Rep. Dean Phillips (D-Minn.), who has floated a presidential primary contest against President Biden, said Sunday people want to “turn the page” on the incumbent president when it comes to 2024.

  • @[email protected]
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    91 year ago

    tbh don’t we want this in our politics? i know it is ugly right now but post Biden what will the game look like?

    i think the right burned itself up and splintered into factions and now the “left” (see center) are also splintering

    the group i see as the most united and with the clearest platform are basically the social democrats. hopefully they play the game right and manage to really set up a stronger safety net for the poorest and give space for a middle class again

    • @PrinceWith999Enemies
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      181 year ago

      While the Dems do need a deeper bench, you don’t get there by trying to primary a sitting president. It’s not going to bring anyone new to the ticket. There are several problems:

      1. You’re going to lose. People who primary Biden are not running because they want to be president, because they know there is not path to victory.
      2. Biden is already the compromise candidate. Fox screeching about how Biden is a communist doesn’t make him one. Republicans moving so far to the right that they’ve passed over the event horizon doesn’t make Biden a communist, either. You’re not going to get republican defectors, because just being a democrat is the bad part.
      3. The only thing a primary run will do is hurt the Biden campaign in the general. You can’t win, you can’t recruit more voters to the ticket.

      You aren’t deepening the bench by doing that. We had a wide array of candidates going into 2020, and we decided on a center-right safe choice for electability. You don’t deepen the bench with a failed presidential bid against your party’s incumbent.

      You deepen the bench by moving people from the House to the Senate with the full support on the democratic committee, replacing people like Feinstein by pushing them out the door if necessary. You do it by advancing younger people to positions of leadership in the party and in national and state congresses. You do it by making sure people like Newsom get air time and national exposure.

      I support out of state progressive candidates wherever I can, and I think we need a better organizational tool for doing so. I liked it when the Pod Saves people were trying to help identify the seats that could be flipped, and I’d like to see that extend to the state governments. We need a cohesive strategy designed to take back state governments and judgeships as well as federal offices. We will not get there by running in a primary against an incumbent president.

    • Telorand
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      121 year ago

      We do want this in our politics, but when we have fascists calling from inside the house, it’s a luxury we can’t afford right now.

      Once fascism is no longer a viable political path for extremists, then we can talk about improving candidate quality and having better options. From where we are currently, though, it feels like putting the cart before the horse.

      • @krashmo
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        61 year ago

        People have been telling any Democrat that isn’t a neoliberal “now isn’t the right time for what you want” for far longer than I’ve been able to vote and I’m 35. Well I say fuck that. Now is a perfectly fine time, people like you just want your guy to keep winning primaries.

        • Hairyblue
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          71 year ago

          I will vote for the person who wins the Democratic primaries. I don’t want Biden to run again. He is too old. BUT if he wins the primaries I will vote for him.

          Republicans and the Christian Nationalist want to rule us from a minority. Voting may not matter anymore if they get in power. They are scared of young people voting and are looking for ways to stop it. Stop voting for Republicans, they don’t believe in our democracy.

        • Telorand
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          51 year ago

          I get your feeling, and I’m actually a little bit older than you (so have had to vote for the same boring centrists), but “fuck that” isn’t how you strategically defeat a coalition of rich, Conservative ideologues who have been slowly and tactfully eroding our democracy.

          “People like me” haven’t had their candidate yet win a primary (I’m a progressive socialist), so I’m not sure who you’re referring to.

          • @krashmo
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            51 year ago

            Fair enough, but again that’s the same kind of thing we’ve been hearing for decades. We heard it about Bernie in the last two elections even though he polled better than Clinton or Biden against Trump. At this point it doesn’t seem like sound advice so much as a means to convince people to vote for someone they don’t actually like based on a vague appeal to the greater good.

            • @orclev
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              21 year ago

              Welcome to first past the post voting, where nobody can take any risks for fear of handing the opposition a win by default. Nothing will get better until we overhaul our voting system. We desperately need multiple parties but it’s literally impossible to get there with first past the post.

      • @Ensign_Crab
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        41 year ago

        Huh. I usually only hear this when progressives run for anything.

    • @Ensign_Crab
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      11 year ago

      I think that Biden’s challengers from his right are doing so because they think he’ll die before the primaries and want to be the remaining logical choice.

      Sure is interesting that they’re willing to splinter the party when centrists call for perfect lockstep unity behind incumbents when it suits them.