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Democrats have left moderate voters behind

JamieDimonsBalls

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Jun 28, 2015
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Whether or not progressives are ready to accept it, the evidence all points in one direction. America’s moderate voters have not deserted the Democrats; the party has pushed them away.


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ftcms%3A3d6ced8d-0c7f-4a17-b9d4-629e17d3b8af

Whether or not progressives are ready to accept it, the evidence all points in one direction. America’s moderate voters have not deserted the Democrats; the party has pushed them away.


ftcms%3Af1e46f9d-144a-44a2-87cd-602b4ee82666

This was the plan
 
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This is EXACTLY why they're in the process of losing the Union vote!! They suck!
 
On certain issues, I totally agree with this.

On other issues, Republicans need to be careful not to do the same thing. The first and most obvious one is abortion.
Putting abortion in the hands of each state is where it needs to be and Republicans need to leave it there (which I think they will).

I watched a portion of the Vance interview with I believe ABC where the reporter was schooled regarding the labor work force. She was advocating for "undocumented" immigrants in order to keep building homes. When Vance said there were millions of prime age males and females who have taken themselves out of the workforce she basically said you want them to do construction work? It was like her saying that kind of work is for non-Americans. The left is way left these days, better pull back and get rid of quacks like AOC and her group.
 
On certain issues, I totally agree with this.

On other issues, Republicans need to be careful not to do the same thing. The first and most obvious one is abortion.

I've been saying this for years - if they dropped the Abortion debate (and I acknowledge why many won't, for religious reasons and otherwise), it would be a red landslide for several elections, but more importantly, would force Dems to move back towards more moderate stances.
 
On certain issues, I totally agree with this.

On other issues, Republicans need to be careful not to do the same thing. The first and most obvious one is abortion.
I've been saying this for years - if they dropped the Abortion debate (and I acknowledge why many won't, for religious reasons and otherwise), it would be a red landslide for several elections, but more importantly, would force Dems to move back towards more moderate stances.
Abortions are immoral, stupid, and always should have been against the law. They will eventually be illegal (or cut back to 6ish weeks) in the West when governments realize we have a depopulation problem, globally.

 
Abortions are immoral, stupid....

...but not unpopular.

Republicans love to contrast Florida with California -- and, mostly, with good reason. While Florida has some growing problems that may (or may not) be due to climate change, for the most part it's been bustling for the past couple decades. Republicans love to point to how Florida's population has grown, while California bleeds not just people...but many billions of taxable income. And as this has happened, Florida has morphed from the quintessential battleground state 24 years ago into a "red" version of "blue" California.

Many Republicans cheered when Florida voters failed to pass a ballot initiative which would've added a right to abortion to their state constitution's Declaration of Rights. What they tend to leave out is that it takes a 60% vote to prevail, and Amendment 4 "only" got 57%.

So...57% in a solidly red state believe that people should have a protected right to abortion. Granted, Florida is a different kind of "red" state than, say, Mississippi is. But measures to restrict abortion access have mostly faltered and measures to protect it have mostly flourished.

I agree entirely that abortion is an issue that belongs in the states. I think Roe was poorly constructed law and the court was right to scrap it in Dobbs. The Constitution is silent on abortion, doesn't empower Congress to regulate it, and it is thus an issue that belongs in the states....

...where Republicans would be smart to tread lightly.
 
Abortions are immoral, stupid, and always should have been against the law. They will eventually be illegal (or cut back to 6ish weeks) in the West when governments realize we have a depopulation problem, globally.


They were an effective way to reducing the birth rate of the poor, which has long become a major problem of developed nations. Tax incentives ought to factor children in with income. Maybe that won't move the needle, but there needs to be some reawakening around the declining birth rates.

6 weeks is ridiculously stupid. Plenty of women wouldn't even know they are pregnant. There's no reason to ban anything inside of first trimester. I'm open to arguments for 12-18 weeks. Beyond that, I generally don't support it, but it's far less important to me (and you) than other topics, as it should be.
 
...but not unpopular.

Republicans love to contrast Florida with California -- and, mostly, with good reason. While Florida has some growing problems that may (or may not) be due to climate change, for the most part it's been bustling for the past couple decades. Republicans love to point to how Florida's population has grown, while California bleeds not just people...but many billions of taxable income. And as this has happened, Florida has morphed from the quintessential battleground state 24 years ago into a "red" version of "blue" California.

Many Republicans cheered when Florida voters failed to pass a ballot initiative which would've added a right to abortion to their state constitution's Declaration of Rights. What they tend to leave out is that it takes a 60% vote to prevail, and Amendment 4 "only" got 57%.

So...57% in a solidly red state believe that people should have a protected right to abortion. Granted, Florida is a different kind of "red" state than, say, Mississippi is. But measures to restrict abortion access have mostly faltered and measures to protect it have mostly flourished.

I agree entirely that abortion is an issue that belongs in the states. I think Roe was poorly constructed law and the court was right to scrap it in Dobbs. The Constitution is silent on abortion, doesn't empower Congress to regulate it, and it is thus an issue that belongs in the states....

...where Republicans would be smart to tread lightly.
I agree in the medium term Republicans should continually say it's a State's issue. Long term, abortion will become illegal or limited to 6 weeks for the reasons I said in my opinion.
 
I agree in the medium term Republicans should continually say it's a State's issue. Long term, abortion will become illegal or limited to 6 weeks for the reasons I said in my opinion.
It is a states issue. Not because of political expediency (even if it is politically expedient for Republicans) -- but because the Constitution is silent on it and nothing in Article 1 (or elsewhere in the text) empowers Congress to regulate it. When that's the case, that's why we have a 10th amendment.
 
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Find a middle ground which is where I believe it is now.
I agree. State's rights is a reasonable excuse for the GOP and the most rational currently, as well. Assuming someone'e objective is to limit as many abortions as possible.
 
I agree. State's rights is a reasonable excuse for the GOP and the most rational currently, as well. Assuming someone'e objective is to limit as many abortions as possible.
You guys sound like Dems -- although I'd be willing to bet that you'd object to that and so would most of our resident Dems.

The crux of your discussion isn't about where the issue actually belongs, but why you'd prefer to have it here or there for reasons of preferred outcome.

I think the issue belongs in the state legislatures (permanently), because that's where the text says it belongs. The 10th amendment exists for the sole purpose of delegating those matters which are not assigned to the 3 branches of the federal government to the states. That's for constitutional reasons.

For political reasons, I also think state legislators would be wise to keep it legal with some reasonable restrictions.

However, if voters in a state elect governments who wish to prohibit abortion entirely, I'm fine with that too. That's how representative government is supposed to work.
 
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