• /home/pineapplelover
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    133 months ago

    Democratic party would crush it if only they replaced Biden with a younger candidate. I’m telling you, even republicans might switch over and vote democrat if this happens.

      • @Godric
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        13 months ago

        Yes, have you?? I actually happen to live amongst them, which may sound exotic to some Lemmings.

        “I hate Trump, but Joe is a walking corpse” is not an uncommon sentiment.

        • @[email protected]
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          103 months ago

          Are they aware that even an almost-corpse could follow their advisors and therefore end up having an effective presidency? As long as Biden doesn’t start doing random senile shit (and be realistic, he’s far from that)

          • @[email protected]
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            43 months ago

            To a lot of these voters it’s not about having a logical cabinet nor even policy. It’s the individual as a character representing our nation, and to them Trump is better spoken than Biden even if what most of he says has little basis in reality.

            This is why Obama had such a good time with swing voters, it’s not really about the policies from what I see. I’m shocked no party since 2008 has tried running a younger candidate. I’d love to see someone younger debate Trump. Like Pete Buttigieg for example. Like ya he’s still a career politician, but I suspect he’d do much better at making the insane stuff Trump says sound insane.

          • @lennybird
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            03 months ago

            If they haven’t changed their minds yet, then they aren’t going to. It’s time to try someone different.

            Besides, you’re not even needing Republican votes. You just need undecided votes and to energize democratic voters who hate both candidates with age being a big factor.

        • @aodhsishaj
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          3 months ago

          The presidency needs to be reframed. It’s not some position of ultimate power. Presidents have far less control than the general public thinks, or the media would have you believe.

          To get anything lasting done you need all three branches working together and with this court, and congress…

        • SaltySalamander
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          13 months ago

          I actually happen to live amongst them

          I do too, which is why I know that you are wrong.

    • @FlowVoid
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      33 months ago

      If Biden decided to step down, his delegates are pledged to support Kamala Harris. So it’s either him or her.

      Still certain Democrats would crush it without Biden?

      • Blackbeard
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        3 months ago

        If Biden decided to step down, his delegates are pledged to support Kamala Harris.

        I’ve tried to verify that this is the case and can’t find evidence anywhere. Can you point me to a source? I was under the impression that they’d be expected to turn to her, but that they’re not required to.

        Edit: After lengthy back and forth, it finally became clear that this is simply an opinion. User has absolutely no proof.

        • @FlowVoid
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          13 months ago

          They aren’t required. But Biden/Harris delegates aren’t chosen randomly, they are Democrats who have demonstrated loyalty towards Biden and Harris and have personally pledged to support them.

          • Blackbeard
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            33 months ago

            But they’re not “Biden/Harris delegates”. They’re Biden delegates, as he was the only name on the ballot. Are you just saying they’ll go with her out of deference?

            • @FlowVoid
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              3 months ago

              Fair point. I think they would absolutely go with Harris. Partly out of deference, partly because she would remain in control of the Biden/Harris $100 million warchest and ground operations org, partly because her name can’t be taken off the general ballot in multiple states, and partly because Democrats need to campaign on women’s rights and it would look awful to pass over a Black woman.

              I also think that Newsom/Whitmer/Beshear/Pritzker et al are not interested in replacing Biden. They will inherit chaos, are very likely to lose in the general, and that will be the end of their presidential aspirations.

              • Blackbeard
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                13 months ago

                partly because her name can’t be taken off the general ballot in multiple states

                Again, where is your proof of this? Ballots haven’t been finalized anywhere in the country, as Biden isn’t even officially the nominee yet. You keep saying these things as if they’re set in stone, but from what I can tell they’re not. Do you have proof that ballots have been printed before the convention, or that states have closed the registration window for running mates before closing the registration window for candidates?

                Note: I agree with the rest of what you said, for the most part.

                • @FlowVoid
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                  3 months ago

                  As you suggest it’s a regulatory problem. There was a recent kerfuffle involving the Ohio ballot, which was solved by putting Biden/Harris on the ballot before they are officially nominated. So any changes made at the Democratic convention will come too late to change the Ohio ballot.

                  There was a similar issue in Alabama, but it looks like they just moved their deadline after the convention.

                  • Blackbeard
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                    3 months ago

                    As you suggest it’s a regulatory problem. There was a recent kerfuffle involving the Ohio ballot, which was solved by putting Biden/Harris on the ballot before they are officially nominated. So any changes made at the Democratic convention will come too late to change the Ohio ballot.

                    …nnnnno. That’s not what’s happening in Ohio. From your article:

                    President Joe Biden will be formally nominated as the Democratic presidential nominee through a virtual roll call ahead of the party’s official convention in Chicago in August

                    The Democratic National Convention, where the president would otherwise be formally nominated, comes after Ohio’s ballot deadline of Aug. 7. The party’s convention is scheduled for Aug. 19-22.

                    I really hate to repeat myself because it seems like you’re engaging sincerely and at least trying to support your argument, but there are currently no ballots that have been formalized in the entire country. Biden and Harris have not been put on the ballot before they’re nominated, they’re being nominated before the ballot access deadline in Ohio. So quite simply, as long as the Democrats nominate any US-born person older than 35, that person’s name will appear on the Ohio ballot. You have it quite literally backwards.

      • @yemmly
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        23 months ago

        Will someone please come out and say what the problem with Kamala Harris is? I see people hinting about it all the time, but I have no idea what it’s all about.

        • @frog_brawler
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          103 months ago

          Her record as DA is problematic for a lot of people. She was labeling herself as a progressive, but then behaved as a conservative. Fought to keep a lot of people in prison for minor offenses, fought to keep the death penalty, etc. While doing that, she had a book out about criminal justice reform… and went against her own advice. Pretty much a lap-dog for conservative criminal justice policy. Overall, blatantly hypocritical to anyone that was paying attention.

          • @yemmly
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            33 months ago

            Thanks for explaining.

        • TheLowestStone
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          63 months ago

          I have a problem with many of her past decisions but, the same goes for Biden. Both are still a significantly better choice than Trump.

          • @[email protected]
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            -33 months ago

            Is she pro genocide? My only problem with Biden is his age and Israel policy, and I have no idea what hers are.

            • TheLowestStone
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              63 months ago

              Unfortunately, anyone who has any real chance of being president isn’t going to do anything meaningful to stop what is happening in Gaza.

        • @pikmeir
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          -13 months ago

          It’s because she’s a woman. They’re scared.

          • @yemmly
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            3 months ago

            It’s certainly true that women who rise to the top of national politics get relentlessly, negatively caricatured (Hillary Clinton, Nancy Pelosi). With Kamala Harris it’s different because a lot of the murmuring comes from Democrats and they never say why.