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General politics thread (was: General U.S. politics thread)
Comments
Anyway, there's a very important race today for a seat on Wisconsin's Supreme Court, which currently has a 5-2 conservative majority. Justice Rebecca Bradley, who was appointed by Gov. Scott Walker (R) to replace a more moderate justice, faces re-election to her first full term. Opposing her is Appeals Court Judge Joanne Kloppenberg, who is most famous for narrowly losing a race against Justice David Prosser (another conservative incumbent on the WI SC) in 2011, at the height of the protests against Gov. Walker.
For more information on the race: https://ballotpedia.org/Wisconsin_Supreme_Court_elections,_2016
If you know people from Wisconsin you may want to remind them to vote -- and not just for their presidential candidate of choice.
Sad.
Anyway, earlier today, voters went to the polls in at least five states, Delaware, Maryland, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and Pennsylvania, to cast their votes for at least the presidential primaries. And a host of other downballot things.
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Also, Delaware wins the award for fastest reporting of election results.
Well, the Clinton campaign is not passing up that opportunity. Now, you, too, can own and play your very own official Woman Card. The campaign's selling them for five bucks each.
They look like New York City Metrocards. The amusing thing is that Clinton once had trouble with her Metrocard when trying to get onto the subway; she had to swipe like five times or something. This moment has been immortalized by her campaign's 404 page: https://www.hillaryclinton.com/404
For reference:
* NRCC = National Republican Congressional Committee, basically the national-level branch of the Republican Party that helps congressional Republicans with their re-election efforts (and secondarily, plays offense against the Democrats)
* David Jolly = current representative, Republican, for the 13th Congressional District of Florida. Florida recently had court-ordered redistricting, which made his district a lot more Dem-friendly, so he earlier bailed from running for re-election and instead tried to take his chances with a Senate race, for the Florida U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Marco Rubio. He's not looking so hot in that race, and now some people are suggesting that he drop back down and try to run for re-election since he's the only person with a ghost of a chance to hold down his district under the new district lines.
Meanwhile, though, the NRCC kinda hates his guts.
I had wondered why, for a long time. I mean, it is rather plainly obvious, the one thing worse for one's electoral chances than a warm body is nobody at all.
More recently though, I think an explanation is starting to bubble to the surface gradually: it costs a lot to run a campaign, even a placeholder one.
Now, for a placeholder campaign, it's not that expensive financially. If you're not expecting to win, but just expecting to stick around just in case the other party's nominee self-destructs and gives your team an opening, most of the time they won't and you can get by with maybe a few thousand dollars worth of campaigning just to show your party's supporters in the area that they're not completely forgotten, making a token effort on your part.
But it's not just about the money.
It's a time-consuming -- and sometimes soul-consuming -- process, to campaign for a seat. To be the candidate upon whom all those expectations and demands for attention and desires for scrutiny fall. You have to suddenly take about half a year out of your life, going door to door to event to event asking for people to support you, or at least hoping that people friendly to you show up so you can say hi to them. And worst of all...you have to beg people for money.
And this doesn't just apply to challengers. This applies to incumbents. Incumbents have to raise money just to defend their own seats. Then the party also demands that they help raise money for the party. And meanwhile they still have to look happy, kiss babies, talk to constituents like those constituents they talk to are the only people in their lives so they can give them their full attention, and so on and so forth. Oh, and the money picture just got worse after the infamous Citizens United SCOTUS decision.
This problem is probably doubly compounded these days for members of Congress. Especially ones in the Republican majority who have to deal with the fact that on one hand they have to govern and keep the place running but on the other hand they have to appeal to an increasingly insane supporter base that just wants to break everything that their governing job stands for into millions of little tiny pieces.
TL;DR running a campaign sucks and being an elected official quite possibly sucks more, depending.
The Republican nominee will be Donald Trump.
It's on now, folks.
Seriously though I like how since everyone is mad at big money in elections they just decided to give big money the election without the smokescreens and go-betweens.
...wait, you mean this video is actually a YouTube Poop?
FYI, the members mentioned are:
David Valadao from CA-21 (a D+3 district, parts of Fresno, Kern, Kings, and Tulare Counties in the San Joaquin Valley)
Jeff Denham from CA-10 (an R+1 district, parts of Stanislaus and San Joaquin Counties, centered on Modesto)
David Young from IA-03 (an even-PVI district, southwest Iowa)
Bruce Poliquin from ME-02 (a D+3 district, basically most of Maine not including the southwestern coast, Portland, or Augusta)
That's silly.
If that person is talking about welfare and stuff, these things are necessary to maintain bourgeois democracy by encouraging social mobility of the working class so as to better expropriate their surplus labor value, especially important if there's the threat of socialists seeking to agitate and stir up class struggle so as to bring a revolution and a dictatorship of the proletariat. There are good examples of this kind of wild capitalism in Nordic countries such as Finland or Sweden.
Unless we're talking about real socialism, in which case it's still silly because if you're under socialism you're under a communist dictatorship, since socialism is communism and they both imply a dictatorship, thus you can't say socialism "leads" to it.
The fact that US foreign policy matters considerably to the world at large is the one aspect I don't envy at all from US politics.
(That, and the electoral college thing.)
Anyway, I keep frequenting the US Politics Thread over on TVTropes, and.... I'm honestly shocked at the shit show it's turned into.
It's filled with a ton of Clinton supporters. Fighteer outright said that TYT, as an example, regurgitates Republican talking points to assassinate her character - when TYT defended Bill from Whitewater, Vince Foster, Travelgate, even Benghazi and the email scandal.
That's not what aggravates me, though. What aggravates me is when Clinton supporters outright say Clinton is as progressive or more so than Bernie, that she doesn't even give the appearance of corruption, or that she somehow wants to overturn Citizens United.
I will give direct fucking quotes. "There is not a single vote she made in favor of Corporate America," "She will play the game in order to fix things and make them better," "She has more incentive to get rid of Citizens United than any other politician on Capitol Hill," and "Wall Street keeps trying to influence her, but it's mostly on deaf ears."
This is a personality cult. I dare say the allure of a Madam President blinds people to the reality of just how horrible Clinton will be on, particularly and especially, foreign policy. It's gotten to the point where, if Clinton appoints Goldman Sachs executives to her administration, her supporters will excuse it and say "It's just what she needs to do" or "They will help her be the next FDR!"