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Ken Burch

(50,254 posts)
Sun Dec 4, 2016, 07:03 PM Dec 2016

Agree or disagree with the following statement

"No one who sought the Democratic nomination in 2016 should seek it again in 2020."


43 votes, 1 pass | Time left: Unlimited
Agree
16 (37%)
Disagree
24 (56%)
Not sure
3 (7%)
Show usernames
Disclaimer: This is an Internet poll
62 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Agree or disagree with the following statement (Original Post) Ken Burch Dec 2016 OP
well guess I won't run again then :-) msongs Dec 2016 #1
If this is the first we'd heard of your 2016 candidacy, that's probably just as well. Ken Burch Dec 2016 #8
Martin O'Malley didn't seem too bad. putitinD Dec 2016 #2
That's why I voted Not Sure. TransitJohn Dec 2016 #7
This message was self-deleted by its author Duckhunter935 Dec 2016 #3
Agreed Travis_0004 Dec 2016 #4
I agree bravenak Dec 2016 #47
O'Malley probably could. temporary311 Dec 2016 #5
whoever wants to run should do it. JI7 Dec 2016 #6
I think O'Malley should run again. SaschaHM Dec 2016 #9
I think Clinton and Sanders should not run. hrmjustin Dec 2016 #10
This message was self-deleted by its author Duckhunter935 Dec 2016 #13
Agree with above Kathy M Dec 2016 #17
If there's one thing this election proved, Bernie is a viable candidate ... Onlooker Dec 2016 #11
People won't want what Bernie is selling next time NoGoodNamesLeft Dec 2016 #15
Your example is ludicrous ms liberty Dec 2016 #18
VCRs first came to the US in 1977, not 1981 NoGoodNamesLeft Dec 2016 #23
Had one kinda like that. kerouac2 Dec 2016 #19
I remember the corded remotes, lol NoGoodNamesLeft Dec 2016 #24
Yep, everybody wants that $5 toaster. That's why Amazon & Wal*Mart are destroying business. TheBlackAdder Dec 2016 #41
That's exactly the case, and why everyone will hate the results of limiting trade NoGoodNamesLeft Dec 2016 #42
That's why the TPP really sucks. Free trade is not what you think it is. TheBlackAdder Dec 2016 #43
Trade is a very complicated issue that most people really don't understand fully NoGoodNamesLeft Dec 2016 #59
this. Joe941 Dec 2016 #49
Well, thankfully, almost NO ONE besides HRC sought the nomination. Gee, I wonder why that was? Warren DeMontague Dec 2016 #12
This message was self-deleted by its author Duckhunter935 Dec 2016 #14
Chafee and Webb ran. Biden might have had his son not died. Garrett78 Dec 2016 #20
You are kidding yourself if you think there wasnt a concerted deck-clearing by the party Warren DeMontague Dec 2016 #22
I suspect Warren prefers being a Senator. 14 candidates is not something to aspire to. Garrett78 Dec 2016 #28
And all that would have been a convincing argument, had she actually won the electoral college. Warren DeMontague Dec 2016 #29
So, you'd prefer the clusterfuck that was the GOP nominating process? TwilightZone Dec 2016 #33
You're kidding yourself if you believe there was field clearing metroins Dec 2016 #51
sure. Warren DeMontague Dec 2016 #60
She was the heavy favorite in 2008, very popular in the party and served the sitting president. SaschaHM Dec 2016 #35
I understand, but there have been good arguments made that the "they waited their turn" approach Warren DeMontague Dec 2016 #36
Thankfully, the party won't be doing that in 2020 for the folks that ran in 2016. SaschaHM Dec 2016 #37
True, and I said many times this past year that no matter what happens, we need to expand our bench Warren DeMontague Dec 2016 #40
Nah. You should have to lose twice before you should be encouraged to sit down. FBaggins Dec 2016 #16
Why shouldn't Martin O'Malley run again? n/t tammywammy Dec 2016 #21
because he's kind of the candidate equivalent of the Dave Matthews Band? Warren DeMontague Dec 2016 #30
None of the 3 candidates who ran in 2016 should think about seeking the 2020 nomination mtnsnake Dec 2016 #25
Dem nominee for 2020... True Dough Dec 2016 #26
You do know ol'Dwayne's a registered Rethug, right? Ken Burch Dec 2016 #32
He is! True Dough Dec 2016 #44
we need to make sure it's Democratic party Members only. stonecutter357 Dec 2016 #27
Nothing good would have come from barring Bernie. Ken Burch Dec 2016 #31
After spending decades bashing the Dem party, including during the primaries. TwilightZone Dec 2016 #34
3rd party run better to you? nt JCanete Dec 2016 #45
HA there it is. You totally denied pushing Sanders and yet..... bettyellen Dec 2016 #53
Not pushing him...just not accepting the idea that he should never have run. Ken Burch Dec 2016 #58
if they dont have the jacket, they can forget it NRQ891 Dec 2016 #38
Disagree... SidDithers Dec 2016 #39
wish I liked O'malley better. He came across as inauthentic to me, but that was the JCanete Dec 2016 #46
I'm good with O'Malley seeking it again BainsBane Dec 2016 #48
Disagree LP2K12 Dec 2016 #50
Too soon to tell... Mike Nelson Dec 2016 #52
Unsure: Depends on which candidate we're talking about CajunBlazer Dec 2016 #54
Not for POTUS jack69 Dec 2016 #55
dynamic new Dems jack69 Dec 2016 #57
I would support Hillary Clinton again Gothmog Dec 2016 #56
Martin o'malley should be able to seek it again. nt La Lioness Priyanka Dec 2016 #61
I don't think O'Malley did anything worthy of being ostracized Sen. Walter Sobchak Dec 2016 #62

