’s not like she’s been parachuted in from obscurity - she was literally voted in as the person to step up and replace the president if anything happened to him over the past four years.
 
I would love us holding the senate, but that going to be very difficult even if Tester wins.

For me, winning the Presidency would be a great achievement and would qualify for a successful election.

The House is definitely in play, and so we can win that one, which would be a bonus.
To be fair if Tester wins, it is still doable. Ohio is very vulnerable, but after that the others are a bit easier. GOP fecked itself again by having Lake in Arizona which should make things slightly easier for Dems. Nevada is hard too but Dems are favourites.

The issue is that Montana and Ohio are really toss-up. If we assume they are independent, and in both cases are 50-50, then chances of keeping both are just 25%. This is the main issue, there are a couple of very vulnerable seats, and a couple of somehow vulnerable that the Dems need to keep. While GOP basically are certain to keep all of their seats.

I guess the goal is win presidency, flip the house and do not lose the senate for more than 1-2 seats. In which case it will be a success.

NB: Minnesota is completely safe, I think I read something wrong when I wrote my previous post. Klobuchar will easily keep her seat.
 
Don't the DNC always release a policy platform around the convention happens? So i wouldn't worry about that, though she should have to go out and speak about it herself, of course.

They do for the main candidate because that person has usually been running for the past 9-12 months, much of which was spent campaigning on specific policies, doing interviews, press conferences, debates etc. All of that ostensibly becomes the candidate's vetting process with the media and the public. This accelerated coronation of Harris has completely circumvented that, and her ignoring calls to do proper one on one interviews with journos isn't helping.
 
I...don't think we are talking about the same election, i'm talking about how the Wisconsin senate election of 2022 causes dems the senate this election, in all likelihood.

Yes, this election will be tough in terms of the senate, but dems should be okay all around.
Ah, you are talking about the previous race. To be fair, it is always hard to defeat the incumbent. And Wisconsin is as a tossup state as it can be, so it was always very hard, no need to put it down to racism. Incumbents simply tend to keep their seats. We see incumbents keeping their seats in states that usually go for the other party (Montana, Ohio, Maine, and even West Virginia), essentially in states that are not solid blue/red, it is close to impossible to defeat incumbents.
 
One obvious counter point to this is that Americans vote on a presidential ticket made up of the presidential candidate and the vice presidential candidate, not solely on just a presidential candidate. Therefore Harris has already been vetted and checked and debated and interviewed as a Vice Presidential candidate, and then won an election as a Vice Presidential candidate. It’s not like she’s been parachuted in from obscurity - she was literally voted in as the person to step up and replace the president if anything happened to him over the past four years.

That's correct, but she's not running for VP. Further, her policies seem to change as the wind blows and people generally don't know what she stands for because she has largely been kept out of the spotlight over the past four years. People are simply assuming her views are a facsimile of Biden's, so maybe she needs to explain them in situations where people can ask questions.
 
To be fair if Tester wins, it is still doable. Ohio is very vulnerable, but after that the others are a bit easier. GOP fecked itself again by having Lake in Arizona which should make things slightly easier for Dems. Nevada is hard too but Dems are favourites.
Yes, it’s doable, but it’s difficult. We should not convince ourselves otherwise.

If Harris wins and the Democrats lose the Senate, you will hear some doom and gloom on election night, just like when Biden won but the Dems lost the House in 2020.

This election is about winning the White House. It’s about ending this terrible Trump era. It’s about the future of our institutions, especially with this Supreme Court.
 
Yes, it’s doable, but it’s difficult. We should not convince ourselves otherwise.

If Harris wins and the Democrats lose the Senate, you will hear some doom and gloom on election night, just like when Biden won but the Dems lost the House in 2020.

This election is about winning the White House. It’s about ending this terrible Trump era. It’s about the future of our institutions, especially with this Supreme Court.
Dems kept the House when Biden won the White House. They lost it in 2022.
 
