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6 votes
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Syria merges Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces into state institutions
18 votes -
Denmark's state-run postal service is to end all letter deliveries at the end of 2025 – cites a 90% decline in letter volumes since the start of the century
37 votes -
Resistbot: A chatbot that turns your texts into faxes, postal mail, or emails to your representatives in minutes
18 votes -
Inside the explosive US meeting where Donald Trump officials clashed with Elon Musk (and Trump pushed back on Musk (a bit))
20 votes -
Senator Tim Kaine of Virginia promises to force a vote in the US Senate over whether to authorize Donald Trump Canada tariffs
19 votes -
Ontario Conservatives win majority government
15 votes -
Jasmine Crockett dares Republicans to say Russia invaded Ukraine
25 votes -
US Senator Mitch McConnell won’t seek reelection in 2026, ending long tenure as Republican power broker
32 votes -
Bernie Sanders - Trumpism can be defeated!
46 votes -
Eastern Kentucky activists bought land where feds wanted to build a prison
10 votes -
Denmark will spend an additional €6.7bn on defence over the next two years, amid the ongoing threat Russia poses to Europe, PM Mette Frederiksen has announced
11 votes -
Remarks by Singapore minister for defence Dr Ng Eng Hen at the BMW Foundation Leaders Roundtable, “On the horns of a trilemma: Geopolitical recession, technological leadership and energy security"
6 votes -
We found the $2 trillion in US government spending cuts that Department of Government Efficiency seeks
25 votes -
Only about 40% of the Ted Cruz "woke science" US database is woke science
18 votes -
When US Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids go awry, reporting gets blamed
10 votes -
Marco Rubio says El Salvador offers to accept deportees from US of any nationality, including Americans
15 votes -
Ex-NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg will be Norway's finance minister – former military alliance chief returns to the political fray in Oslo after governing coalition collapsed
10 votes -
An interview with Ahmed al-Sharaa, Syria’s president
13 votes -
Finland's Left Alliance is countering the far right by rejecting austerity and championing workers' rights and climate action
21 votes -
Ken Martin elected US Democratic National Committee chair
11 votes -
Norway's PM Jonas Gahr Støre left heading minority government after coalition partner pulls out over EU market rules it says make it impossible to shield citizens from high electricity prices
8 votes -
Secretary of State Marco Rubio orders halt to almost all US foreign aid
28 votes -
US Republican Party representative introduces bill to amend the 22nd Amendment, seeking to allow a third Donald Trump term in office
44 votes -
Danielle Smith puts petroleum over country
14 votes -
Sweden's political parties have agreed that dual citizens who commit crimes that threaten national security should lose their citizenship
11 votes -
US Defense Secretary nominee Pete Hegseth's views on women in combat, infidelity, and extremism, in his own words
16 votes -
New Rasputins rise to power - mysticism, pseudo science and autocracy
6 votes -
US Republicans introduce constitutional amendment to impose term limits
18 votes -
Jean-Marie Le Pen has died
Jean-Marie Le Pen is dead. My mother taught me to only say good things of the dead, so I'll say it's a good thing he's dead. Press release from the Élysée Jean-Marie Le Pen, co-founder and first...
Jean-Marie Le Pen is dead. My mother taught me to only say good things of the dead, so I'll say it's a good thing he's dead.
Press release from the Élysée
Jean-Marie Le Pen, co-founder and first president of the National Front, passed away on January 7 at the age of 96.
Born in 1928, Jean-Marie Le Pen served as a Member of Parliament three times, was a five-time presidential candidate, a seven-time Member of the European Parliament, a municipal councilor for the 20th arrondissement of Paris, and a regional councilor for Île-de-France and later Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur. Founder of the National Front in 1972, its president until 2011, and subsequently honorary president from 2011 to 2018, he reached the second round of the 2002 presidential election, where he secured 17.8% of the vote. A historic figure of the far-right, he played a role in the public life of our country for nearly seventy years, a legacy now left to the judgment of history.