Response to Ken Burch (Original post)

 

hrmjustin

(71,265 posts)
10. I think Clinton and Sanders should not run.
Sun Dec 4, 2016, 07:28 PM
Dec 2016

Second acts in presidential politics just don't happen anymore!

Response to hrmjustin (Reply #10)

 

Onlooker

(5,636 posts)
11. If there's one thing this election proved, Bernie is a viable candidate ...
Sun Dec 4, 2016, 07:41 PM
Dec 2016

... not saying he's the best, but when Trump fails to address the grievances of the working class, Bernie will seem like a very good option, even if he's 80 years old.

 

NoGoodNamesLeft

(2,056 posts)
15. People won't want what Bernie is selling next time
Sun Dec 4, 2016, 07:57 PM
Dec 2016

What people forget about limiting Free Trade is that it makes things much more expensive. When things people want to buy get so expensive due to limitations on trade that will make people mad and they will remember why they liked trade back in the day.

Here's a little reminder...back in 1981 when it cost over $1200 to get a VCR.



Just to make it clear... $1389.88 in 1981 is the equivalent of $3,696.09 today according to the inflation calculator here:
http://inflationdata.com/Inflation/Inflation_Calculators/Inflation_Rate_Calculator.asp




ms liberty

(9,809 posts)
18. Your example is ludicrous
Sun Dec 4, 2016, 08:29 PM
Dec 2016

The price of a VCR in 1981 does not illustrate how prices go when trade is restricted. What your example illustrates is that when VCR'S were new to the market they were very expensive. They were new to the market due to being a new technology available for home consumers, NOT due to trade restrictions. This pattern of pricing new technology on the market has been repeated in pretty much every electronic for sale since then that I have priced and can think of, from my first PC up to my latest flat screen teevee, which was a quarter the price of my first one.

 

NoGoodNamesLeft

(2,056 posts)
23. VCRs first came to the US in 1977, not 1981
Sun Dec 4, 2016, 08:45 PM
Dec 2016

And the first Blue Ray player was $1000 in 2006. In 1981 that would be the equivalent of $450.89...or about 3 times LESS for brand new technology than it cost for technology 4 years old.

kerouac2

(641 posts)
19. Had one kinda like that.
Sun Dec 4, 2016, 08:35 PM
Dec 2016

Only the remote wasn't wireless. It was a remote with a reeeally long cord. It was a Betamax. Weighed a ton and it came with one movie - Humanoids from the Deep - with Doug McClure...

TheBlackAdder

(28,881 posts)
41. Yep, everybody wants that $5 toaster. That's why Amazon & Wal*Mart are destroying business.
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 02:36 AM
Dec 2016

.


I know union guys who are pro-Union to the max, but buy all their shit from Amazon or Chinese resellers because it's cheaper. When I mention that their actions are the very things that drives companies to offshore jobs, they make the case that their purchases are really going to matter, their needs are more important.


Multiple that by 5 million and there's that sucking sound to Mexico, to pay Nabisco workers $3 a day.


.

