2016 Postmortem
Related: About this forumDid Hillary's VP pick cost her the election?
Bernie supporters and other hard progressives were already stewing, and it seemed like Hillary did little to extend an olive branch to them. Simply picking a progressive running mate may have inspired these disillusioned people and given Hillary the turnout she needed. Instead she basically doubled down on establishment when she picked Tim Kaine. Trump got fewer popular votes than Romney. The difference was in the turnout Hillary drew compared to Obama. Several months ago I predicted Trump's win condition on here, and shockingly it came true. Low Democrat voter turnout caused by a campaign lacking in excitement.
The only other thing Hillary could have really done significantly better would have been to completely drop gun control from her platform. Gun control is a losing issue politically. It will always lose more voters than it will gain. For better or for worse, Americans love their guns.
Historic NY
(37,878 posts)he was the best choice.
Calculating
(2,996 posts)Nobody I know had even heard of the guy prior to his selection.
Historic NY
(37,878 posts)Gov. of VA
Lt. Gov. VA
Mayor of Richmond
sitting US Senator.
etc....
Cobalt Violet
(9,915 posts)BlueProgressive
(229 posts)That was the problem.
I don't know if a different choice would have made the difference, but that one certainly didn't help her at all.
He was considered "safe". She was 'coasting'.
Buzz Clik
(38,437 posts)Last edited Tue Nov 29, 2016, 12:28 PM - Edit history (1)
They will then turn the volume to 11 on pronouncing the insanity and criminality of the Trump administration.
Until then, we must entertain ourselves with this.
ismnotwasm
(42,462 posts)Jesus some of this shit is embarrassing
Farmgirl1961
(1,643 posts)She won the popular vote by over 2.25 million and there was a lot of "funny stuff" in the swing states. She didn't lose anything and Trump didn't legitimately win.
AgadorSparticus
(7,963 posts)GP6971
(33,034 posts)overall, an excellent pick.
JI7
(90,551 posts)VP picks don't matter much . but kaine did whatever he had to do and he would have been a great vp. not having kaine as vp is something else i feel bad about.
elleng
(136,155 posts)'Feingold asked the DNC for help to reach out to these areas, and he went ignored. He and Hillary went down with the same ship. Her campaign felt that Wisconsin was safe, and instead of shoring it (along with Michigan and Pennsylvania) up, she was flirting with the idea of going into Georgia and Texas.
Feingold's anxiety should have been an indication to Hillary's campaign that she needed to go there, but she didn't. Not even once.'
http://www.democraticunderground.com/?com=view_post&forum=1251&pid=2631842
oberliner
(58,724 posts)Lots of ads, money spent, high profile surrogate rallies, etc.
She did everything she could to win that state.
LisaL
(46,612 posts)She had consistently held a 6 point lead there in the polls. Hindsight is always 20-20, it is not?
Goblinmonger
(22,340 posts)and that there was the potential for the state not going Dem. But why listen to him, right?
elleng
(136,155 posts)Folks really should pay attention to those actually on the ground, but it's difficult, I guess, if they're not saying what one wants to hear.
Goblinmonger
(22,340 posts)Not only didn't they listen to Feingold, it seems them discounted a lot of what Bill was telling them that turned out to be correct.
elleng
(136,155 posts)Haven't heard what Bill was telling them. Interesting, as been thinking, where were the real thinkers?
Goblinmonger
(22,340 posts)And way too many people here on DU are looking to blame everyone and not reflect on the missteps of the campaign.
Here's one article.
...
Early on, Mr. Clinton had pleaded with Robby Mook, Mrs. Clintons campaign manager, to do more outreach with working-class white and rural voters. But his advice fell on deaf ears.
The sophisticated data modeling Mr. Mook relied on showed that young, Latino and black voters would turn out as they had hoped. But while they favored Mrs. Clinton overwhelmingly, she could not run up the score with them like Mr. Obama had in 2012.
...
I think Bill Clinton was right about the need to concentrate more in those areas, said Jay S. Jacobs, a prominent New York Democrat, pointing to Mr. Trumps victories in Wisconsin, Ohio and Michigan, states Mrs. Clintons campaign had largely overlooked.
elleng
(136,155 posts)aggravated by DUer's reaction you describe.
Here's the article I was thinking about, 'Hubris of Clinton Ground Game.' http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/the-hubris-of-the-clinton-ground-game_us_5831cebce4b099512f835e78
elleng
(136,155 posts)OH, JEEZE! Gotta find a good movie to watch tonight.
