I know that it’s popular to dismiss President Biden. I get it. He’s old. This is the first election featuring the 2 oldest candidates, ever. So what? The future of the WORLD is literally dependent on this election. To boot Biden from the ticket and try to bootstrap another candidate is madness. Booting this incumbent and hoping his VP will succeed is like firing the cook and hoping the dishwasher will give you Michelin-quality food. Stick with the old man, and figure out a way to enact his popular policies while also expanding the Supreme Court, enacting term limits and limiting “Christian” Nationalists.

  • queermunist she/her
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    04 months ago

    I should be clear: back in 2022 the DNC merely announced that they had a preferred candidate,

    Under his watch, the DNC, not BBT, has taken the lead role in political organizing and — still hypothetically — re-elect conversations, people familiar with the inner-workings told West Wing Playbook. That’s removed any potential uncertainty about how the party’s infrastructure would be deployed. If Biden decides to run for re-election and there is a primary challenge, DNC executive director SAM CORNALE told us: “We’re with Biden. Period.”

    and the DNC decides which debates it sponsors. But, they announced they had “no plans” to sponsor any debates in April 2023, not back in 2022.

    Calling this a conspiracy implies this is underhanded or illegal or something, but this is normal precedent. They were just uniting the Party behind the incumbent (who had already made it clear he was going to run) and trying to prevent divisions from forming within the Party. This really is just normal political party stuff. The same thing was done for Bush in 2004, Obama in 2012, etc.

    • @Carrolade
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      14 months ago

      Having a preferred candidate is fine, I have nothing against that. Same with having no plans early on, as plans can change. Had, say, Bernie chose to run again, I expect a debate would have been held as he is clearly a significant challenger.

      The precedent is not the organization trying to unite the field. The precedent is serious contenders seeing an incumbent and preferring to hold off on their challenge for 4 years, because the incumbent usually wins and people don’t like losing elections. Even so, we have had plenty of cases where a challenger did rise, and usually fail miserably. Just not recently.

      • queermunist she/her
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        04 months ago

        The candidates don’t merely see an incumbent and decide to stay out of the race, they also see the DNC openly making statements about full support for Biden and weigh that against the risk to their political careers if they try to challenge it. It’s one thing to challenge the incumbent, it’s another thing to challenge the Party’s preferred candidate. Combine this with the tendency for the President to become the de-facto leader of the Party and you have a situation where candidates are cowed into staying out of the race.

        “Just not recently” is doing a lot of work there by the by. The last time there was a a serious challenger within the Democratic Party was back in 1980, which is before most of this website was born I’d imagine. Incumbent Jimmy Carter refused to debate Democratic Massachusetts Senator Edward M. Kennedy, and then he lost to Ronald Reagan.

        It makes sense for the Party to not want history to repeat itself.

        • @Carrolade
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          14 months ago

          Lemmy is a lot older than you’d expect, look at the popularity of the Antique Memes Roadshow community.

          Was Ted Kennedy punished in any way for that, or did he continue on with a long and illustrious career? The DNC has no punishment paradigm for people who act on their own. The candidate will, however, very likely be saddled with the memory of defeat, which will harm them in future elections unless they’re very strong in their home region.

          Additionally, Reagan won in a historic landslide, he was one of the most popular presidents in American history. I don’t think we can pin that on Jimmy Carter refusing to debate his primary opponent, that is a real reach the strains belief.

          • queermunist she/her
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            4 months ago

            Was Ted Kennedy punished in any way for that, or did he continue on with a long and illustrious career?

            That was before they knew they’d need to keep primary challengers from threatening incumbents.

            Though he did have a long dead-end career where his presidential ambitions were totally destroyed.

            You can blame his “memory of defeat” for that, but what about the Party’s memory of defeat? They saw the worst defeat in history and you don’t think they associate that, in part, with a primary that dinged their incumbent? Primarying the incumbent is terrifying to the Party and they will always do whatever they can to discourage and prevent it. The Party learned from history.

            And if Biden stays on the ticket we might see a fucking repeat with Trump this time, and that would be a nightmare.

            • @Carrolade
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              14 months ago

              I think you’re really straining a narrative here, kinda contorting it to make it fit this enduring unfair conspiracy. I just apply Occam’s Razor to it, it’s too convoluted, and there is a much simpler, at least as likely, explanation.

              Additionally, I think people would have come out and made statements about being threatened, and would not be deterred by some assumption of punishment. An actual threat would be required to quell someone who thinks they can help run the country, these are not naturally fearful, anxiety-prone individuals.

              Lastly, Jimmy Carter was overseeing one of the most brutal economic situations in the past century, that was the era of stagflation. He had to deal with Three Mile Island and the Iran Hostage Crisis. At the time, he was unbelievably unpopular, which triggered the primary challenge in the first place. He was then challenged by one of the most charismatic men to ever run, a former Hollywood star, winning the popular vote 44 million to 35 million and getting almost 500 electoral college votes.

              If you just want to go “oh, that was the primary challenge!” I think that’s just not very smart thinking.

              • queermunist she/her
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                4 months ago

                I think you keep calling this a conspiracy to discredit normal party politics and I think I’m tired of telling you it’s not a conspiracy. The simple explanation is the Party doesn’t want incumbent challenges and so it does what it can to prevent them, so it doesn’t do debates and doesn’t help candidates get their name out and openly supports the incumbent.

                Look, whether you think political parties do anything or not doesn’t matter anyway. We’re about to see if Biden is going to be forced out of the race, and maybe if he is you’ll see that party pressure exists and that it doesn’t all come down to individual free agents acting of the own will without outside pressure changing their decisions.

                And if he’s forced out I’m sure you’ll handwave it as just being a personal choice between him and his family, and the Party had little to do with it. 🙄

                • @Carrolade
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                  4 months ago

                  No, it’s a conspiracy. People coordinating secretively, in your assertion applying behind the scenes pressure to prevent people who may want to run from running for a government seat, without admitting to it. If it’s not a conspiracy, show me some evidence of where people have talked openly about it.

                  Without evidence, it is not just a conspiracy, it’s a conspiracy theory.

                  It does not matter if it makes sense to you, we do not simply try to apply “sense” to what we see, we look at evidence. Because what makes sense to one individual may not make sense to another, this is just a basic challenge of life. Qanon makes sense to Trump fans for instance. Evidence goes beyond individual sense, though.

                  And again, I already said, twice that yes, influence exists. Sway, lobbying, convincing, etc. This is distinct from control, command, force. This fine line is the difference between reality, with things like money and polls and convincing arguments, and imaginary conspiracy theories like yours or Qanon.

                  Unless, you can present evidence of someone receiving this pressure not to run? At any point in the past 30 years? It’d be news to me, I would be very interested in hearing about this. But I want evidence, not supposition from random internet people.

                  edit: Significant pressure too, please. Not just a quote from some random official saying “don’t run pls”. People are entitled to have their own opinions, and this is distinct from a pattern of coercion. You’ve mentioned people’s careers being ruined, for instance.

                  edit2: You know, they would have blocked Katie Porter if they could’ve blocked anyone. Instead they had a drag-out, brutal primary contest with her and a moderate, that she lost. If they stopped people, they’d have stopped her instead of having to win a bruising election at the cost of millions.

                  • queermunist she/her
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                    4 months ago

                    Now that he’s been forced out, do you feel ridiculous for twisting yourself into a pretzel trying to support him?

                    And, like I predicted, will you deny he was forced out and just claim this was a personal decision?