• macniel
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    995 months ago

    I wish her a good run and become the first female president of the USA.

      • @Valmond
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        125 months ago

        I don’t like lemon ice-cream very much, but I like it a hell more than scrotum gangreene.

    • @[email protected]
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      -1595 months ago

      Gods I cannot wait for her to lose, she’s a POS through and through, Dems need a better candidate.

      • @[email protected]
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        745 months ago

        I think she’s an awful choice tactically and have little hope for what her administration would do - but I’ll still vote for her if her name is on the ticket.

          • Billiam
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            95 months ago

            I disagree.

            There are millions of voters who, for reasons I will never understand, are still undecided. At some point, fighting over your candidate doesn’t inspire outsiders as to your party’s vision for governance. You’ll never sell a message of “We’re the party that will defeat fascism!” if half your efforts are spent essentially rehashing the primary. Seriously, the Dems right now look like a low budget version of Spartacus.

            Biden, whether through serious belief or the obstinance that comes from advanced age, is not going to step aside. Continuing to publicly fight that, rather than unite behind a single party-wide message, only makes the Dems look weak.

            And no, I’m not saying Biden shouldn’t step aside or that he is the best candidate. But party unity is the key to defeating the GOP and if Biden won’t withdraw, we work with that.

          • @Psychodelic
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            35 months ago

            Seriously! 4 weeks of plenty of time

            I mean, we Americans are certainly well-known for our quick critical-thinking skills, our ability to be reasonable and of course our willingness to compromise for the greater good.

            Hell, the day before the election is just as good - especially if you don’t actually care about winning and/or enacting critical policies/legislation we need

            • @[email protected]
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              105 months ago

              Exactly. Briton just had an entire election in 6 weeks!
              Imagine, only 6 weeks for an entire campaign ‘season’!
              Glorious

              • @Psychodelic
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                45 months ago

                Sorry, bro. I was being sarcastic. As much as I’d love what you’re putting down I absolutely do not think Americans are capable of anything like that

                Most Americans can barely read. That’s where we’re at, over here

              • @[email protected]
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                15 months ago

                Then again, Britain is how many times smaller than the USA with how many times less electors and how many times less subdivisions in the country?

                • @[email protected]
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                  135 months ago

                  India is roughly a billion people; The largest democracy in the world. I think they get it all done in 3 months. They also just had an election this year.

                  The US is kinda unique, having years long presedental campaigns. It’s crazy, and complety, unnecessarily, excessive.

                  There’s no reason for it, beyond driving donations for parties, and ratings for news networks.

                  But it’s the insanity we have. The insanity we’ve gotten used to.

      • @enbyecho
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        305 months ago

        Gods I cannot wait for her to lose, she’s a POS through and through

        I find that in general when people say shit like this, without elaborating, they generally don’t have a solid idea why they think that. Is that the case for you or do you have actual reasons for saying this?

        • @[email protected]
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          5 months ago

          Not OP here and I’ll vote for her in the election 100% but the concerns I’ve seen raised most often are:

          She was a cop and her history reflects the history of being a cop. Being a prosecutor means that you’re pressuring innocent people into jail time plea deals and using cops to back up your arguments all the time. She’s the epitome of back the blue.

          That makes her a great choice against the “Law and Order” fascist felon at least.

          • @enbyecho
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            05 months ago

            … but the concerns I’ve seen raised most often are:

            Concern, singular. It’s the same issue over and over again, and especially in Harris’ case… I mean both Clintons were once opposed to gay marriage, which is a real deal breaker for me. I didn’t hold that one single issue against Hillary, I looked at the totality of her neo-liberal/con background before deciding I couldn’t support her.

            And… Joe Biden and just about every other congress critter has a terrible history of police support too. You know what? That’s the price they pay for getting votes. I don’t agree with it, I think it stinks as much as pigs in general, but it’s a price I’m willing to accept to get everything else and not get a Republican administration.

            I’m looking for reasons that make Harris unelectable. TBH, her background throwing people in jail for minor drug offenses ups her appeal with a lot of voters.