Ace Rothstein
(3,299 posts)lumberjack_jeff
(33,224 posts)She didn't need Wisconsin in the general election any more than she needed them in the primary. They'll fall in line.
Zambero
(9,766 posts)emulatorloo
(45,569 posts)Calculating
(2,996 posts)How many people are gonna vote Dem for gun control, who wouldn't vote Dem anyway? How many people were scared away by the NRA fearmongering about how a Hillary appointed supreme court was gonna reverse Heller and end our individual right to keep and bear arms? Probably quite a lot...
Hillary was quite vocal on the gun issue, even calling Bernie out during the debates for not being anti-gun enough. I was literally cringing during that as I thought about the votes she was losing.
yallerdawg
(16,104 posts)and sticking with it come hell or high water?
Now we have a critique of the "feckless" Hillary for standing firm on an issue that matters to Democrats and liberal progressives?
This is ridiculous.
lumberjack_jeff
(33,224 posts)Exilednight
(9,359 posts)msongs
(70,183 posts)Kentonio
(4,377 posts)It's not a contest based on the popular vote, so talking about number of votes is about as relevant as saying you didn't really lose a football game because your team touched the ball more.
jmg257
(11,996 posts)6 million votes in just 2 states.
pat_k
(10,879 posts)Votes suppressed by long lines in "certain places" + overconfident Hillary supporters and "analysts" = Formula for disaster
Any effect of VP pick is minor in comparison.
Midwestern Democrat
(823 posts)He didn't add anything to the ticket but he didn't cause any problems either (although his Vice Presidential debate performance was not very good at all, IMO). He certainly didn't advance his stature in the party - nobody's thinking about him as a future presidential nominee.
Garrett78
(10,721 posts)As for Kaine, I wasn't wild about the pick, but there are so many other factors that deserve more attention.
Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)The few that passed, barely passed
Hoyt
(54,770 posts)another AR15.
phleshdef
(11,936 posts)a kennedy
(32,112 posts)radical noodle
(8,611 posts)And if only she'd worn a different color shoes and her suit jackets hadn't been so long...
killbotfactory
(13,566 posts)Great, he's a competent administrator, and he speaks spanish... awesome?
It should have been Warren.
Hekate
(94,726 posts)....was NOT INTERESTED in running for either President or VP. Yet the fantasy persists that she was not telling the truth. I don't get it.
As it is, Warren still has her Senate seat, which is a good thing.
Hekate
(94,726 posts)What did you want her to do? Besides not being the woman with 30 years experience fighting for the rights of humanity, particularly the female and children parts so routinely overlooked by politicians.
Including Bernie -- very early in in his gadfly campaign I noticed that every social issue was subsumed into his economic theories. Women's reproductive health care? Don't worry -- single payer will solve all of that. Actually, no it won't unless you change social attitudes about women's rights. Specifically African American issues? Don't worry, raising the minimum wage will solve that. Actually, raising the minimum wage will not solve the problem of black males being killed for no reason by white cops. Latino/a -- never mind. Identity politics shouldn't be our focus.
Hillary is not a gadfly. She is highly focused and methodical. She extended lots f olive branches, only to have them snapped off in her hand by partisans convinced she "couldn't be trusted" due to 30 years of RW lies about her.
Bernie has gone back to doing what he has always done: be a gadfly who would rather scold Democrats for our perceived failures, than a real ally focused on the real enemy of us all, which is the RW and Trump.
Kentonio
(4,377 posts)You want to sit and insult the politician who warned you about the mood of the people and about what was going to happen, you go right ahead. If enough people do the same, then we can 'look forward' to losing again in 2020 too.
MyNameGoesHere
(7,638 posts)Interesting. Who was your candidate?
Kentonio
(4,377 posts)still_one
(96,580 posts)Zyper Teachout cause them to lose?
As for 2020, those self-identified progressives who refused to vote for Hillary have insured that the damage that will be done in the next four years will go way beyond that.
lumberjack_jeff
(33,224 posts)It seems they've left. I wonder why?
With all Sanders faults, to what do you ascribe the fact that unlike all the other significant Democrat players in this election cycle, he's still an elected official?
Hekate
(94,726 posts)....a popular officeholder from a small state. I'm pretty sure he can hold on as long as he wants to. Remaining Senator in a state with 35 million people is a lot heavier lift (thank you Barbara Boxer and Diane Feinstein -- and now Kamala Harris).
montana_hazeleyes
(3,424 posts)with the nuke codes. Everyone .knew. what. he. is .about. "campaign lacking excitement??"