 

NoGoodNamesLeft

(2,056 posts)
42. That's exactly the case, and why everyone will hate the results of limiting trade
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 02:51 AM
Dec 2016

The jobs are already gone and they are not coming back. Instead of limiting free trade there needs to be innovation to develop new industries. Otherwise the cost of goods is going to be so high that people will not be able to afford them and then they will be angry over that.

TheBlackAdder

(28,881 posts)
43. That's why the TPP really sucks. Free trade is not what you think it is.
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 03:13 AM
Dec 2016

.


I took a global emerging economies course over the summer.

China is kicking US and EU ass right now because we are pushing for Millennial Development Goals to prop up global income.


The EU and US goes to a country and lays down all kinds of trade requirements. Sales are company-based, for the most part and the company can cancel contracts whenever they want. China says, "Hey, Brazil! Fuck dealing with the US, if you deal with us, we'll give you a 25 year guaranteed contract, with built in price increases -AND- we won't hold you to any labor, environmental, banking, etc. requirements that the other countries are pushing." In another 2 years, China will be the major trading partner with 1/2 of Central and South American countries--forsaking the US.

China acts as a mercantile nation, they don't deal on an individual business level, they deal on an entire country need level. They are positioning themselves for the next 3 decades ahead. They have over a million square miles of African croplands... (who knew there was that much?) and almost as much in other nations combined.


If TPP were to pass, China is the only country not signing onto it. Why not?

Because when all of the Pacific Rim countries are locked in with specialized trade agreements that force social needs and demands to audits, inspections, regulations, etc... China will do what they did in the Americas, and say "Hey, Indonesia! Fuck the U.S., trade with us and we'll lock you in for 25 years and we won't hold you to any other demands!" They will have cornered the market.



Now, how China is like Wal*Mart (besides all the Chinese stuff Wal*Mart sells):

Wal*Mart pays low wages so labor is forced to subsidie their income by going on public assistance. This is something that most businesses can not get away with. When a new Wal*Mart moves into an area, they sell goods below the area or even below costs, as the other store pick up that loss. Local companies go out of business because people flock to the cheap stuff. As more and more people lose wages, as the local economy depresses, more people are force to shop at Wal*Mart--further accellerating the economic decline and bolstering Wal*Mart's profits.

China is that as a mercantile nation, they buy raw goods from a country, say Ecuador. Ship it over to China and return with a finished product that sells for less than what the US or EU provides. Since the pay is lower, and as more and more people are forced to buy cheaper Chinese goods, that gives China employment while putting Ecuadorians out of work--further driving demand for cheap Chinese goods.



Now, I'm leaving out a whole pile, such as how US Aid and World Bank are agents to make countries dependent on the US.

But, your plan sounds good in theory, but lacks in the implementation phase, because as the delays in ramping up industry occurs, more jobs are lost. The billionaires are offshoring their money in Luxembourg to dodge US taxes, as the US is now seen as a declining economy. They are positioning themselves for the next markets that are starting to emerge--which is NOT the US.



And, with many corporations, if there is a publicly traded stock, the board members can be sued if they do not look out for the shareholders. This means, if there is an option to offshore, they are legally bound to assess those options.

Nothing will change unless that exposure is removed from corporate board decisions. And, we all know that the major shareholders want to see returns over the commodified costs of labor.

.

 

NoGoodNamesLeft

(2,056 posts)
59. Trade is a very complicated issue that most people really don't understand fully
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 12:48 PM
Dec 2016

But always have strong opinions on. Not enough people look at long term impacts because they want instant gratification. I haven't done enough research to have an informed opinion about TPP, so I don't say a lot about it. The one thing I know that is pretty universal is that the more you limit trade the more you pay for things, and in some cases A LOT more.

Warren DeMontague

(80,708 posts)
12. Well, thankfully, almost NO ONE besides HRC sought the nomination. Gee, I wonder why that was?
Sun Dec 4, 2016, 07:45 PM
Dec 2016

Our party has like 70 million people in it or something, I'm sure all of them were "just busy". Amazing how no one stepped forward to run against Hillary, except O'Malley and then Sanders at the last minute- Sanders of course not being a member of our party, as we are constantly reminded.

Why, it's almost the sort of automatic field-clearing deference one would expect for an incumbent. Really interesting.

Well, I'm sure it was just a coincidence.

Response to Warren DeMontague (Reply #12)

Garrett78

(10,721 posts)
20. Chafee and Webb ran. Biden might have had his son not died.
Sun Dec 4, 2016, 08:35 PM
Dec 2016

And I'm not sure what you mean by "the last minute" regarding Sanders. He announced his candidacy pretty early on.