The President of the Republic extends his condolences to his family and loved ones.26 votes -
Matthew Alan Livelsberger wrote political statements calling to forcibly remove Democrats from office in Washington
17 votes -
Pickering pausing in-person meeting due to alt-right threats, mayor says
8 votes -
US Congress' age debate reignites over member living in retirement home
51 votes -
Danish government has announced a huge boost in defence spending for Greenland – defence minister Troels Lund Poulsen said the package was at least $1.5bn
17 votes -
US Senator Elizabeth Warren pushes bill to make it easier and cheaper to file for bankruptcy
11 votes -
Donald Trump nominates Fox News host and Army National Guard Major Pete Hegseth for US defense secretary
26 votes -
A mass movement can beat health CEO greed
12 votes -
Norwegian Parliament votes to extend abortion access to eighteen weeks into a pregnancy, adding six weeks to a limit set in 1978 when the procedure was first legalized
9 votes -
Bomb threats made against US President-Elect Donald Trump cabinet nominees
21 votes -
Matt Gaetz withdraws as US attorney general nominee, after sex trafficking and drug use allegations threatened to imperil his confirmation
51 votes -
US President-Elect Donald Trump picks key figure in Project 2025 for powerful budget role
19 votes -
Tracking who US President-elect Donald Trump has named to serve in his cabinet and administration
29 votes -
John Thune elected as US Senate Republican leader to succeed Mitch McConnell
16 votes -
Thoughts on a Democratic postmortem
So Trump won. Next few years are gonna be rough, I know. What happened, and where can the Dems go from here? James Carville said it best: It’s the economy, stupid (even if he predicted the wrong...
So Trump won. Next few years are gonna be rough, I know. What happened, and where can the Dems go from here?
James Carville said it best: It’s the economy, stupid (even if he predicted the wrong candidate). Inflation was a big concern among voters, mostly driven by gas, groceries, and housing. Rightly or wrongly, many voters tied this to Biden, and through him to Harris. They viewed Trump as being likelier to fix things, with a big bold plan (tariffs, deportations, tax cuts). I suspect some (many?) voters wanted to punish Dems for inflation. Others probably thought Harris would worsen it. While she had a long proposal, she didn’t seem to talk about it much, nor boil it down to soundbites. Many of the demos that swung were hit hard by the price increases.
We saw swings among Latinos, young voters, and rural voters toward Trump. Some of this was due to depressed D turnout (Harris got 15 million fewer votes than Biden), but in other cases it was due to genuine swings. Starr County, TX went Republican for the first time in decades. New Jersey only went for Harris by single digit percentages. Black voters had a small 2% decline of the share of the electorate.
I think non-immigration identity politics played a smaller role. I do think Harris/Walz could’ve talked more about men’s issues specifically (suicide, the academic gap, poor job prospects), although they are hard to soundbiteify and not sound forced. They likely could've approached it from a universalist angle. Trans issues might’ve driven some voters to Trump, but I believe it was more localized (e.g., reduced margins in Loudoun County). Latinos likely weren’t particularly turned off of Trump because they aren’t a cohesive bloc, and in many cases not even the same race (you’ve got whites, indigenous, blacks, mixed, even Asian Latinos). Between the countries the cultures can be very different, to the point of each country hating the other. They can be more socially conservative as well, especially those in their 40s and older.
Immigration was definitely a bigger issue, dovetailing with economic issues (housing costs, “why are migrants getting help but not me”, homelessness). The migrant bussing by Gov. Abbott will be viewed as one of the greatest political maneuvers of the 21st century. It brought the issue to voters outside of border states. The number of people coming to the border was frustrating/scary for some voters.
Abortion didn’t play as big of a role, I suspect because many women don’t think they’ll need one, or because they don’t view care that legally may qualify as one.
The state of democracy didn’t motivate enough people for the Dems, in fact, some people who thought it was important voted for Trump.
Foreign policy didn’t play much of a role, although Israel/Palestine probably was significant in Michigan. But that needle would’ve been hard to thread for any candidate, and probably would’ve been less of a problem if other points were addressed.
I think the fact that Harris is a biracial woman did reduce votes, but I don’t think it was necessarily decisive in her losing. The right woman can definitely win (Thatcher won the U.K. in 1979, so it should be possible in the U.S. in 2024). I would probably hold off in 2028, but I don’t see an issue with running women long-term.
So, what are the takeaways for Dems?
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Suburban white-collar voters are not the end-all be-all. They are a good bloc to have (reliable voters in many swing states, including in off-years), but they are not enough to outweigh the others.
