2016 Postmortem
Related: About this forumHow Clinton lost Michigan and blew the election
If one is looking for what the party needs to need better, this is a vital while also infuriating read.
http://www.politico.com/story/2016/12/michigan-hillary-clinton-trump-232547
They started prepping meals and organizing hotel rooms.
SEIU which had wanted to go to Michigan from the beginning, but been ordered not to dialed Clintons top campaign aides to tell them about the new plan. According to several people familiar with the call, Brooklyn was furious.
Turn that bus around, the Clinton team ordered SEIU. Those volunteers needed to stay in Iowa to fool Donald Trump into competing there, not drive to Michigan, where the Democrats models projected a 5-point win through the morning of Election Day.
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rzemanfl
(30,288 posts)geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)rzemanfl
(30,288 posts)someone else, no matter how good a hitter you might be.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)some things are in our control, others aren't
Clinton's campaign screwed up plenty that was in its control.
stopbush
(24,630 posts)and it's still called a strike.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)Clinton was undone by a number of strategic failings, including an excessive reliance on data crunching without enough emphasis on collecting quality data, or in the actual human elements of campaigning.
They thought they could win the campaign from 36,000 feet in the air.
But for Comey et al, they still might have. But it's also true that this election was winnable even with Comey et al.
zentrum
(9,866 posts)Could have withstood Comey et al by having voter turn out if they'd run a better campaign.
Maybe Dean, or some one like him, would have been able to do a more insightful, closer to the ground, tuned-in, job.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)I think fresh, new leadership needs to be constantly rotating in from the grassroots, local level.
zentrum
(9,866 posts)Was just inwardly imagining how much better shape the DNC would be in if they'd let Dean run it since 2004 instead of acing him out.
We would have had 12 years of local year-round offices recruiting candidates and staying in touch with neighborhoods.
Dems have a real window of opportunity here if they will take the right lesson from this debacle. Need new faces and a new model.
lapucelle
(19,532 posts)including the Clinton camp.
Obama's inaction this year on DWS, filling the vacant Supreme Court seat, and reigning in the politicized FBI has been damaging beyond measure.
http://www.politico.com/story/2016/07/debbie-wasserman-schultz-dnc-226100
zentrum
(9,866 posts)
..of times friends and I have talked late into the night trying to figure out many of Obama's decisions and non-decisions.
Really hope he takes some important Executive actions before leaving office including appointing Garland.
rzemanfl
(30,288 posts)okieinpain
(9,397 posts)them and were ignored that is a perfect storm to get your ass kicked.
Lithos
(26,452 posts)"The harder I work, the luckier I am" applies well (and to your point).
But you also have to have humility to recognize you always need to keep pushing. Your OP suggests this was definitely missing in the campaign (note: I did not say anything about Hillary - just the campaign).
L-
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)for most every competitive context.
Response to rzemanfl (Reply #17)
Post removed
Demsrule86
(71,021 posts)you ignore that inconvenient fact in order to cast blame on Hillary who won the popular vote by about three millions...why?
rzemanfl
(30,288 posts)exboyfil
(17,995 posts)geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)dsc
(52,631 posts)so they may have felt ignored but that would be like my feeling I look like Brad Pitt.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)pstokely
(10,713 posts)?
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)jalan48
(14,393 posts)Botany
(72,477 posts)rurallib
(63,198 posts)texasmomof3
(108 posts)that the election was stolen or we can sit back and digest what voters said out loud with their vote whether we agree with them or not. Once we understand why they voted that way it gives us the ability to start where they are an in once voice educate them over the next four years. We don't have to agree and we don't have to understand but we MUST know this.....they get to vote again in 4 years. Unless we give them answers to their frustrations (again whether we agree or not) the same thing will happen.
Botany
(72,477 posts)She is + 3 million in the popular vote and 3.8 million votes were ripped from her
nationally in targeted states. The other side had a huge % of their voters being
spoon fed "hillary/liberal hate" by Russia and its fake news operation.
Yurovsky
(2,064 posts)thumbing your nose at the Midwest (and that's POC as well as white blue-collar folk) will guarantee Trump gets re-elected in 4 years, as much as that pains me to say it.
It wasn't a conspiracy. It wasn't Putin or the Easter Bunny or Fake News or Comey.
Team Clinton didn't tend their garden in the Midwest & PA. Making excuses is for losers. Fixmwhats broken& kick ass in 2018 & 2020. Or continue to point fingers, cry, and bemoan the unfairness of it all. I say fuck that shit and let's get busy winning, because losing sucks.
