It also can't be a revolution any longer, at least not in the traditional sense and certainly not inside the binary logic box that is the D versus R, left vs. right, right v. wrong, black/white either/or yin yang state of American politics. The headlines from last night include the following:
-- Clinton becomes presumptive nominee
-- CNN ignores DNC request to not count superdelegates before they vote
-- Six states are casting presidential primary ballots today:
-- Establishment media commit massive act of malpractice, claim Clinton clinched
There is a Tweet from Hillary in in the top link, and she says we've still got voting to do.
-- Obama had a heart-to-heart with Bernie Sunday afternoon.
-- Michael Lindenberger, writing for the Dallas Morning Views, says, "get on the bandwagon, Berners!" in the most condescending way possible. This might mean that the Snooze isn't going to endorse Trump, but I won't be restricting my autoneurological respiratory function by having my cortex override my medulla oblongata.
-- Walter Bragman (unfortunately even more melodramatic than HA Goodman) still manages to make a few good points.
This is spot on. In their zeal for 'first woman president', Clinton supporters ignore or weakly discount every single flaw of hers.
I had been of the opinion that Clinton-(VP) could hold serve until 2032, but even if she picks Elizabeth Warren, Hillary is going to be lousy one-termer in the Herbert Walker mold. The royal flush in 2018 against Democrats will rival1992 1994's (thanks to DBC in the comments for the correction), her husband's first midterm. And once her lying, economic misfires and the war she starts on Iran catch up to her, we'll have a Republican president and Congress in 2020 ... just in time for decennial redistricting.
Egberto reinforced the point about all politics being local recently.
Far beyond Bragman's fear-mongering about the Democratic party destroying itself by nominating and electing Hillary Clinton, there will be some ominous ramifications for duopolists in the future. No, the GOP won't die off in the wake of Trump's defeat, certainly not in Texas, the South, or the Mountain states. Neither will the Dems do so in 2020, if he's correct about them getting swept out of office. We could wish for these things, but change in politics is too goddamned incremental for either one of the two monoliths to just keel over. It should continue to be a slow death for both, though, at least until they feel threatened enough by minor parties' ballot strength to adapt and co-opt their most popular initiatives to sustain themselves for some time longer.
By that time all of that happens, we (humans) should have been burned off the Earth like wasps out of their nests. Mother Nature is going to shake us off like a bad case of fleas, as George Carlin presciently observed.
But until then, some of us will party like it's 1999, roll coal, turn the A/C down to 68, stock up on snacks and watch the revolution on teevee. The AP will call it before ten p.m. so they can get to bed early. Maybe even a couple of days in advance.
In related news, writers Etan Cohen and Mike Judge, and star Terry Crews (fictional wrestling champ-turned-president Dwayne Elizondo Mountain Dew Herbert Camacho) of Idiocracy are going to be making anti-Trump ads this cycle. That's as perfect as irony gets.
-- Clinton becomes presumptive nominee
-- CNN ignores DNC request to not count superdelegates before they vote
-- Six states are casting presidential primary ballots today:
Clinton and Sanders are poised to split the 694 Democratic delegates up for grabs in New Jersey, California, Montana, New Mexico, North Dakota and South Dakota. The District of Columbia, which offers 20 delegates, is the last to vote on June 14.
-- Establishment media commit massive act of malpractice, claim Clinton clinched
The Associated Press and NBC News inappropriately reported Hillary Clinton made history and “clinched” the Democratic Party’s presidential nomination. It spurred other media organizations, such as CNN and the New York Times, to follow suit and splash their home pages with big headlines indicating Clinton was the nominee.
In engaging in this act, establishment media improperly influenced five primaries scheduled for June 7, including the California primary, one of the biggest contests in the presidential race thus far. They collectively stooped to a new sycophantic low.
The reports of “clinching” are entirely based on an unofficial survey of superdelegates, which the AP and NBC News has conducted throughout the 2016 election. They both determined Clinton reached the “magic number” needed to clinch, which is 2383 delegates.