      • macniel
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        5 months ago

        why would you hope that? (not a US resident)

        • @SirDerpy
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          She began on a progressive platform with a side of identity politics. She sold out her progressive platform during the campaign to position herself for, then secure the VP nomination.

          But, we don’t need specifics to be certain any given US federal politician is absolute trash. They’re all elected on corporate money.

        • @[email protected]
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          75 months ago

          Ideologically, she’s a corporate shill that incarcerated thousands of people for minor posessions and then claimed to be against such policies while never offering any amnesty or apology. Politically I have major disagreeances with both parties platforms. Socially, I think Harris leads to some Republican bullshit scheme.

          Also, to everyone that keeps trying to gaslight America. EVERYONE HATES HARRIS, SHE WILL DRIVE AWAY ON THE FENCE VOTERS AND YOUNGER APATHETIC VOTERS.

          • @[email protected]
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            5 months ago

            She did her job and applied the law as it was, she wasn’t the one who had the power to change those laws, the people chose to elect people who didn’t change them.

      • @ulkesh
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        135 months ago

        So you are eager for Trump to win, then.

        sigh

        • @[email protected]
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          -185 months ago

          I’m eager for dems to see we won’t put up with trash anymore. No more slightly better republicans, we deserve better.

          • @[email protected]
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            65 months ago

            The unfortunate truth is that that’s not an option. We get either a Republican, or a slightly better Republican. We need to put in a lot of groundwork to open the doors for any other options, and we’re just not there yet.

          • @ulkesh
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            25 months ago

            So, Trump then.

              • @ulkesh
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                45 months ago

                The fact that you’re both-sides-ing this is enough for me to bow out. Biden and Harris are nowhere near the level of evil that Trump is. Enjoy wasting your vote. I’m out.

      • @[email protected]
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        105 months ago

        They’re all pieces of shit, you don’t come to lead a political party without being one. But we’ve still got to pick which is the least smelly piece of shit of the bunch.

      • @expatriado
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        75 months ago

        enlight me on the reasons for this conclusion, idk much about her

        • @[email protected]
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          Ideologically, she’s a corporate shill that incarcerated thousands of people for minor posessions and then claimed to be against such policies while never offering any amnesty or apology. Politically I have major disagreeances with both parties platforms. Socially, I think Harris leads to some Republican bullshit scheme.

          Also, to everyone that keeps trying to gaslight America. EVERYONE HATES HARRIS, SHE WILL DRIVE AWAY ON THE FENCE VOTERS AND YOUNGER APATHETIC VOTERS.

          • @enbyecho
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            05 months ago

            Ah, so you sorta tried to answer this question. But it boils down to “because things”, mainly. Or rather ONE thing exactly. I’d bet that is the sum total of your actual knowledge of Harris’ history.

            Like take this sentence: “Socially, I think Harris leads to some Republican bullshit scheme.”

            What? What does that actually mean?

            • @[email protected]
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              -45 months ago

              Harris cannot win, Harris will not win this election. If she is the nominated candidate all it leads to is Republican bullshit and a win.

              • @enbyecho
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                05 months ago

                Harris cannot win, Harris will not win this election. If she is the nominated candidate all it leads to is Republican bullshit and a win.

                “Because reasons”

                • @[email protected]
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                  05 months ago

                  Yes, because of many reasons, with the big one being she’s incredibly umpopular and will drive people away.

  • SatansMaggotyCumFart
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    635 months ago

    I think Biden has a better chance than her, and if he’s voted in she’s the back up anyways.

      • partial_accumen
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        On that note, what would America do if Biden were re-elected and simply stepped down immediately?

        I know republicans would attempt to block and/or complain about everything, but the reasonables- how would they react?

        Assuming the Republicans still hold the House, they would ABSOLUTELY LOVE THIS!

        Sure, President Harris would still be a Democrat and control the Executive branch, but her new VP would be voted in by the House of Representatives. They’d try to put Trump in as VP. Having Trump (even as the junior in the Executive Branch) would give him access and power to spoil President Harris’s agenda.

