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General politics thread (was: General U.S. politics thread)
Comments
one of the weirdest things this cycle:
former AK governor Sarah Palin (yes, that Sarah Palin) fucked over her former LG and current gov Sean Parnell (R) by endorsing the fusion ticket of Bill Walker (I) for Gov with Byron Mallott (D) for LG
(previously, Walker and Mallott were both gov candidates, and Hollis French was D for LG)
still not sure whether to conclude that Palin did Team Blue a favor
That's why I've taken to press Save Draft after every sentence.
Needs more colours.
>electorate of anywhere having memory of events before election fever hits*
*does not apply if death/murder/civil war/etc is involved
One has to wonder, what made the Democrats fare so poorly.
Midterm turnout sucks in general for Democrats. Sucked worse with voter suppression. Sucked worse when Democrats saw their own candidates running right to try and win conservatives they were never going to win anyway.
Also lol Kochs. Oregon was one of the only states that kicked them out, and we're blue enough that they knew it wasn't going to happen after like one month.
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2014/11/28/1347618/-Looking-back-at-the-biggest-electoral-themes-of-the-2014-election
In summary:
* money didn't matter as much as people thought
* hard to measure effect of voting restrictions, but they may have mattered in some close races (e.g. FL-Gov and NC-Sen)
* hard to say why people who don't vote, don't vote despite having potentially a lot to gain from doing so
* late deciders seem to have swung in the Dem direction, as opposed to conventional wisdom which says that they swung in the Repub direction as the polls were apparently too Dem-friendly. what happened, though, was that the "swing" was not from Repub to Dem, but rather from not voting at all to Dem. Dem voters apparently just didn't feel like voting at all.
* ...which may have been partly because of "orphan races" -- ones with no major top-of-the-ticket action (e.g. a high-publicity governor's race) driving turnout.
Other factors (my opinion, not in the article) included a general sense among Team Blue supporters that the message was "we're not crazy, unlike those Repubs" as opposed to anything more motivating, as well as a number of small mistakes by various candidates -- for example, from Bruce Braley (IA-Sen D candidate), most notably.
http://jacktrammell.tumblr.com/post/104782995979/the-problem
how gerrymandering is a core problem of U.S. politics, as it gives outsized influenced to whoever is in charge in state legislatures once every ten years.
So yesterday I lost an argument on US political representation, specifically over the winner-takes-all nature of the electoral college. So a question:
Because more dramatic, arcane, and crazy.
Honestly, I don't know the real reason. I could look up the history of the Electoral College on Wikipedia right now but my internet connection is very poor.
I do know that the actual electors of the Electoral College used to actually matter, or something like that, because the whole idea was that direct election of the president was poorly advised because the framers/founding fathers/whateveryouwannacallthem felt the people should leave the executive leadership of the country to educated political elites. Or something like that.
Of course, that wasn't a very popular idea, and that was later changed.
How each state allocates its electors is actually voluntarily up to each state. So each state could make its own law regarding how its electors are allocated. There are two states -- Maine and Nebraska -- that allocate them not completely by winner-take-all but only two EVs winner-take-all and the other two are based on whoever wins each congressional district's votes.
Incidentally, there is a National Popular Vote thing going around, where states are passing a bill saying that, if a number states -- whose EV total is a majority -- pass that bill, then they will all pledge their electors to the winner of the popular vote.
I've heard two arguments against using national popular vote:
1. At least in the past, it might have been difficult or take a long time to get results from some states. Having an electoral college system would allow some states to be "left out" just in case problems arose.
2. In case an election is extremely close, rather than recounting the entire country, you only need to recount those states that have very close results, since the math -- or, technically, the criteria for how to count the votes -- is unambiguous otherwise.
Neither of these arguments address why (closest) proportional allocation of electoral vote doesn't work, though. The need for recounts is still there, but it just happens at different cutoff points -- which, to be fair, could make the system slightly even more arcane. Or we could just make people learn math better...
Furthermore, a nationalized system for voting procedures, registration, technology, etc. would take out some of the ambiguity in the way the votes are counted, diminishing the problems of recounting somewhat. There are advantages and disadvantages to this, of course -- the disadvantages being that it may make updates to voting technology more difficult, and that federalism is a huge thing in the states, sometimes for good reasons but also sometimes for corrupt reasons (e.g. racism).
Source: http://www.dailykos.com/story/2015/01/14/1356640/-Daily-Kos-Elections-Live-Digest-1-14
Suddenly, I really want to see this happen just so he can win a second special election. It would be freaking hilarious.
And one from the previous day:
The comparison is to the New York State Senate, which is similarly nearly evenly divided but a handful of Democratic State Senators in an "Indepdent Democratic Caucus" side with the Republicans to essentially give the Repubs majority control of the chamber.
@ Longtorso: wow. I didn't expect this kind of weird shit to happen in places that, you know, have a bit more of a practice with democracy.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/28/opinion/how-did-politics-get-so-personal.html
[05:02:21]
[05:02:29]
[05:02:33]
wtf happened, USA?
*Actually this is a pretty smart move by the Republicans because I'm betting at least half of their rhetoric will be "Obama loves illegals more than working Americans!"
This looks deliciously evil.
I want to try this sometime.
sauce: http://www.dailykos.com/story/2015/03/03/1367482/-Daily-Kos-Elections-Live-Digest-3-3
sauce: http://www.dailykos.com/story/2015/03/18/1371258/-Daily-Kos-Elections-Morning-Digest-Aaron-Schock-s-career-is-a-total-wipeout
FYI, Schock is notably a relatively young member of the House of Representatives, being its youngest member from 2009 to 2013 when he was dethroned by Patrick Murphy (FL-18) (who was more recently dethroned by Elise Stefanik (NY-21)).
("WATN?" means "Where are they now?".)
source for that: http://www.dailykos.com/story/2015/03/18/1371256/-Daily-Kos-Elections-Live-Digest-3-18
(Wikipedia says that he was the youngest member of the House from 1985 to 1990. He ran for governor in 1990 but lost the election to A Connecticut Party candidate Lowell Weicker.)
(Incidentally, Weicker pulled successful third-party shenanigans in Connecticut back in 1990, 16 years before Joe Lieberman would do the same in 2006, albeit for a Senate seat rather than the governorship. Incidentally, Lieberman was the one who beat Weicker in a 1988 election.)
(I just realized that Connecticut has fun political history.)
The last days in office, of former Oregon governor John Kitzhaber.
In other news: gerrymandering mishap leaves nation without any borders whatsoever
> the only town with an actually elected dogcatcher
> population in 2010: 1337
truly 1337
Some claims to fame, eh?
source: comments section of http://www.dailykos.com/story/2015/04/01/1374824/-Indiana-pizza-shop-won-t-serve-gays-owner-says-we-re-not-discriminating-against-anyone
my emphasis