Letters to the Editor

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Checking in on the latest polls.
  • drichmond

    "Given the blind venom that the conservatives and republicans went after Bill I think IMHO that it is easily conceivable that Hillary will have an even larger target painted on her."

    I think the reason they might be more successful with Hillary is that many people found Bill likable on a personal level, whereas Hillary is less charismatic (how's that for an understatement). And let's face it, there's also the gender thing for the Republicans to use. Although they'll really have their work cut out for them to top the viciousness with which they opposed Bill. (Of course, they gave it the old college try with Gore and Kerry, which shows that no one is immune.)

    "And as a progressive I find her repugnant on so many different levels, sad to say she and Schumer represent my state but not me."

    Clinton might be a better senator if she wasn't always positioning herself to be president, although it's hard to imagine her standing on principle about anything. Other than that, I don't understand why Schumer and Clinton are so cautious - their Senate seats are so safe that they really could afford to take some risks. The only two reasons I can figure for why we don't have more progressive Senators is (1) Long Island and (2) upstate New York. BTW, why the fuck doesn't Naussau county get rid of Pete King (R)?

    but you did say one thing I have to respond to

    ""they have fought for thirty years to get where they are today."

    that is true and what the democrats have failed to do is to unify like their opponents and fight at all, they have capitulated in fear of being seen as weak and ultimately that has shown them to be weak because they have no unifying principles that they as a group stand up for.

    again my humble opinion, otherwise I think you raise valid points."

    The thing about the Democrats is that since we only hold the congress at present - and since Democrats notoriously lack the party discipline that the Republicans have developed (BTW, that party discipline was something that developed over time: the Republicans have much more party discipline now than in the 1970's)- the Democrats aren't a monolithic entity. We have Democrats in conservative parts of the country who are in our caucus but can't be relied on the deliver the votes we need (I'm not sure, however, we would be holding those seats if we had run more liberal candidates in those districts). It is truly infuriating when candidates like Hillary and Schumer, who don't have to answer to a red-state electorate take such wrong-headed positions. Maybe they need a good primary challenge like Lieberman had in Connecticut (although hopefully with different results).

    Of course, having a Democratic president would help some too, since we wouldn't have to worry about the veto as much, so we wouldn't need supermajorities to get anything done.

    There's a good book that I recommend to anyone - Rick Perlsteins' "Before The Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus." I think that book provides a good blueprint for how political revolutions start.