• Flying Squid
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    744 months ago

    Biden endorsed Harris. The donors want Harris. Even AOC endorsed Harris. It’s going to be Harris even if it’s an “open convention.”

    • @[email protected]
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      394 months ago

      Just to elaborate more, it is an open convention because the delegates are unbound, they could vote for anyone now that Biden has withdrawn. To get on the ballot, anyone just needs to get the signatures of 300 delegates saying they support them. If the vast majority of delegates publicly endorse Harris before the convention though, it’s essentially already over. As this would indicate she would easily win the first ballot (and no, before anyone asks, super delegates cannot vote on the first ballot).

      • @dariusj18
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        4 months ago

        It is always an open convention. By rules, delegates are pledged but not bound.

    • @[email protected]
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      74 months ago

      Enough delegates have pledged to Harris to give her a majority. There’s not going to be a fight.

      I know the media is looking to drum up controversy so they can draw eyeballs, but this is done.

    • @[email protected]
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      44 months ago

      Then let it be an open convention. The last time the DNC crowned someone we got Hillary and a bunch of young voters switched over to Trump.

      We should have an open convention even if there’s a likely outcome to foster unity.

      • @gAlienLifeform
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        284 months ago

        If the delegates get to swoop in at the last to make someone nobody’s ever heard of the nominee instead of Harris, that’s going to be a coronation that totally disregards voters. Harris being the nominee is what would have happened anyway if Biden had to step down and the logical way to go here.

        Harris is not my favorite person in the world, but I guarantee there’s a chunk of convention delegates who want someone like a Manchin or a Bloomberg or a Clinton or someone else worse.

      • Flying Squid
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        184 months ago

        Yes, I’m sure there will be a lot of “unity” from people like yourself when it’s Kamala Harris anyway.

        • @[email protected]
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          4 months ago

          There will be, yes.

          I think she’s a bad choice to beat Trump and the most important thing is to beat Trump. If she’s the pick I’ll back her - but I’m not going to support someone who I think will lose while there’s still a choice.

          Edit: Beautiful show of unity - downvoting someone saying they’ll back the eventual candidate. This kind of head-in-sand bullshit is what loses us fucking elections and it was all over the place shouting down people with legitimate criticisms of Biden before he stepped down.

          • Flying Squid
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            114 months ago

            Why in specific is she a bad choice?

            • @Bassman1805
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              174 months ago

              And who realistically is a better choice at this point? I can’t think of a single other Democrat with the recognition to pull a presidential campaign together in 3 months.

              • Flying Squid
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                34 months ago

                The only person I have heard that even remotely has a chance of being the pick instead of Harris is Gavin Newsom and he both doesn’t seem to want it and also polls really badly against Trump.

                • @Bassman1805
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                  74 months ago

                  Yeah, he’s widely known outside of California, but largely because he’s a massive punching bag for conservatives. Not a good pick for a presidential race.

                  • @njm1314
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                    04 months ago

                    I think Gavin Newsom will be a very strong candidate if he had time to prime the pump. Which is I imagine what he was planning to do in 2028. A shorter, if we can call four months short good Lord, campaign is not in his favor.

            • @[email protected]
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              14 months ago

              She performed poorly on the national stage last time she was on it. She has a decent voting record but doesn’t have a lot of sponsored legislation. She has a deep flaw from being a former prosecutor. I’m not aware of her having a passion to fix any particular problems.

              I think we can do better and choose someone who can excite the voterbase to get folks to turn up. We need to fight voter apathy.

              • Aniki 🌱🌿
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                54 months ago

                That was almost 4 years ago and she’s been VP since. Things have changed.

                • @[email protected]
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                  4 months ago

                  They have? She’s now popular enough to excite the base and win a sweeping victory at the convention?

                  (Also, I don’t know how her being a former prosecutor has changed - and I’m quite doubtful most of my other concerns have shifted either).

              • Flying Squid
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                54 months ago

                She performed poorly on the national stage last time she was on it.

                So like Joe Biden in 2020 who got elected anyway.

                She has a decent voting record but doesn’t have a lot of sponsored legislation.

                Who gives a shit?

                She has a deep flaw from being a former prosecutor.

                That is in no way a flaw, let alone a deep one.

                On top of that, 13 presidents have been lawyers, including Clinton and Obama.

                I’m not aware of her having a passion to fix any particular problems.

                Just because you’re not aware of something doesn’t mean it isn’t the case.

                • @[email protected]
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                  14 months ago

                  I’m not aware of her having a passion to fix any particular problems.

                  Just because you’re not aware of something doesn’t mean it isn’t the case.

                  Let’s see if she can deliver a passionate platform, it’s kinda her entire job as a politician and if I, a hyperaware political person, am not familiar with it, then most people have no fucking clue.

                  • Flying Squid
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                    64 months ago

                    Most people have no fucking clue because she’s been in the shadows for four years as VP and I think it was pretty obvious that Obama’s former VP was going to get the nomination in 2020.

                    She still has a lot of time for voters to get to know her and your claim of hyperawareness didn’t apparently extend to the fact that a whole lot of presidents have been lawyers.

          • @paultimate14
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            44 months ago

            As a black person she’ll alienate the racists in the DNC. There aren’t as many as the DNC, but it would be naive to think there aren’t any. As much as I don’t want to cater to racists, beating Trump is more important right now.

            As a woman she will alienate misogynists. Same thing.

            As a cop she’s going to alienate a ton of voters. She’s recently changed her positions on a lot of crime-related issues like marijuana, but idk how much that’s going to help her win the BLM crowd.

            I’ll vote for her if she’s the pick, no question. Heck, there are very few people the DNC could nominate at this point that I wouldn’t vote for. I suppose as Biden’s VP she was kind of nominated in the primary if you squint. But yeah… DNC elites appointing a cop at the last minute doesn’t strike me as the best way to fight fascism.

            Identity politics aside, I like a lot of what she claims to support, but that’s assuming that she’s truly no longer the prosecutor she used to be. She has good records on reproductive rights, economics, LGBTQ+ support. My biggest gripe with her would be she’s still just as pro-Israel as Biden and most of the DNC seems to be.

      • @Bassman1805
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        134 months ago

        People love this talking point, as if Hillary didn’t also win the popular and electoral votes in that primary. She still would’ve had the nomination of there were no super delegates.

        I wanted 8 years of Bernie too, but let’s chill with the conspiracy theories.

        • @[email protected]
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          24 months ago

          No.

          In that primary the charts from day one included superdelegates for Hillary and the DNC absolutely put their thumb on the scale in a major way. That primary was an absolutely awful mistake and turned a lot of voters off of the democratic ticket.

          Were it not for the bullshit Hillary pulled we likely never would have had Trump as a president - the margin of his election was thin enough that not trampling over the progressive side of the party would have kept him out of office.

          • @[email protected]
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            44 months ago

            the margin of his election was thin enough that not trampling over the progressive side of the party would have kept him out of office

            There, see. There’s the fault in your argument. The Democratic party can’t seem to stop trampling over progressives