Botany
(72,477 posts)Starting in 2013 just as the Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act a coterie of Trump operatives, under the direction of Kris Kobach, Kansas Secretary of State, created a system to purge 1.1 million Americans of color from the voter rolls of GOPcontrolled states.
The system, called Crosscheck, is detailed in my Rolling Stone report,
The GOPs Stealth War on Voters, 8/24/2016.
Crosscheck in action:
Trump victory margin in Michigan: 13,107
Michigan Crosscheck purge list: 449,922
Trump victory margin in Arizona: 85,257
Arizona Crosscheck purge list: 270,824
Trump victory margin in North Carolina: 177,008
North Carolina Crosscheck purge list: 589,393
On Tuesday, we saw Crosscheck elect a Republican Senate and as President, Donald Trump. The electoral putsch was aided by nine other methods of attacking the right to vote of Black, Latino and Asian-American voters, methods detailed in my book and film, including Caging, purging, blocking legitimate registrations, and wrongly shunting millions to provisional ballots that will never be counted.
Trump signaled the use of Crosscheck when he claimed the election is rigged because people are voting many, many times. His operative Kobach, who also advised Trump on building a wall on the southern border, devised a list of 7.2 million potential double voters1.1 million of which were removed from the voter rolls by Tuesday. The list is loaded overwhelmingly with voters of color and the poor.
******
BTW I worked for HRC in OH so the idea she thumbed her nose at the Midwest is bullshit
jonno99
(2,620 posts)Botany
(72,477 posts).... but they didn't know that their vote would not be counted.
jonno99
(2,620 posts)roles, and if it is, I get my ballot.
If my name was cross-checked off the registration roles, I would expect that that I would NOT get a ballot.
At that point I might pitch a fit, but in the end I re-register and vote.
I'm curious how often it happened - how often did someone show up to vote only to find that they were no longer registered?
Botany
(72,477 posts).... and not unless your were told and then you did the follow up work that ballot would
not be counted but you would think that you voted.
Beth Clarkson has done some very good work showing that machines and tabulators
have been dumping votes as a function of population size for years.
BTW you can not re-register to vote on election day or weeks before the elections.
In OH I have seen cases of long time voters who have voted for years at the same
precinct and lived in their same home for years show up and their name has been
removed from the voter roles (rolls?).
LovingA2andMI
(7,006 posts)Michigan had it's nose thumbed at point...blank....period as it was assumed she would win the state by 5 points. And Clinton did not visit or host a rally in Detroit the three weeks prior to election day. We live in Michigan and volunteered -- so we know.
Election issues aside in Michigan and there were many, she should have worked the ground HARDER HERE, period.
Yurovsky
(2,064 posts)I think they could have won Michigan by 100,000 if they'd not wasted time and money in states they didn't need.
And for the record, the Trump camp let it be known that the Midwest was their target to win the EC. so why not work the Midwest and turn out your base? Just because the Democrats had won WI, PA, & MI for multiple GE cycles was no guarantee they'd win it again. But the arrogance of people like Robby Mook - who believed he was smarter than Bill Clinton - led the Democrats right over the damn cliff and got Trump elected. I don't give 2 shits about winning the popular vote. It means nothing if you don't win the 270 required electoral votes.
And Trump's brain trust figured this out and beat Team Hillary on half the budget. That might be the worst example of a campaign team shitting the bed in my lifetime. I don't want excuses, I want results. Losers make excuses, winners get inaugurated. And I'll be damned if I'm going to watch another Democratic presidential campaign team snatch defeat from the jaws of victory due to their own arrogance and stupidity. I'm not going to play nice with the idiots that screwed this up, I want them held accountable. If we don't, we can expect this nightmare to recur every 4 years until we clean house.
LovingA2andMI
(7,006 posts)As In This Right-On-Point Reply!!
StevieM
(10,540 posts)Botany
(72,477 posts)Albeit on election day (election protection stuff) but I was in touch w/the
campaign and the idea that Hillary did not work in the midwest is pure
bullshit.
What did work for Trump was:
Cross Check
Russian hacking and fake news stories
Comey
and the media.
texasmomof3
(108 posts)Do we want to always be counting on the right electors in the right states or do we want to actually change minds so that we never have to count on recounts, courts, judges, electors etc ever again. Wouldn't it be great to outright win? The other thing you have missed is that it wasn't just that Hillary lost. In the last 8 years we have lost on every level from local to the white house. There is a problem. You can admit it and work towards it or you can continue to bitch about a vote count.