Biden is the only one who possibly could have beaten Clinton, but I'm not sure Biden would have done well enough with the base.

Warren DeMontague

(80,708 posts)
22. You are kidding yourself if you think there wasnt a concerted deck-clearing by the party
Sun Dec 4, 2016, 08:42 PM
Dec 2016

For Hillary.

Sanders didnt have to pay attention because he has always operated outside the orbit of the DNC.

I think Warren might have given Hillary a run for her money. I suspect there was very strong pressure put on her not to run. That is just one example. The GOP had 14 candidates at one point. You cant tell me there were no other options on our side.

Personally between Biden and HRC I would have voted for Hillary in the primary anyway, because Im not a fan of Biden's track record as a drug warrior. But I think he might have done better in the GE.

Garrett78

(10,721 posts)
28. I suspect Warren prefers being a Senator. 14 candidates is not something to aspire to.
Sun Dec 4, 2016, 09:03 PM
Dec 2016

I was pointing out that you missed a couple names.

Of course there were people unwilling to run against Clinton. She was supremely qualified, highly endorsed and had a well-developed campaign infrastructure (based on having run before, name recognition, having a large staff, etc.).

Warren DeMontague

(80,708 posts)
29. And all that would have been a convincing argument, had she actually won the electoral college.
Sun Dec 4, 2016, 09:07 PM
Dec 2016

But she didn't, and it's entirely possible that the sort of bubble-ensconced insularity that accompanies the belief that a candidate is entitled to no real competition for the nomination, also led to some serious strategic blindness in the general election.

TwilightZone

(28,833 posts)
33. So, you'd prefer the clusterfuck that was the GOP nominating process?
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 12:19 AM
Dec 2016

Speak for yourself. One or two relatively reasonable candidates and a bunch of attention whores.

Sure, great idea.

metroins

(2,550 posts)
51. You're kidding yourself if you believe there was field clearing
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 10:32 AM
Dec 2016

There were at least 5 candidates.

The facts completely refute your argument.

Any person afraid to run, or pressured not to, would be a weak person who shouldn't have ran for the highest office in the world.

People ran, Hillary won the primary, anybody who didn't win is because the voters didn't want them. Just like Hillary lost the GE, it's on the candidates themselves. Don't blame Hillary because others didn't run, it's their choice.

SaschaHM

(2,897 posts)
35. She was the heavy favorite in 2008, very popular in the party and served the sitting president.
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 12:35 AM
Dec 2016

Few people wanted to waste their time. She and President Obama cleared a pretty stacked line up in 2008 of prominent party figures. And it's not just her. Second place finishers have come back multiple times and won their primary. Reagan, McCain, and Romney were all beneficiaries of having previously laid the ground game, connecting with voters in a previous primary, and getting the national recognition that comes with running. Remember the circus that Romney had to run with? His 2 "serious" contenders were a drugged up Rick Perry and a guy that just got finish working for Obama. No one wasted their time/money running against him.

Hell, if Bernie were a long time Dem and maybe younger, he could probably come back in 2020 and run with a bunch of also-rans. And no that is not a knock on Bernie's status as an Independent. I just don't see people that backed Clinton in 2016 rallying around him as opposed to a Booker/Gillibrand/Harris/Franken/Klobuchar nor do I see potential contenders showing him any deference. If Trump screws up as much as it seems like he will, the Dem 2020 primary will be very crowded.

Warren DeMontague

(80,708 posts)
36. I understand, but there have been good arguments made that the "they waited their turn" approach
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 12:48 AM
Dec 2016

doesn't really work anymore.

Look at the field where a major party nominated the consensus pick for "the next in line"- McCain, Romney, Bob Dole, Al Gore, and Hillary. Hasn't worked out very well. Last time the expected De Facto status quo heir actually won the GE was Poppy Bush, to my mind.

Warren DeMontague

(80,708 posts)
40. True, and I said many times this past year that no matter what happens, we need to expand our bench
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 01:30 AM
Dec 2016

bigtime.

Personally, I'd like to see more leadership coming from outside the orbit of East Coast Baby Boomers. I think Gavin Newsom and Kamala Harris are two to watch.

FBaggins

(27,636 posts)
16. Nah. You should have to lose twice before you should be encouraged to sit down.
Sun Dec 4, 2016, 07:58 PM
Dec 2016

After that though... it's someone else's turn.