        “Whenever there is a vacancy in the office of the Vice President, the President shall nominate a Vice President who shall take office upon confirmation by a majority vote of both Houses of Congress.” - source is The Constitution of the United States specifically the 25th Amendment

        Alternatively, again assuming Republicans keep the house, they could make Trump the Speaker of the House.

        “The Constitution does not explicitly require the speaker to be an incumbent member of the House of Representatives, although every speaker thus far has been, and as a member the speaker also represents their district and retains the right to vote.” source

        I hate these two possible scenarios of VP or Speaker.

        On that note, what would America do if Biden were re-elected and simply stepped down immediately?

        • @[email protected]
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          235 months ago

          It’s so wild to me that one of your two political parties is actively trying to dismantle your democracy and everyone continues on as if it’s normal.

          • @halcyoncmdr
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            -215 months ago

            You seem to think the other hasn’t been working towards the same goal for the past 50 years at the best of corporations, just less obvious about it. The current Dems are fiscally conservative, and socially liberal. That’s why all the Republicans fight about is usually social issues, they’re both working towards whatever corporations want done with the money most of the time.

            • @Psychodelic
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              225 months ago

              Dude, Biden tried to forgive like $140 billion in student loans and invested like a trillion dollars into infrastructure and energy programs with the IRA

              You’re not entirely wrong that the DNC is heavily influenced by wealthy corporations/donors, but c’mon man. Get a grip! You sound ridiculous with that both sides nonsense

              • @halcyoncmdr
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                -55 months ago

                Doing good things a few times doesn’t make up for all the other neoliberal corporate bullshit you seem to want to ignore happened.

                Looks like providing a carrot once in a while works well at making people forget.

                • @Psychodelic
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                  55 months ago

                  Are you trying to suggest not voting for one of the only two political parties? Third party candidates can’t win in the US

                  If you are, how old are you and how long have you been paying attention to American politics? I’m genuinely curious

        • @leadore
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          95 months ago

          No no. House doesn’t get to nominate/choose the VP. Harris would choose a VP then the House would have to vote to approve them or not, like the Senate does with SCOTUS nominees. So the worst a Repub-controlled House could do (and they would) is prevent her from filling the VP slot at all.

          That’s why: 1) very important Dems get the House back in this election. Biden may not hand it over immediately but it could happen at any time during the term. 2) It’s probably better to make her the nominee now so she can choose a VP to run with and avoid that issue.

        • @[email protected]
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          45 months ago

          I think a Trump VP is inconceivable - if it came down to that Harris would likely just continuously nominate random democrats and leave the position vacant.

          • @[email protected]
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            95 months ago

            At which point political assassination becomes a real concern as the next in line is Mike Johnson.

        • @FlowVoid
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          45 months ago

          Realistically, if Biden were re-elected then Democrats would almost certainly win the handful of seats needed to control the House.

        • @Guy_Fieris_Hair
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          15 months ago

          It would take Harris to Nominate him as vice, it would instead be a deadlock of never a vice, and whatever.

        • @[email protected]
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          15 months ago

          Or she could use the presidential immunity and make sure that Trump can’t be nominated in that position 🤷

    • Omega
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      65 months ago

      I don’t think he’s capable of making up the difference.

      She has higher potential. But she could also do worse, which doesn’t really matter.

  • @macarthur_park
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    605 months ago

    NYTimes reporting the call wasn’t anything exciting.

    Vice President Kamala Harris tried to buck up the Democratic Party’s biggest donors on Friday, telling about 300 of them that there was little to worry about in President Biden’s campaign.

    Ms. Harris spoke to the group at a time of extraordinary turmoil among Democrats, with many hoping that she will replace Mr. Biden as the party’s nominee. But several listeners said they found the meeting overall to be of little value and even, at times, condescending, believing that the message ignored donors’ legitimate concerns about the Biden-led ticket.

