Woo hoo moderates and centrists. Clap for the conservaDems (and for that matter, the same standing-in-the-middle-of-the-road armadillos in the TXGOP.) Dilly "pragmatists".
Moser was being complimentary; it's simply not accurate to call non-voters a voting bloc.
How's that worked out for ya in the last twenty years, Donks?
That question was answered emphatically: 'let's keep doing the same thing we've always done, and hope for a different result'. Good luck in November, Mules.
Expect a #DemExit again. It's really not an even split as the toon suggests, but the prags do get the ass. I like the red shirts on the left, too.
I'll have a lot more about last night later.
(Laura Moser) spent a recent Saturday walking from door to door in the Houston suburb of Cypress, trying to convince voters who rarely come out to the polls in Texas’s Seventh District to support her progressive agenda in the Democratic primary runoff Tuesday.
These are the voters Texas Democrats want to see turn out in droves during the 2018 midterms. But in past years, they haven’t had a lot of success convincing them.
“You’re the most powerful voting bloc in the country,” Moser told one skeptical resident. “If everyone voted, you would get people representing you who looked like you.”
Moser was being complimentary; it's simply not accurate to call non-voters a voting bloc.
Houston is Moser’s hometown, and like the rest of the state, it has diversified since she grew up here. Many people working on their lawns or sitting outside in Cypress spoke Spanish, and a group of Latino and African-American children raced their bikes up and down the cul-de-sac.
Several neighborhood residents told Moser they don’t often see candidates for Congress knocking on doors as she encouraged them to get out and vote during the May 22 election.
This lines up with how Democrats have historically tried to win races in Texas — paying more attention to voters they know will turn out reliably. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) typically backs moderate candidates who they believe will appeal to independents and Democrats, and be more competitive against Republican incumbents.
How's that worked out for ya in the last twenty years, Donks?
The DCCC is following the same playbook this year, favoring Moser’s opponent in the runoff, Lizzie Pannill Fletcher. The DCCC hoped Moser wouldn’t make it this far, dropping an opposition research file on her ahead of the March primary — a decision that backfired and seems to have helped propel Moser into this week’s runoff this week. The organization has stopped short of explicitly backing Fletcher ahead of the runoff, but she’s clearly their preferred candidate.
Tuesday night (tested) which path appeals to Texas Democrats: Are they are still rooted in the center, or does their future lie in changing demographics and embracing a progressive ideology? More broadly, the TX-7 race has become emblematic of the conflict between the Democratic establishment and its newly emboldened progressive base, who wants to see the party swing left.
That question was answered emphatically: 'let's keep doing the same thing we've always done, and hope for a different result'. Good luck in November, Mules.
Expect a #DemExit again. It's really not an even split as the toon suggests, but the prags do get the ass. I like the red shirts on the left, too.
I'll have a lot more about last night later.