Warren DeMontague

(80,708 posts)
30. because he's kind of the candidate equivalent of the Dave Matthews Band?
Sun Dec 4, 2016, 09:08 PM
Dec 2016

Look, I like him, I thought some of his campaign statements were spot-on perfect, but he's not exactly electrifying. Maybe in 4 years he'll amp it up, but...

mtnsnake

(22,236 posts)
25. None of the 3 candidates who ran in 2016 should think about seeking the 2020 nomination
Sun Dec 4, 2016, 08:47 PM
Dec 2016

except for O'Malley or Sanders

True Dough

(20,141 posts)
44. He is!
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 03:54 AM
Dec 2016

But he holds rather moderate views. I think we can win him over and have a center-left candidate that gets votes from supporters of both parties.

Likely a pipe dream, but what the hell!

 

Ken Burch

(50,254 posts)
31. Nothing good would have come from barring Bernie.
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 12:14 AM
Dec 2016

He wasn't the enemy and none of the other candidates, whatever else you could say about them, would have dealt with the issues he raised.

Bernie is blameless in the defeat. He did all he could to help Hillary.

TwilightZone

(28,833 posts)
34. After spending decades bashing the Dem party, including during the primaries.
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 12:21 AM
Dec 2016

Revisionist history is revisionist.

 

Ken Burch

(50,254 posts)
58. Not pushing him...just not accepting the idea that he should never have run.
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 12:41 PM
Dec 2016

I accept that Bernie wasn't nominated and I campaigned for Hillary in the fall. I'm not obligated to accept the argument that his candidacy shouldn't even have happened.

NRQ891

(217 posts)
38. if they dont have the jacket, they can forget it
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 01:01 AM
Dec 2016

all kidding aside, and someone who liked Bernie more than Hillary, I think (and thought) that it was a reasonable requirement, that a candidate for president on the ticket, actually be a member of the party - that said, i cant resist a cheap shot.

(great article of clothing to have, in case a time machine sends you back to a fraternity party in 1981)

SidDithers

(44,252 posts)
39. Disagree...
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 01:06 AM
Dec 2016

only Hillary and Bernie shouldn't seek the nomination.

Hillary, because she's had her chances.

Bernie, because he's not a Democrat.

I think that Martin O'Malley should have the opportunity to run again, if he so chooses.

Sid

 

JCanete

(5,272 posts)
46. wish I liked O'malley better. He came across as inauthentic to me, but that was the
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 04:11 AM
Dec 2016

least of my issues. He's a pro-corporate moderate dem that didn't really have much to say about economic issues. Nothing spoke to me anyway.

He sounded effing fantastic tonally on race and religion, but his actual track-record with prisons and policing in Maryland is concerning.

BainsBane

(54,728 posts)
48. I'm good with O'Malley seeking it again
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 09:14 AM
Dec 2016

He didn't get much of a hearing anyway. The other two will be too old in 2020. Clinton won't try. I couldn't begin to imagine what the other one will do. I know that I won't vote for him regardless.

LP2K12

(885 posts)
50. Disagree
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 10:22 AM
Dec 2016

Only because MOM could move the party in the right direction. I'd prefer that Sanders and Clinton not run, but would support whoever our candidate is at the time.

Mike Nelson

(10,269 posts)
52. Too soon to tell...
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 11:07 AM
Dec 2016

...they all have the right to run. I do hope Bernie becomes an "official" Democrat, in any case. I will enthusiastically the nominee!

jack69

(163 posts)
55. Not for POTUS
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 11:51 AM
Dec 2016

as the ones this year had an open court slam dunk, but got the wrong basket. US citizens just have to take voting more serious or we are going to wind up another 3rd world country.

jack69

(163 posts)
57. dynamic new Dems
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 11:59 AM
Dec 2016

There just has to be some young, energetic Democrats that are qualified for the Presidency. Hillary was my choice, but she did not seem to fight back when she should have. She was no Obama when it came to public speaking. That is what cost her by not building a large lead that could not be overcome. In the present USA, ideas are secondary to presentation. You know that's correct. Sort of like the Gore campaign that sort of disappeared for a while.

Gothmog

(154,205 posts)
56. I would support Hillary Clinton again
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 11:52 AM
Dec 2016

If Sanders wants to run, he needs to join the Democratic party

 

Sen. Walter Sobchak

(8,692 posts)
62. I don't think O'Malley did anything worthy of being ostracized
Mon Dec 5, 2016, 06:22 PM
Dec 2016

The other two, I would be quite content to never hear their names spoken again.

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