    Ms. Harris, of course, is in a delicate position: She must demonstrate loyalty to her boss but also be prepared to jump immediately to the top of the Democratic ticket if Mr. Biden were to withdraw.

    • @[email protected]
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      305 months ago

      But several listeners said they found the meeting overall to be of little value and even, at times, condescending…

      Yeah no shit. Harris bombed out of the 2020 run before Iowa because that’s just who she is. Got 0 rizz. Biden should have talked Abrams into being VP 4 years ago.

    • @Ensign_Crab
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      15 months ago

      The NYT that has a personal vendetta against Biden for reasons that Biden stans can never articulate?

  • @demizerone
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    495 months ago

    It would be fucking hilarious if they pushed out Kamala for Hilary.

    • @[email protected]
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      685 months ago

      “We realized the reason voters want Biden to step down is because Harris is his running mate. So we replaced her with the only Democrat in existence less popular than Biden, and the only person in existence to have lost to the Toupee in an election: Hillary Clinton. It’s her turn.” - Dem leadership.

      • @FinishingDutch
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        455 months ago

        God that whole rhetoric pissed me off to no end, when they shoved Bernie aside because it was ‘her turn’. The level of arrogance needed to even think that, let alone push it as an argument on voters…

        While I’m certainly not downplaying her actual political credits - she has experience in all levels of government - the presidency is not an ‘it’s my turn now’ position. That soured a lot of voters on her as a candidate.

        ‘It’s my turn’ is only an argument if you’re waiting in line at Disneyland.

        • @[email protected]
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          Was the saying “it’s her turn” always referring specifically to Hillary? I always processed “it’s her turn” to just refer to a woman president in general, and giving the environment, that just happened to be Hillary. Still not MUCH better, but at least we’re saying it’s a collectives turn, not a single individual person.

          Edit: literally just asking a simple question and posing a rhetorical in response to my memories around the event. Not trying to start anything.

      • @stetech
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        Technically, she got more votes (edit due to being unclear: than Trump, in 2016). And not by a little, nearly 3 million people more voted for her over orange anti-republic anti-democracy man. But the voting system is unrepresentative, so it didn’t matter.

        • @Hugin
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          deleted by creator

  • @[email protected]
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    275 months ago

    Why is everyone acting as if she’s an heir or something? All delegates to the convention have already been elected. If Biden steps down, they can vote for whoever, and Dem party rules state that the superdelegates can’t jump in until the 2nd vote if no one wins the first.

    • @[email protected]
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      175 months ago

      I heard somewhere that all the money raised for the Biden/Harris campaign would stay with Harris if she ran for president.

      I don’t know if that’s true, or what would happen to the money if they both drop out but I heard someone say that.

      • @leadore
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        105 months ago

        From https://www.usnews.com/news/national-news/articles/2024-07-19/what-happens-to-bidens-campaign-money-if-he-drops-out

        What Happens to Biden’s Campaign Money if He Drops Out?

        It depends on who the new Democratic nominee is, says Saurav Ghosh, the director of federal campaign finance reform at the Campaign Legal Center.

        The simplest option from a campaign finance standpoint would be to nominate Vice President Kamala Harris, because “if Harris remains on the ticket, as either the presidential or vice-presidential candidate, the new ticket would maintain access to all the funds in the campaign committee,” says Ghosh.

        This is “[b]ecause Biden and Vice President Harris share a campaign committee,” Ghosh says, as both names appear on Biden’s statement of candidacy and statement of organization to the Federal Election Commission.

        However, if a new Democratic ticket did not include Biden or Harris, then things would become “more complicated,” Ghosh said.

        Since $2,000 is the limit to transfer money between federal campaign committees per election cycle, Ghosh said, the Biden campaign couldn’t legally contribute all of its campaign money to a new candidate.

        Instead, “Biden’s campaign would have to offer to refund the money to donors, who could then contribute to the new candidate’s campaign,” or “transfer an unlimited amount to the DNC, which could then spend the money supporting the new presidential nominee, and up to $32.3 million of that spending could be coordinated with the new nominee,” said Ghosh.