One obvious counter point to this is that Americans vote on a presidential ticket made up of the presidential candidate and the vice presidential candidate, not solely on just a presidential candidate. Therefore Harris has already been vetted and checked and debated and interviewed as a Vice Presidential candidate, and then won an election as a Vice Presidential candidate. It’s not like she’s been parachuted in from obscurity - she was literally voted in as the person to step up and replace the president if anything happened to him over the past four years.
This is in theory, but in practice people vote for the president, not for the VP. It is the same vote, so while in theory you vote for both, pretty much everyone votes for the president, with the VP being parachuted there. This is different to the early days, where the VP was simply the person who got the second most electoral votes.
 
Ah, you are talking about the previous race. To be fair, it is always hard to defeat the incumbent. And Wisconsin is as a tossup state as it can be, so it was always very hard, no need to put it down to racism. Incumbents simply tend to keep their seats. We see incumbents keeping their seats in states that usually go for the other party (Montana, Ohio, Maine, and even West Virginia), essentially in states that are not solid blue/red, it is close to impossible to defeat incumbents.

Dems don't have a problem winning statewide races in Wisconsin, but did you know, they are all white?

Also, that incumbent outed himself out as a traitor, literally all Wisconsin had to do, a state that tilts blue, for the record, was to not vote for a traitor, but he was white, so i guess it was okay.
 
Dems kept the House when Biden won the White House. They lost it in 2022.
Correct. When they lost seats in the House in 2020.

I heard so much doom and gloom despite beating T. Four 5 years they wanted to beat him, and they we did…. some were like “look, we lost seat No. whatever in Florida… a congressman is crying”…
 
Trump having a press conference, everything he says so far is a lie, per usual.

For whatever reason, this guy plays well in the rust-belt states.
 
That's correct, but she's not running for VP. Further, her policies seem to change as the wind blows and people generally don't know what she stands for because she has largely been kept out of the spotlight over the past four years. People are simply assuming her views are a facsimile of Biden's, so maybe she needs to explain them in situations where people can ask questions.

Which will happen as the DNC takes place, followed by all the associated media, then interviews and town halls and, hopefully, debates. A day can be a long time in politics, and so there’s still a a huge amount of time for all these things to play out.

Incidentally, it’s a little bemusing to hear this critique being made of Harris when Trump is her opponent - the guy who is the least policy-minded presidential candidate in history. His current campaign strategy of rambling nonsense and insults for hours on end at maga rallies is hardly a policy tour de force.
 
This is in theory, but in practice people vote for the president, not for the VP. It is the same vote, so while in theory you vote for both, pretty much everyone votes for the president, with the VP being parachuted there. This is different to the early days, where the VP was simply the person who got the second most electoral votes.

But they still get vetted and interviewed and have debates etc, which is the point I was making. That’s a fundamental and inescapable part of being the VP on the ticket, so to make out like she is an unknown or hasn’t faced scrutiny already is disingenuous.
 
Trump just called for 3 debates



He is just making up stuff, if Harris caves in to the Fox debate, he will do that one, and then bail on the rest.

Insist on the agreed schedule.
 
But they still get vetted and interviewed and have debates etc, which is the point I was making. That’s a fundamental and inescapable part of being the VP on the ticket, so to make out like she is an unknown or hasn’t faced scrutiny already is disingenuous.

The last time she was "vetted" was when she was running for VP in 2019 and wound up the worst performer among prominent Dems. Even Biden's Transportation Secretary outperformed her, so what transpired then isn't something that can be used in the present imo.

Fortunately we are now getting debates so that's a good start.
 
Trump insists on having multiple times the crowd sizes of Harris still.

Heck, why not just fully take the piss, and go full Dr. Evil? Nobody will care anyway.
 
Trump insists on having multiple times the crowd sizes of Harris still.

Heck, why not just fully take the piss, and go full Dr. Evil? Nobody will care anyway.

Same arena...

GUVcB4AWQAAThcM