Hey all. I just read a pair of articles on Politico (as I am wont to do). The first is about electing progressive politicians in Alaska. The second was about an Indiana rural Democrat.
https://www.politico.com/magazine/st...cs-2018-216304
https://www.politico.com/magazine/st...indiana-216273
So I thought I'd drop these two here and basically ask two questions:
One - Is it even possible at this point for the City-centric base of the Democratic party to realize how/why they are failing politically?
Two - If the answer to that first question is yes, how can the Democratic party re-approach these issues without alienating its base but still bringing in voters that may agree on 80% of the broad points with 20% of hardcore disagreement.
The interesting thing about this to me is it always brings to mind LBJ. A president the progressives of his day hated (the Kennedy boner still exists to this day despite the number of hawkishness - Vietnam is precipitated by his policies and lack of actual legislative civil rights success), but actually got more progressive policy done in his time than the vast majority. Anyway this brought to you by a flight that lent itself to some reading.
https://www.politico.com/magazine/st...cs-2018-216304
https://www.politico.com/magazine/st...indiana-216273
So I thought I'd drop these two here and basically ask two questions:
One - Is it even possible at this point for the City-centric base of the Democratic party to realize how/why they are failing politically?
Two - If the answer to that first question is yes, how can the Democratic party re-approach these issues without alienating its base but still bringing in voters that may agree on 80% of the broad points with 20% of hardcore disagreement.
The interesting thing about this to me is it always brings to mind LBJ. A president the progressives of his day hated (the Kennedy boner still exists to this day despite the number of hawkishness - Vietnam is precipitated by his policies and lack of actual legislative civil rights success), but actually got more progressive policy done in his time than the vast majority. Anyway this brought to you by a flight that lent itself to some reading.
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