      • @SirDerpy
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        15 months ago

        This is absolutely not true. The DNC can do whatever the fuck they want with presidential campaign money. It’s a donation to a private organization. There’s no contract unless a big donor insists.

        • @[email protected]
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          235 months ago

          That’s an oversimplification. The Biden campaign has around $240 million on hand. If Harris becomes the presidential nominee, her campaign inherits the entire $240 mil.

          If another person becomes the nominee, the Biden campaign could refund contributions so they can be sent to the new campaign directly. Otherwise, they are permitted to transfer as much as they want to the DNC.

          But the DNC can’t spend the money however they like. They can spend an unlimited amount supporting the new candidate independently (running ads, oppo research, etc), but there is a limit to how much they can spend in coordination with the campaign. For example, if they rent a venue for the candidate, that must be coordinated with the campaign and therefore counts towards coordinated expenditures. The coordinated expenditure limit per presidential cycle is $32.3 million.

          And if they want to give directly to the campaign, that is even more limited. A political committee can only give $5,000 dollars per campaign per election cycle. Anything more than that would have to go to some kind of Super PAC which also has limits in what it can do in direct coordination with a campaign (though it gets fuzzier because Super PACs are tantamount to political money laundering in my opinion).

          So no, if the DNC gets the money, they can’t just give it to whatever campaign they like. The limitations are not due to any contractual obligation when donating the funds, but rather US political rules on how presidential campaigns are allowed to receive money.

          Source: https://www.usnews.com/news/national-news/articles/2024-07-19/what-happens-to-bidens-campaign-money-if-he-drops-out

          • @[email protected]
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            5 months ago

            If another person becomes the nominee, the Biden campaign could refund contributions so they can be sent to the new campaign directly.

            Hmm.

            That’d have to happen extremely quickly. If they don’t have some kind of mechanism already in place for getting approval from the donor, it seems likely to me that they wouldn’t have time to set something up.

            The US typically runs fairly long campaigns, the whole election year. Not all countries work like that. IIRC, the UK does a (limited) three month campaign cycle. But even by those standards, this is really short. There are about three-and-a-half months left before the election. They haven’t even selected an alternative, much less had someone spend the money to put together a campaign, much less actually embark on it.

            Also, US campaigns are very large compared to most countries. I don’t know what total spending is like this time around, but I remember that when Trump ran against Hillary in 2016, each spent about $1 billion in their campaign. If you have to do that, you’d have to select someone, set up and complete all the fund transfer stuff, pay someone to devise a campaign, and then implement the campaign – and this is on the order of a billion-dollar project – in about a hundred days.

            • @[email protected]
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              45 months ago

              I agree. As much as I want to see an open debate between potential candidates, narrowing it down to a single alternative and have a vote whether to switch to that person or stay with Biden… the financial side makes that idea seem unrealistic.

              I think the most viable option is to have Biden step down and Harris step up. As much as Kamala Harris is not my favorite politician, I think we all understand this is not about having someone we like in the White House, it’s about ensuring someone with plans to dismantle democracy does not get the chance to bring those plans to fruition.

          • @Psychodelic
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            15 months ago

            I’m with you, but can’t they just donate it to a super PAC? Isn’t that basically their whole point - to launder campaign contributions?

            • @[email protected]
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              55 months ago

              The red tape Super PACs get around concerns how much money can be received. While a presidential campaign can only receive $3,300 from an individual, and a traditional PAC can receive up to $5,000, a Super PAC can receive unlimited donations from both individuals and corporations. That’s the money laundering part - it allows the super rich to put unlimited money toward a political cause even though the system was originally designed to prevent this.

              But the official name for Super PACs is “Independent-expenditure-only political committee”. So, while they are allowed to receive unlimited funds, they cannot give it to a campaign or do any spending in coordination with a campaign (though how many Super PACs strictly follow the no coordination rule is hard to quantify).

              Essentially, the DNC giving the money to a Super PAC would be similar to if they kept the money and did the independent political expenditures themselves. The difference being that they would lose control over what independent expenditures the money goes towards.

