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politics and politicians Title: Vox thinks it’s time for Democrats to admit that they have a serious problem at the state level Even a broken clock is right twice a day. The left leaning Vox news outlet already has stated that mass shootings represent a small proportion of all gun violence. Now, theyre touching upon the Democratic Partys woes at the state-level. Matthew Yglesias wrote what Republicans have known for a whilethat Democrats are in deep trouble at the state and local level. Theyre in denial, and its time to recognize they have a problem: Not only have Republicans won most elections, but they have a perfectly reasonable plan for trying to recapture the White House. But Democrats have nothing at all in the works to redress their crippling weakness down the ballot. Democrats arent even talking about how to improve on their weak points, because by and large they dont even admit that they exist. Instead, the party is focused on a competition between Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton over whether they should go a little bit to Obamas left or a lot to his left, options that are unlikely to help Democrats down-ballot in the face of an unfriendly House map and a more conservative midterm electorate. The GOP might be in chaos, but Democrats are in a torpor. Yglesias also noted that the GOP is flexible: Essentially every state on the map contains overlapping circles of rich people who dont want to pay taxes and business owners who dont want to comply with labor, public health, and environmental regulations. In states like Texas or South Carolina, where this agenda nicely complements a robust social conservatism, the GOP offers that up and wins with it. But in a Maryland or a New Jersey, the party of business manages to throw up candidates who either lack hard-edged socially conservative views or else successfully downplay them as irrelevant in the context of blue-state governance. As Ive written before, Republicans have been investing in state and local races since the 1990s. Theyve been winning, and its here where congressional maps are drawn. Republicans control the most state legislatures since 1920, and two-thirds of the governorships are in GOP hands. In half of the states in the country, the Republican Party has unified control. Hence, why there is the assumption (and its a pretty good one) that the House will be in Republican hands for at least a generation. Yglesias aptly notes that this kills a Democratic agenda at the federal level, and that there is no plan from the House Democratic leadership to reclaim the majority. Yes, he noted that Democrats have had success at the presidential level, but its not an overwhelming advantage: Winning a presidential election would give Republicans the overwhelming preponderance of political power in the United States a level of dominance not achieved since the Democrats during the Great Depression, but with a much more ideologically coherent coalition. Nothing lasts forever in American politics, but a hyper-empowered conservative movement would have a significant ability to entrench its position by passing a national right-to-work law and further altering campaign finance rules beyond the Citizens United status quo. Yeah, I have no problem with any of that, but Vox is a left leaning publication. Nevertheless, at some level, Democrats recognize they have a problem; the DNCs vice chair, Donna Brazile, has called the Democratic disintegration at the state level a crime. While the Republican State Leadership Committee has a $125 million effort over the next several years called REDMAP 2020, which aims to maintain and expand Republican majorities at the state level, Democrats have a $70 million projectAdvantage 2020to reclaim that lost ground in time for the next census. Right now, The RSLC is investing heavily in Virginias upcoming state races, but also have interest in other races in Mississippi, Missouri, Washington State, Louisiana, and Kentucky. Virginia is a critical point for Republicans this year, as all 140 legislative seats are up for re-election. While Republicans enjoy a supermajority in the House of Delegates, they have a meager two-seat (21-19) majority in the senate. Democratic Gov. Terry McAuliffe will once again probably push for Medicaid expansion in his two year budget proposal due in December, which makes holding the senate all the more critical. The RSLC has devoted $250,000 to those key senate races. One candidate of theirs, Nancy Dye, who is running against Democratic incumbent John Edwards in Senate District 21, has outraised him. According to WBDJ7, Dye raised $249,939, $90,000 of which came from the RSLC, for the month of September. Edwards raised a tad over $200,000, but he did clinch an endorsement from the National Rifle Association. According to the Richmond Times-Dispatch, Senate District 10 has become ground zero for control of the upper chamber, given Republican State Sen. John Watkins retirement. Here, Democrat Dan Gecker and Republican Glen Sturtevant have both received huge sums of money from their parties: [