But if it is true that history happened, why didn’t Clinton’s own party congratulating her? How come there was no statement from the Democratic National Committee?
As of 12 am ET on June 7, the DNC had released no statement. There was no status update on the DNC’s Facebook page. There was no message sent or retweeted about Clinton making history.
There is a Tweet from Hillary in in the top link, and she says we've still got voting to do.
-- Obama had a heart-to-heart with Bernie Sunday afternoon.
-- Michael Lindenberger, writing for the Dallas Morning Views, says, "get on the bandwagon, Berners!" in the most condescending way possible. This might mean that the Snooze isn't going to endorse Trump, but I won't be restricting my autoneurological respiratory function by having my cortex override my medulla oblongata.
-- Walter Bragman (unfortunately even more melodramatic than HA Goodman) still manages to make a few good points.
Clinton’s problems can be attributed to the internet and the way she conducts herself politically. She is a politician of a bygone era of insider politics. Like Mitt Romney before her, Clinton has fallen victim to the fact that, today, anyone can readily pull up a video on YouTube of her saying different things to people on different sides of various issues.
This is spot on. In their zeal for 'first woman president', Clinton supporters ignore or weakly discount every single flaw of hers.
I had been of the opinion that Clinton-(VP) could hold serve until 2032, but even if she picks Elizabeth Warren, Hillary is going to be lousy one-termer in the Herbert Walker mold. The royal flush in 2018 against Democrats will rival
For Democrats, 2020 presents the first chance in a decade to win back the House of Representatives. The election coincides with the next Census, which means the party that takes the majority of the state legislatures will redraw the congressional districts. The GOP won the down-ballot race the last time there was a Census — in 2010 — which allowed them to gerrymander the House districts heavily in their favor, and the Democrats have been unable to win control since.
This time around there are fewer restrictions on the redistricting process because the Supreme Court in Shelby County v. Holder, struck down Section 4 of the Voting Rights Act — the formula for states and localities to fall under the Section 5 preclearance requirements. If the Democrats lose down-ballot in 2020, they will not regain control of the House until 2031. Put simply, progress of any kind for the next decade will come down to turnout, and down-ballot voting in the next presidential election.
Egberto reinforced the point about all politics being local recently.
Far beyond Bragman's fear-mongering about the Democratic party destroying itself by nominating and electing Hillary Clinton, there will be some ominous ramifications for duopolists in the future. No, the GOP won't die off in the wake of Trump's defeat, certainly not in Texas, the South, or the Mountain states. Neither will the Dems do so in 2020, if he's correct about them getting swept out of office. We could wish for these things, but change in politics is too goddamned incremental for either one of the two monoliths to just keel over. It should continue to be a slow death for both, though, at least until they feel threatened enough by minor parties' ballot strength to adapt and co-opt their most popular initiatives to sustain themselves for some time longer.
By that time all of that happens, we (humans) should have been burned off the Earth like wasps out of their nests. Mother Nature is going to shake us off like a bad case of fleas, as George Carlin presciently observed.
But until then, some of us will party like it's 1999, roll coal, turn the A/C down to 68, stock up on snacks and watch the revolution on teevee. The AP will call it before ten p.m. so they can get to bed early. Maybe even a couple of days in advance.
In related news, writers Etan Cohen and Mike Judge, and star Terry Crews (fictional wrestling champ-turned-president Dwayne Elizondo Mountain Dew Herbert Camacho) of Idiocracy are going to be making anti-Trump ads this cycle. That's as perfect as irony gets.
3 comments:
I just gave Lindbaugh(ger) a Twitter snootful about ways the US has moved right under Obama.
Minor correction: Bill Clinton's first midterm disaster happened in 1994. That one still makes me shiver, with Newt Gingrich elevated to the Speaker's chair and the start of the GOP winning streak in Texas.
Your overall point about Hillary Clinton's administration dying in a 2020 flak-storm is quite plausible.
But, David, the bond market which Jackson Stephens never told the Slickster about in Arkansas made that happen.
Post a Comment