Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
2016 Postmortem
Showing Original Post only (View all)After the defeat of Hillary Clinton, what should the US left do next? [View all]
After the defeat of Hillary Clinton, what should the US left do next?Abi Wilkinson
New Statesman
Hindsight is 20/20, but many now feel they took their eye off the ball. Leslie Lee III, a writer from Louisiana currently residing just outside Washington DC, argues that people got so worn down by the polls that we forgot our message, that Clinton was the worst possible candidate to put against Trump. For him, identifying what went wrong is simple: Trump promised people something, the establishment candidate was telling people America was already great. It doesnt matter if he was doing it in a dishonest, con-artist, racist, xenophobic, sexist way he said hed fix peoples problems, while Clinton said they didnt have problems.
Leslie isnt alone in believing that a wonkish focus on polls and data distracted from what was really going on. Everyone I speak to feels that the supposed experts from the liberal mainstream arent equipped to understand the current political landscape. We are witnessing a global phenomenon, suggests writer Amber ALee Frost, who first got involved with the Democrats to support the Sanders campaign but voted Obama in 2008. The UK offers the most clear parallel to the US. Nationalism, racism and xenophobia are festering. Student and Democratic Socialists of America activist Emily Robinson agrees: All across the world weve seen massive right-wing upswells, from Trump, LePen and May in the West to Modi and Erdogan in the East. Whatever differences exist between these respective politicians, its hard to argue with the contention theres been a widespread shift to the right.
US left-wingers argue that liberals fail to understand their own role in the current situation. From a British perspective, its hard to disagree. Repeatedly, Ive seen discussions shut down with the claim that even acknowledging economy policy may have contributed to the resurgence of ethno-nationalist ideology amounts to apologism. Nor can faulty data be held entirely responsible for any complacency. In the run-up to the Brexit vote, polls suggested that the result would be too close to call; nonetheless, within the liberal bubble almost everyone assumed wed vote to remain. The fact the value of the pound rose on the eve of the referendum was seen as evidence for this belief, as if currency traders have some sort of special insight into the mind of the average UK voter. Looking back, the whole thing is laughable.
One left-leaning activist, who prefers to be identified by his blogging pseudonym Cato of Utica, campaigned door-to-door for Clinton. He explains in visceral detail his disillusionment with the party hed worked within for roughly a decade: I was heavily involved in North Carolina in places where the recovery never even touched. These were working poor people, and the doorbells didnt work. If the doorbells are broken, what else is broken inside the house? What else isnt the landlord taking care of? I looked at our candidates and none of the people I was pushing were going to address the problems in these peoples lives.
Leslie isnt alone in believing that a wonkish focus on polls and data distracted from what was really going on. Everyone I speak to feels that the supposed experts from the liberal mainstream arent equipped to understand the current political landscape. We are witnessing a global phenomenon, suggests writer Amber ALee Frost, who first got involved with the Democrats to support the Sanders campaign but voted Obama in 2008. The UK offers the most clear parallel to the US. Nationalism, racism and xenophobia are festering. Student and Democratic Socialists of America activist Emily Robinson agrees: All across the world weve seen massive right-wing upswells, from Trump, LePen and May in the West to Modi and Erdogan in the East. Whatever differences exist between these respective politicians, its hard to argue with the contention theres been a widespread shift to the right.
US left-wingers argue that liberals fail to understand their own role in the current situation. From a British perspective, its hard to disagree. Repeatedly, Ive seen discussions shut down with the claim that even acknowledging economy policy may have contributed to the resurgence of ethno-nationalist ideology amounts to apologism. Nor can faulty data be held entirely responsible for any complacency. In the run-up to the Brexit vote, polls suggested that the result would be too close to call; nonetheless, within the liberal bubble almost everyone assumed wed vote to remain. The fact the value of the pound rose on the eve of the referendum was seen as evidence for this belief, as if currency traders have some sort of special insight into the mind of the average UK voter. Looking back, the whole thing is laughable.
One left-leaning activist, who prefers to be identified by his blogging pseudonym Cato of Utica, campaigned door-to-door for Clinton. He explains in visceral detail his disillusionment with the party hed worked within for roughly a decade: I was heavily involved in North Carolina in places where the recovery never even touched. These were working poor people, and the doorbells didnt work. If the doorbells are broken, what else is broken inside the house? What else isnt the landlord taking care of? I looked at our candidates and none of the people I was pushing were going to address the problems in these peoples lives.
InfoView thread info, including edit history
TrashPut this thread in your Trash Can (My DU » Trash Can)
BookmarkAdd this thread to your Bookmarks (My DU » Bookmarks)
68 replies, 6175 views
ShareGet links to this post and/or share on social media
AlertAlert this post for a rule violation
PowersThere are no powers you can use on this post
EditCannot edit other people's posts
ReplyReply to this post
EditCannot edit other people's posts
Rec (6)
ReplyReply to this post
68 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
After the defeat of Hillary Clinton, what should the US left do next? [View all]
portlander23
Dec 2016
OP
3. Don't pave the way for a well-known candidate with high negatives. nt
killbotfactory
Dec 2016
#13
Especially if that person was polled by Gallup to be the most admired woman in December 2015.
lapucelle
Dec 2016
#52
Like it or not, the US is a republic - of 50 individual states. We need to face the fact
jonno99
Dec 2016
#35
If true, then we should strive as much as possible to decentralize the rulling class
jonno99
Dec 2016
#41
"he said he'd fix peoples problems, while Clinton said they didnt have problems"
Dems to Win
Dec 2016
#5
Actually, the GOP wins because they vote for the candidate with the 'R' next to their name.
Demsrule86
Dec 2016
#18
Constitutional Amendment to abolish EC. Federalize national elections with appropriate....
Hekate
Dec 2016
#11
which is why we need to stay disciplined and honest about what they did, instead of giving it a
LaydeeBug
Dec 2016
#26
Work to alienate Democrats from Right-Leaning News Networks. There's only so much GOP pie to share.
TheBlackAdder
Dec 2016
#20
"that Clinton was the worst possible candidate to put against Trump". Out of the woodwork. nt
LexVegas
Dec 2016
#21