] In September, Geckers campaign received $140,000 in cash from McAuliffes Common Good VA PAC and in kind contributions donated goods or services of $128,060 from the Democratic Party of Virginia, $95,018 from the Virginia League of Conservation Voters PAC and $14,582 from Planned Parenthood Virginia PAC. Such donated services often include help with advertising, such as the fliers stuffing mailboxes in the 10th District, which is made up of parts of Chesterfield County and the city of Richmond and all of Powhatan County. Geckers September cash contributions also included $5,250 from the Virginia League of Conservation Voters PAC, $5,000 from the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers PAC and $5,000 from Senate Minority Leader Richard L. Saslaw, D-Fairfax. Sturtevants September cash contributions included $180,000 from the Republican State Leadership Committee; $77,800 from the Virginia Senate Republican Caucus; $24,000 from Sen. Frank Ruff, R-Mecklenburg; $15,000 from Middle Resolution PAC Inc.; $10,000 from Sen. Mark Obenshain, R-Harrisonburg; and $10,000 from the GOPAC Election Fund. Yet, Kentuckys gubernatorial election is looking grim for Republicans. The state has been something of an anomaly; it has the only chamber, the State House of Representativesthats one of the last bastions of Democratic control in the south. And the Republican gubernatorial nominee, Matt Bevin, who challenged Sen. Mitch McConnell in the 2014 senate primary, could blow the whole thing in a race that shouldnt be hard for Republicans: Conway has vastly outspent Bevin on television, and the Democrat has maintained a small but sturdy lead in the polls. Republicans have been frustrated both by Bevins frequent missteps and by the manufacturing executives hesitance to put much of his own money into his campaign. Late last month, the Republican Governors Association pulled its TV ads for Bevin, sending a signal it believed the race was lost. Bevin responded by putting up a million dollars worth of commercials on his own, and on Tuesday morning, the RGA announced it was going back on the air for the last two weeks of the race. We decided to go back in because weve been doing the polling, and the polling shows the race very winnable, RGA spokesman Jon Thompson told me. Republican and Democratic operatives agree on two points: The race between Bevin and Conway has been overwhelmingly negative, and turnout will be low. Nobody has momentum, said Scott Jennings, a GOP consultant in Kentucky. Democrats have tried to seize on Bevins shaky standing among Republicans and hammered him for inconsistent and erratic statements. Hes wavered, for example, on whether he would cancel Kentuckys Medicaid expansion, and in a recent debate, he appeared to confuse Medicare and Medicaid. Nevertheless, Democrats have a long way to go in rebuilding their party at the state level, which is where their new talent will be found. Right now, the Democratic talent pipeline looks quite empty, even with Republican setbacks. One of those being ceding the largest cities in the country to Democrats, but thats a tale for another time. Poster Comment: Another story on the Dem implosion at the state level. Their farm team has never looked so weak in the last century. The Virginia and Kentucky races are interesting. The GOP finally forced Bevins to cough up some moldy dough for his own race for governor in Kentucky. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: TooConservative (#0)
That could explain the Dems desire to destroy Federalism in this country. Well except when it comes to things like sanctuary cities and drug laws.In those cases they have no problem with federalism or the nullification of national laws. I've often heard them argue in favor of the elimination of the electoral college. They are well on their way to accomplishing that . https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2013/07/25/the-national-popular- vote-effort-explained/ They have also relied on the judicial system to minimalize the impact of state laws ;often overturning them against the clear text understanding of the constitution ,or on the slimmest pretext.
#2. To: tomder55 (#1)
The Dem elites, tycoons, and media allies all know that the Dem party is very weak. They will put all their eggs into the Hitlery basket. Appointments to the Court are the only real path for them to impose their agenda because so many of their positions are those of the far Left and their candidates cannot win in too many states. The GOP has similar weaknesses in Blue states but not as profound as the Dems are nationally.
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