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![]() "dave weil" wrote in message ... On Fri, 06 Feb 2004 16:11:18 -0500, " wrote: dave weil wrote: On Fri, 06 Feb 2004 15:18:15 -0500, " wrote: Jacob Kramer wrote: "Michael McKelvy" wrote in message ... By the time the election comes around and Kerry's record is more widely known, the undecided voters, who decide most elections will IMO elect Bush again. In the latest polls his numbers are right where his father's were at this time: http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmp...u=/ap/ap_poll_ bush It looks like most Americans are catching on to this charlatan. Whether you like Bush or you don't (and I don't), this looks like wishful thinking. The only Democrats that have been able to win the White House in the last 40 years were from the south or southwest. Of the Democratic Presidential candidates during that time, probably Mondale and Dukakis are most similar to Kerry, and, to put it charitably, they weren't particularly competitive. Had there not been an assassination, you wouldn't be able to make that statement. Or, alternately, saying 44 years would render your statement incorrect. Which is to say, it's been 44 years since a Northeastern Democrat was able to win a Presidential election -- or even be reasonably competitive. That's my point. The demographics of the nation have changed a hell of a lot in the last 44 years, with a dramatic shift of population to the south and west. It's noteworthy that in even that 1960 election, it was not a clear and decisive victory for Kennedy. Dukakis was actually leading Bush I right after the Democratic convention, and that was meaningless. If you like, assume Kennedy's 1964 re-election, and it's still 36 years in the past. I think the national demographics make it nearly impossible for a northeastern Democrat to make a convincing showing. Christ, Humphrey couldn't win even with Wallace pulling a lot of southern conservative votes from Nixon. Gore didn't even carry Tennesee. The northeastern and midwestern candidates that the Democrats have fielded in the last 40 years have provided a series of textbook examples of how not to pick national candidates. Mind you, I say this as a moderate Democrat who's tired of watching Republicans win presidential elections. I find it difficult to imagine how anyone could think that Kerry is somehow going to miraculously change this trend. Why do you think that far west and New England Republicans have been successful? Is there something fundamentally different about where Democrats and Republicans come from? I'm just askin'. It's one thing to think Bush is horrible and a menace, it's quite another to talk yourself into believing that most Americans are going to see it that way come November. The big if right now is whether the right will feel betrayed enough to jump ranks. If one in ten of those disaffected conservatives go to Kerry, that would be a miracle for the Democrats. Well, Kerry isn't a lock yet, so I don't know if it's an issue yet. I'm not entirely convinced that this is the case, but if the Demos are sufficiently aroused from the results of the last election and get a big turnout, there could be enough defections to make it interesting. I actually hope you're right, but I'll believe it when I see it. If you had to put $1000 on it right now, do you think Kerry would be able to win even 20 states? Yes, I think he could. of course it depends on the states as to whether it would get him close. Let's remember how close the last contest was. Even assuming things like incumbency, 9/11, etc, one should probably look to 1990 as a cautionary tale. How many people knew Clinton before the primaries? Are you saying that because he's a southerner, he had some sort of advantage that Kerry doesn't have? Let's not forget that the first president Bush had waged a successful military campagn (up to a point) but lost support when he went back on his taxes pledge. Could the deficit act in a similar fashion? I dunno, but he seems to be proposing programs designed to win him popular support, but I wonder how many Republicans are going to worry about the net effect of tax cuts and 10 year missions to Mars, Medicare reform, etc. And if the Democrats *really* get motivated about the Supreme Court situation in the next 4 years, *that* alone might be enough to drive the turnout to new levels. I think the GOP will use that as an issue. They don't want more Liberal's on the Bench rewriting the law. I'm also guessing that the new offensive slated for Afghanistan is in hopes of finding bin Laden in, say, mid summer. I wonder if this new offensive, coupled with continuing deaths in Iraq will tax the American peoples' patience when the body counts start rising again. If they catch Bin Ladin before the election you can kiss any chance of a Democrat win goodbye. As I recall, Mondale may have got a grand total of 2, and did Dukakis get more than 1? I don't buy the fact that just because a candidate comes from a specific region, it's necessarily the kiss of death, or has much to do with others from the same region. |
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