          • @SirDerpy
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            5 months ago

            Yet, you never asked.

              • @SirDerpy
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                5 months ago

                The best way to facilitate the spread of misinformation, THE critical war which humans are loosing at an increasingly fast rate, is to post the wrong answer on the internet. And, you got a low quality answer because it’s coming also with emotion.

                It’s a cute meme. But, you’re not serving yourself or the community as well as you could if you simply frame it as a question.

                As an example here’s what was missing from the higher quality answer you deserved:

                Donations can be made to candidates. But, the vast majority is made to the national committees, then allocated to presidential and down ballot campaigns. This is one way individual candidates are held ideologically hostage to the changing whims of corporations.

                In the future please just ask questions. We don’t need a community for that on Lemmy… yet.

                • @[email protected]
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                  05 months ago

                  I couched my comment with the caveat that it was unsubstantiated and it then generated a lot of discussion. Your comment itself is unsubstantiated and really just makes you sound like a cob. Is money donated to a party theirs to use anyway they want? The answer appears to be kinda, maybe, but it depends.

    • @Ensign_Crab
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      25 months ago

      Why is everyone acting as if she’s an heir or something?

      Because these are Democrats, and no one expects them to have primaries anymore.

  • @apfelwoiSchoppen
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    5 months ago

    It’s been kind of maddening, seeing the discourse about her electability go from zero to hero. US politics makes no sense outside of corporate and wealthy circles. She is way more electable than Biden.

    • OsaErisXero
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      135 months ago

      There are, potentially valid, concerns that her being brown, a prosecutor, and a her makes her less electable than the ancient white man nobody likes. I think people for whom this is a problem were never going to vote dem anyway, but I can see what they perceive the problem is.

      • OfCourseNot
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        15 months ago

        Some people are gonna vote D/R no matter what, some will never vote D/R. The problem at hand is not those, is taking the people that could vote D ‘off their seats’ and go cast that vote. Biden’s not moving anyone, which could seriously result in losing the election, and I think Harris on top of not moving these could make the people that have a problem with her being a woman of color or a prosecutor go vote for Trump. The perceive problem is a real concern.

    • @Psychodelic
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      15 months ago

      I wouldn’t listen to any network or pundit that flip flops that noticeably

      Where are you seeing that kind of drastic shift?

  • @TunaCowboy
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    115 months ago

    We should update our currency “enabling the worst of us”. We deserve what we get at this point.

    • @heatofignition
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      195 months ago

      “Far left” here, we generally understand the need to vote blue no matter who in this election. It’s pretty obvious.

  • @bostonbananarama
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    -55 months ago

    They both need to step aside, it’s better to have an unknown than a known candidate that people don’t like.

    • Flying Squid
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      185 months ago

      Can you show an election where that strategy has worked this late in the game?

      • @[email protected]
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        195 months ago

        Yea, pretty much every election up here in Canada.

        I’m amazed that Americans think four months “is like literally no time”.

        It’d take an ad spend but the DNC could name recognition pretty much anyone at this point.

        • @[email protected]
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          5 months ago

          The elections are short, but we’ve known the candidates a long time. De Dluca was elected leader shortly before the election and no one knew who he was and he totally tanked.

          *see, I even got his name wrong. Del Duca.

          • smokebuddy [he/him]
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            Doug got in to replace Patrick Brown pretty late in the game after CTV reported that Brown was a creep with young (but later turned out to be legal age) women at bars in Barrie and a snap leadership race stuck us with him. I just looked it up again and he was leader for about three months before the Provincial election, Del Duca was around for two years.

        • Flying Squid
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          35 months ago

          You don’t elect a chief executive in Canada the way we do in the U.S.

          You can’t compare a parliamentary election to our constitutional presidential republic’s elections.

        • @Psychodelic
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          -25 months ago

          *4 weeks, bud

          The convention is in 4 weeks. Mail-in-ballots get sent out at the end of September.