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You cannot take minority demographics for granted. They will not stay with you forever. They are not monolithic.
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Social policy can only go so far. Its salience can be quite limited compared to the economy. Negatives can be very negative, white positives may be “meh”.
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Running against someone, rather than for yourself only works so many times.
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You can only have so many issues stacked against you and be able to win. If it was just the economy, it might’ve been closer, but you had the economy, and immigration, and social policy, and Israel/Palestine.
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The average voter does not account for lag in terms of policy. Trump got credit for a good economy even though Obama did a lot of the work.
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Places that are or have been “safe” are not guaranteed to stay like that forever, especially when paired with point 2, without work.
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NatCon populism is here to stay. The combination of left-ish economics and social conservativism, propelled by apathetics and the hard right is a winning one, and needs to be countered accordingly.
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Many folks view Democrats as being the “mom” or “Karen from HR” party. That is not the kind of reputation that wins elections.
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It’s the economy, stupid.
Based on that, what would my strategy be for Dems in 2026/2028?
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Clean house. The folks in charge lost 2024 and only barely won 2020. Care needs to be taken to ensure replacements have sufficient political/management experience.
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Don’t be the party of why/if. Be the party of do. The former implies insecurity, the latter confidence.
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Bring back the 50-state strategy. Open offices in rural areas. States viewed as safely blue came awfully close to flipping for Trump this year. But the reverse can also be true, especially with a good candidate (cf. Indiana in 2008 ). And even if the presidential candidate loses, downballot candidates can still win, especially in off-years. I think the Dems had a good ground game, and while it cannot make up for everything else, it’s usually better to have it than not. Local elections matter a lot because they have stronger day-to-day impact, and they are the breeding ground for future politicians. North Carolina had several good Dem victories.
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Focus on economics. Moderate suburbanites aren’t enough to win on, and many people like Trumponomics. Go for smart tariffs, universal policies (e.g., Child Tax Credit, universal Medicare, etc), targeted tax cuts and increases along with tax code simplification, and one other oddball policy (withdrawal from the WTO? Annual gas tax holiday?) likely to be popular with voters.
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Social moderation/tolerance. The party is a big tent one, and there’s going to be friction over social issues. This doesn’t mean abandoning core constituencies, but being smarter about rhetoric and candidates (you won’t win the Georgia governorship with an Everytown candidate). Candidates should be allowed to have differing views on social policy (especially if it is personal and doesn’t extend to the political realm), and there should be a mechanism to allow dissent on an issue an individual is out of touch on. Related: get the loudest social progressives away from the party. They frequently clash with it but manage to tie the party to an unpopular viewpoint with something they said on Xitter/Tik Tok. I did like the initial message of freedom the Harris campaign was putting out, but it didn’t seem to be used much.
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Turnout still matters. You need to be able to turn out more people for you than the other guy.
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(My weird, hot take-ish view) Go on an offensive cyber campaign. You’ve got Russian operatives shilling for Trump and the GOP. Hack them. Make it so they can’t just continuously pump out disinfo. Even a few million should be enough to establish a unit dedicated to fucking up Russian troll farms.
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(Courtesy of @EgoEimi) Go for the reality TV angle. Lots of rallies, some political stunts, and bring loads of energy.
One final thought: Trump is a sui generis candidate. He energizes people who aren’t into politics normally. Thus far, the GOP hasn’t been able to translate that into off-year elections or non-Trump POTUS candidates. Nobody wants diet Trump, they want the real deal. When he passes away, it remains to be seen whether someone (Vance?) can take over with the same level of success.
78 votes -
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US election results (other than presidential) thread
A place to collect articles about what happened in all the other contests. Edit: please post what the election results were (with a link to the article) at top level and then we can discuss them...
A place to collect articles about what happened in all the other contests.
Edit: please post what the election results were (with a link to the article) at top level and then we can discuss them underneath it.
34 votes -
German government coalition collapses as Olaf Scholz sacks Finance Minister Christian Lindner
35 votes -
Why I’m running for Commissioner of Agriculture in North Carolina
9 votes -
They ran for US President. What did they learn? (original from 2004)
7 votes -
Japan's government in flux after election gives no party majority
21 votes -
Sweden to issue another update of a Cold War-era civil emergency advice booklet later this month – new version adapted to better reflect today's security policy reality
8 votes