The campaign reboot of @Betoorourke is long on rhetorical opposition to the "racist" president, short on much policy besides a "mandatory" assault weapons buyback. reason.com/2019/08/15/bet… via @reason
Former media darling halted his long poll slide after the El Paso shooting by blaming it on Trump, and is now hoping Democrats forget his past centrism.
And since the El Paso shootings, and O'Rourke's subsequent viral "What the fuck?" video, the candidate has finally halted the long, humiliating polling slide that began right around when South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg start stealing Beto's youthful, semi-centrist thunder.
The last baker's dozen of national polls have O'Rourke at near 4 percent, compared to previous dozen's 2.5 percent.
That might well be a blip, similar to the rise and fall of Sen. Kamala Harris, but O'Rourke clearly feels invigorated by his last two weeks of trading Iowa corn dogs for community grieving sessions and withering critiques of Trump's alleged white supremacy.
Sounding maximally #resistance-woke—even prior to the shooting, O'Rourke was confessing his familial history of owning slaves—is one way of de-emphasizing the candidate's less traditionally progressive views on issues such as charter schools, free trade, and the national debt.
That's a strategy he has in common, albeit with different issue sets, with a group of his competitors I like to call the Transitionals, as in they are transitioning away from whatever deviations from progressivism they were previously known for.
So: Kamala Harris the cop is posing as a criminal justice reformer. Kirsten Gillibrand is talking less about her past of being a Blue Dog Democrat who opposed the 2008 bailout and the 2011 debt-ceiling increase and more about her future of educating people about "white privilege"
Sen. Cory Booker (D–N.J.) is downplaying school choice while upfronting slavery reparations. Budget-balancing free trader Julián Castro has made headlines this campaign mostly by attacking both Sen. Bernie Sanders (I–Vt.) and Beto O'Rourke from the left.
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Remember the heady days of 2020? Progressives trained by the richest universities in the land suddenly had the chance to remake America in their image, the way they had always dreamed of doing.
The result was so obvious and crushing a failure that one is no longer supposed to talk about it.
Four years later, the power elite have discovered that their cosplay revolution is seen as merely ridiculous. Minority groups don’t want the new names that have been issued to them.
" . . . it’s far too early for the mayor to crow “We have turned the corner of crime in our city.” nypost.com/2024/01/06/opi…
Overall crime in New York City dropped in 2023 over 2022; we’re still the “safest big city in America,” as Mayor Adams boasted recently — but that’s cold comfort when we’re still far behind 2019, the last year before the destructive effects of our criminal-justice “reforms” made themselves visible.
Consider car thefts: 5,438 in 2019; 15,802 in 2023.
All sent letters of support for convicted child sexual abuser BRIAN PECK during the sentencing phase of his trial for the horrific sexual abuse of @DrakeBell
Marsden’s letter:
“I assure you, what Brian has been through in the last year is the suffering of a hundred men.”
Democrat movers and shakers are grafting antisemitism onto the party’s DNA.
“There is a problem all across the country [with Democratic voters who will punish Biden if he continues to support Israel and I hope that the President and Blinken can get this thing calmed down,
In a 9-0 decision, the Supreme Court ruled states cannot use section 3 of the 14th Amendment to kick Donald Trump off state ballots over his alleged “insurrectionist” actions on Jan. 6, 2021.
Learning that state officials aren’t empowered to simply toss leading presidential candidates off ballots came as a great surprise to many incredulous left-wingers.