Here's some excitement- We are the Titanic and trump is the Ice burg!!!!!
Oh for cripes sake.
still_one
(96,580 posts)will be done in the next four years will last for decades, and a lot of people are going to get hurt before this is over
Raine
(30,604 posts)Next!
stonecutter357
(12,770 posts)still_one
(96,580 posts)Mike Nelson
(10,289 posts)...it secured VA. You seem to be suggesting Bernie would have helped, but they would have lost VA. Kaine was a smart pick. Also, Hillary took the popular position on gun control. Trump lied - she is not against private, responsible ownership of firearms. Low voter turnout can also be attributed to voter suppression. They continue to make it more difficult for Democrats to vote. Many have to work all day and wait hours on a line, then they're told they're in the wrong polling place because it moved to a new area.
Demsrule86
(71,023 posts)I doubt we would have carried Virginia. A bitter and divisive primary cost us the election and it looks as if BOB's have learned nothing...ah well, Trump is in the House now...jut wait until their student loans are not only not forgiven but sent back to the bank assuming there will be student loans... no jobs after the massive tax cuts...as I have no doubt we are looking at another financial debacle...best case scenario...and then there are the people who will die...those who did not vote for Hillary literally have blood on their hands.
Exilednight
(9,359 posts)Then there's reality.
TheBlackAdder
(28,932 posts).
His choice alienated the left-leaning Republicans, many Independents, some Never Trumpers, and some Bernie folks.
To claim otherwise seems to be a detachment from reality.
.
mtnsnake
(22,236 posts)As far as Kaine costing her the election, I couldn't disagree more. If anyone cost us the election, it wasn't Kaine. The right wing had been preparing for a Hillary Clinton run for decades and they had their sheep convinced that Hillary was the devil. Nope, Kaine had very little, if anything, to do with her loss.
Back to the guns, it's absolutely absurd that a civilized country allows the kinds of automatic or semi-automatic weapons as we do. It is equally absurd how many needless deaths and murders are a result of handguns, but nothing is ever gets done about it because of the gun lobby's power. Sadly, I've come to realize that the cowboy mentality is not going away anytime soon. It makes it very difficult for us to win elections.
If Hillary had dropped gun control from her platform, as you suggested, she MIGHT have won the election, MAYBE, but she would never had made it through the primaries to begin with. Her stance on gun control was one of the reasons why she had so much support during the primaries.
Vinca
(51,057 posts)Goblinmonger
(22,340 posts)She thought she had to move to the middle and pull from the establishment to win this election. Seems like she was wrong.
And how about you stop with the digs to the progressive wing of the party? I voted Clinton. Doesn't mean I didn't want a more progressive candidate for Pres and VP. But that shitting on progressives worked so well this election, probably want to keep it up for future elections, I guess.
Orsino
(37,428 posts)There's no shortage of posts looking for one single factor to blame, and they are all silly. Nothing exists in a vacuum. We can attempt to assign relative weights to things we believe affected the outcome, but imagining that the surgical removal of an event or choice from the campaign wouldn't affect many others is not edifying.
saltpoint
(50,986 posts)Gothmog
(154,601 posts)The complaints by the sanders supporters are really sad.
Baitball Blogger
(48,090 posts)I didn't know Tim Kaine before the selection and there just wasn't enough time afterward to convince me he wasn't a Vanilla DNC choice.
I was going to vote for Hillary, anyways, but that's because I still remember the pain from losing the 2000 election.
VP selections do matter. If Trump prevails through the Recount, I think we still might see a President Pence.
raging moderate
(4,503 posts)I voted for Bernie in the Primaries. Tim Kaine is fine.
lumberjack_jeff
(33,224 posts)Exit polls indicate that 23% of voters who thought that the country wasn't liberal enough voted for Trump. What drives liberals to vote for an asshole like Trump, and what does that suggest about their energy for the nominee?
Gram Parsons
(7 posts)That's what cost her the election more than anything. There are of course many dynamics that caused the results. The VP pick remains a rather meaningless one.
Bernie would have won, not because he is more progressive, but because he inspires people. Unfortunately, charisma is job requirement #1 for big league presidential politics.
jalan48
(14,410 posts)TCJ70
(4,387 posts)...I hadn't even heard of him until she picked him. I suspect a lot of other people were in that boat, too.