Crunchy Frog
(26,977 posts)That in itself is an indictment of her campaign.
Jean-Jacques Roussea
(475 posts)Incoming youth + outgoing elderly + No EMAILS, Comey (let's hope) + outreach to get people oppressed by voter restriction IDs/registered + Trump idiocracy = Election is a lock. We only lost the college by 85k
We don't need Trumps base. We don't want them.
Crunchy Frog
(26,977 posts)Without hard work and good strategizing, you can always manage to snatch defeat out of the jaws of victory. I just hope our party finally figures this out before it's too late.
And we should want any voters we can possibly get, without compromising our principles. There will likely be many disillusioned former Trump voters, and it would be the height of idiocy for the party to actively drive them away, or tell them we don't want them.
uponit7771
(91,754 posts)SunSeeker
(53,656 posts)texasmomof3
(108 posts)We have been loosing seats at every level from dog catcher to the white house for the last 8 years. I assure you that has very little to do with Comey, russians or voter suppression. There is a systematic problem with how were are framing our ideas. They are good ones. They just aren't being communicated as effectively as we clearly need then to be.
okieinpain
(9,397 posts)she could have fixed but they ignored the warnings so they could play head games with kelly anne and bannon. guess who won that one.
PoliticAverse
(26,366 posts)in threads like this.
They seem fixated on "she won by so many votes" rather than the reality of she lost by so little
a small change in strategy could have made the difference.
ZoomBubba
(289 posts)In a couple of states it came to less than 10,000 votes. We should focus on what the small change needs to be as getting back 10,000 votes in Michigan is more important than 10,000 voters who may go Green in California because they don't like the small adjustment.
bettyellen
(47,209 posts)Lot of bruised ego in that piece.
Not using Obama as much as they could have? highly doubt that. Seems like people on the outside Monday morning quarterbacking.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)not even swing voters.
there is science showing in-person contact is the most effective means of persuasion in political campaigns.
So this is pure, arrogant incompetence:
citood
(550 posts)During the campaign, where a GOP operative would take a hidden camera into a campaign office. Ignoring the purpose of their video, I could not help but notice that these offices were not exactly 'bustling' with campaign activity.
My conclusion was that the campaign relied heavily on TV and radio advertising (she had a huge financial advantage here, so it would be a natural choice), but didn't seem to do as much 'in person' politicking as past campaigns.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)limitations
citood
(550 posts)I remember the pundits marveling in 2012 at how well data analysis had helped the campaign target its GOTV efforts in crucial counties in FL.
I can see why they had confidence in the concept.
But, having said that, I also remember Romney's GOTV software went FUBAR on election day...which should have been a red flag.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)He won Michigan by fighting for it, not trying for a head fake.
Data can be a useful tool--Obama integrated it into his campaign. Clinton placed blind faith in it.
HoneyBadger
(2,297 posts)Knocked on over 100 doors, spoke to to 30 families in the worst place that I have ever set foot in, and got them to vote. Not sure why this was not done everywhere. My brother, independent in NYC, got 3-4 phone bank calls a day from Trump and never anything from Hillary. The ground game baffles me.
bettyellen
(47,209 posts)State at least four weekends in a row to knock on doors. I did phone calls instead but I know it's a lie to say no one walked door to door.
I'd love some honest info o how it was different for past campaign but this piece isn't totally honest from what I can see.
emulatorloo
(45,567 posts)i wish every field coordinator and volunteer could see that paragraph. They would be furious at reading that nonsense, as I am now..
emulatorloo
(45,567 posts)Lots of in person persuasion going on. Excellent field coordinator who knew exactly what she was doing.
Yes, I know this is anecdotal, but I believe this paragraph from the article is full of bullshit.
P.S. Comey effect. She was ahead. Comey letter took her down in the polls and she never recovered.
Response to geek tragedy (Reply #10)
emulatorloo This message was self-deleted by its author.
mcar
(43,504 posts)I highly doubt that.
pkdu
(3,977 posts)guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)He talked about voting machines breaking down in Detroit and Flint, and the fact that many thousands of votes were not counted in Detroit and Flint.
He also talked about cross check and its effect.
This is simply in addition to what was pointed out here.