          There’s a lot of misinformation being shared due to the lack of proper context. Yes, the election is in November but it’s not that simple

          Honestly, if we ever think something is simple, we should pretty much assume we don’t know wtf we’re talking about

      • @bostonbananarama
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        85 months ago

        Can you show an election where that strategy has worked this late in the game?

        To my knowledge the President and vice President haven’t stepped down from a political campaign. However, I can point to a situation in which a vice president took over for an unpopular president and lost. That would be Hubert Humphrey in 1968.

        Additionally, just based on logic alone, it is ridiculous to insinuate that it wouldn’t be better to have an unknown candidate than a disliked candidate.

        How could it be better to have a candidate that voters do not like, over a candidate that they haven’t come to an opinion on yet?

          • @bostonbananarama
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            25 months ago

            That would be tough, at this point in the calendar the only incumbent presidential candidates with a lower net job approval than Joe Biden were George HW Bush and Jimmy Carter. Both of whom lost the election. Trump was a few points better in 2020, he also lost.

      • polonius-rex
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        25 months ago

        can you show an election where somebody in the polling position of biden has come back to win it?

        non-us election cycles are shorter than the time that’s left i don’t think it’s an impossible hurdle

        • Flying Squid
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          145 months ago

          I don’t have to show evidence for a claim I did not make.

          You, however, made this claim: it’s better to have an unknown than a known candidate that people don’t like.

          Can you back it up with evidence or not?

          • polonius-rex
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            65 months ago

            i think it’s weird that you think you’re allowed to infer claims from my position but that i’m not allowed to infer claims from yours

            • Flying Squid
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              65 months ago

              I didn’t infer anything. You made a direct claim that you aren’t backing up. I quoted it. I have made no claims.

              • polonius-rex
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                75 months ago

                you didn’t quote anything?

                please could you quote the exact words you believe i used to express “it’s better to have an unknown than a known candidate that people don’t like.”?

                thank you

                • Baron Von J
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                  95 months ago

                  that was the original statement Flying Squid was replying to before you joined in the thread, Squid just didn’t seem to notice that you’re not the same commenter.

                • @ysjet
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                  -65 months ago

                  Fuck off, sea lion.

          • Baron Von J
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            55 months ago

            the commenter you’re replying to now isn’t the one who made that claim, and for some reason they aren’t speaking up to clarify that about themselves.

        • @FlowVoid
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          5 months ago

          can you show an election

          2016

      • @Sanctus
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        -15 months ago

        Its not, last time we did this Reagan won by a fucking landslide. I am very nervous but voting D.

        • @bostonbananarama
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          65 months ago

          In 1980, Reagan beat an unpopular incumbent, Carter, by a huge margin. In 1984, Reagan was the incumbent and crushed Walter Mondale. I’m not sure which one is the, “last time we did this” though.

          If anything, Reagan shows us that unpopular incumbents do not have a high likelihood of reelection.

            • @bostonbananarama
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              35 months ago

              So you didn’t mean Reagan, you meant Nixon. But Nixon was the incumbent and at this point in the calendar had 58% job approval (Biden: 38.5%) and a net job approval of 26.9% (Biden: -17.7%). At this point in the calendar, Nixon was 44.6% higher in net job approval. Do you really think that’s analogous?

              • @Sanctus
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                05 months ago

                What I mean is this is probably a bad idea. We did something similar and it was bad. But go for it. I’m voting D no matter who.

  • sunzu
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    -75 months ago

    I wonder if we would get this headline if the coup failed…

    Zero respect

  • @VanillaBean
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    -75 months ago

    I remember when Rolling Stone was a magazine only for music haha

    • Flying Squid
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      335 months ago

      So before it was a magazine? Because this is issue 1 and there’s a reason there’s a photo of John Lennon dressed as a soldier in an anti-war film on the front page of its inaugural issue in 1967.

      • @VanillaBean
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        -65 months ago

        Still, it was music/musician focused.

        • Flying Squid
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          235 months ago

          And it is now.

          Here’s the front page of their website.