M
Mulligan2
Guest
I disagree. I believe a candidate’s temperament will be a huge factor in voter’s decision making in this year’s general election.For whatever it’s worth, I don’t think any of that’s really going to matter.
I haven’t heard abortion mentioned very often at all on the campaign trail this year. It’s important to remember that for virtually all women currently of childbearing age, reproductive freedom has been the law of the land during the entirety of their life. This is a losing general election issue for Republicans - Todd Akin, Richard Mourdoch, et al. I don’t understand your Civil War analogy and nostalgia reference, but I would suggest that the Republican platform is by and large based on nostalgia - “thing were better in the old days,” “make America great again” - as opposed to looking forward.For the Dems as Dems, the main thing besides abortion on demand is loyalty to an ideology they don’t really hold anymore except as a hereditament, like a guy who hangs his great-great grandfather’s Civil War sword over the mantel; no longer meaningful in a present way, but containing a certain amount of nostalgia.
You’re probably right about that.For the Repubs, as Repubs, it’s chaotic. There are so many ideas of what a “true conservative” ought to be that probably nobody could possibly satisfy very many of them.
To some extent, yes. But as mentioned, ‘temperament’ will be a critical factor.What’s really going to matter is the perception whether this country is in trouble, and how deep, and who is more likely to fix it.
It’s easy for each side to highlight certain things to bolster their claims of whether or not things are improving or not. A lot of voters will remember how bad things were in 2008 at the tail end of the Bush years, and by contrast, how good things were under President Bill Clinton and President Obama.We’re at near-recession growth rate, just had a staggeringly bad employment report, incomes have declined, foreign policy results seem to get worse daily, taxes have increased, health insurance premiums are through the roof, race relations are getting worse, and small business just doesn’t want to invest. It’s not good. Yes, the stock market is a fairly bright spot, but it wouldn’t take much to head it south.
In this election, it won’t be “who’s more likely to fix it?” – it will be “who’s less likely to break it?”So, who is more likely, in the mind of most, to fix it? Hillary Clinton is “more of same” by any way one wants to look at it, but far worse when it comes to corruption. Trump is weird and inarticulate but has actually accomplished some things in life and seems, bit by bit, to be attracting some surprising people. One suspects he’s a lot better, one-on-one than he is in front of an audience. All the same, his attracting such large crowds is puzzling. Maybe it shouldn’t be. He never really seems to say much, but he does at least say SOMETHING. My goodness how we’ve eaten a lot of verbal pablum in the last two decades, and it might just be that people want to hear something that at least has a little bit of content, however badly he expresses it.
I don’t believe things are nearly as bad as your comments indicate. And voters have known Mrs. Clinton for decades - she has admirable qualities as well as not so admirable ones. However, her admirable qualities are already shining in relation to Mr. Trump.I think, in the end, it will come down to “who’s going to get us out of this hole”. People seem willing to forgive Obama for the miserable status quo as a person. But I see no reason to believe they’ll forgive Hillary Clinton for her hand in it.