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Siddhartha Roychowdhury's avatar

While I don't disagree with most of this post, ever since I moved to this country in 2000, the weak party has won the Presidency the same number of times as the strong party and this election will be the tie breaker. That suggests that being strong as a party has not resulted in the kind of results that would make them popular among voters. You can write a whole post about why but if it's the same social media spreading misinformation crap, I'll probably skip that. The fact is that Biden is doing the things that Trump said he would do but failed - on immigration, on military intervention and on trade and industrial policy. This will be the third election in a row that I'll be voting against Trump but I recognize that he has changed the direction of the country by winning the public opinion on issues that both parties were dogmatically against not so long ago. When Romney lost in 2012, the diagnosis from the Republican think tanks was that they had to compromise on illegal immigration/amnesty to do better among Hispanic voters. Trump took the completely opposite stance and now most people are against illegal immigration. IMO he's the most influential President in the last 24 years, for both good and bad.

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Annoying Peasant's avatar

Generally reasonable article, although I think it needs to be said that neither the Democrats nor the GOP are a “traditional” political party along the lines of the Labour Party and other groups in other wealthy democracies. They don’t have dues-paying members, a binding political platform (the party platform is more of a “vibes” messaging device), or a strong cohesive internal organization. Which is to say that they’re (excessively imo) candidate-centered parties instead of mass-based parties that you find in many other democracies. But it’s true that, candidate-centric as they are, there’s more muscle on the bone re the Dem internal network

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