Else You Are Mad
(3,040 posts)Every critism of Hillary (that is not crackpot in nature) influenced why Hillary lost. It was her campaign's ignorance in how to compete against a populist, her alienating of working class voters, the fact to what Palast said yesterday about the election fraud. It was not just any one of them, it was the perfect storm of all aspects.
Every influence needs to be discussed, understood and not ignored.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)In the religion group, there was a recent post to the effect that Trump should thank Catholics for the election. As if Catholics were uniquely responsible for Clinton's loss.
Else You Are Mad
(3,040 posts)Catholics are usually Catholics in name only compared to the other Christian religions. I went through 16 years of Catholic education and there is an even split between liberals and conservatives because it is, from my personal experience, more of a cultural group then a religion for most of the Catholics I have met.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)Trump won the Catholic vote 52-47. And that does not count the 41% who did not vote. Many subsets of voters seem to echo this split.
ismnotwasm
(42,454 posts)Hillary's loss had many factors including ground game mistakes. I ignore --mostly --any OP that dismisses that
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)And agreed on the many factor argument.
It was not one factor, it was a combination of GOP tactics to suppress the vote, and divide the electorate, and non-participation, and combined these things allowed Trump to win just enough votes in just the right states to win. And I would argue that the just enough and the right states were caused by the GOP illegally changing and/or preventing the votes.
At JPR the focus is all on Clinton's message and what are described as her various fatal flaws, but her supposedly fatal flaws and deficient message would have won absent GOP lawbreaking.
ismnotwasm
(42,454 posts)While I agree with analyzing--we do have a lot work to do, I tire of simplistic finger pointing, and I abhors anyone who dismisses so called "identity politics" i.e. Racism, sexism, homophobia, anti-senitism etc.
especially when "white rust belt voters" are as "identity politics" as you can get.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)seems to depend on promoting one particular identity to the exclusion of all others.
ismnotwasm
(42,454 posts)A sad, sorry state of affairs, although I see signs of claiming to be "anti-racist" coming back into vogue. Which kills me because it's not a damn fashion statement
mtnsnake
(22,236 posts)that was big enough for anyone in Brooklyn to see.
HoneyBadger
(2,297 posts)I think that whomever runs in 2020 needs their headquarters to be in a swing state. What exactly was the point of concentrating your talent where the outcome is certain?
Ken Burch
(50,254 posts)n/t.
Chitown Kev
(2,197 posts)Obama HQ was out of Chicago, which was ideal for working the Rust Belt and nearby from Minnesota to Missouri to Pennsylvania.
A Massachusetts HQ may not have been the best thing for Romney, though...so it all depends
Midwestern Democrat
(822 posts)looks very transparent and contrived and also gives off the appearance of ingratitude to the candidate's home state (in 2012, everybody laughed at Jon Huntsman first setting up his headquarters in Orlando, Florida and then moving it to Manchester, NH - how nakedly transparent is that?) All of the five previous Democratic nominees had their campaign headquarters in their home state:
1988 Dukakis Boston; 1992 Clinton Little Rock; 2000 Gore Nashville; 2004 Kerry Boston; 2008 Obama Chicago
LovingA2andMI
(7,006 posts)+3 --- Bernie worked the ground HARD in Michigan for his Primary win and Clinton should have done the same -- instead of ignoring the state in the last three weeks prior too election.
ehrnst
(32,640 posts)However, at this point, we don't really know if Hillary actually lost Michigan.
Also, the 3 million that Bernie lost to Hillary by was more than a red flag.
Baitball Blogger
(48,034 posts)Get the fucking election machines updated or upgraded in the battle states so we don't have to listen to the same fucking post-election laments!
BobbyDrake
(2,542 posts)The STATE controls the voting machines, not the DNC. For fuck's sake, this "blame the DNC for everything" mentality around here has officially jumped the shark!
Baitball Blogger
(48,034 posts)Gore got docked because he only asked for recounts in three counties. The legal reasoning was that he wasn't being fair by asking recounts in all of them. The ultimate logic was that voters weren't being treated equally. So you sue the states for disenfranchising voters because the states are knowingly running elections with faulty machines. And when the court ruling forces the state to update them, THAT's when the donation money collected by the DNC can be donated to protect Democratic votes in the precincts where we're losing Democratic votes due to the faulty machines.
BTW, we learned back in 2000 that, in Florida, the Democratic precincts were using older machines that have a higher percentage of errors, than the Republican precincts. Yes, they were using different technology. I don't know if that situation has changed, which means that Democratic precincts are still losing important votes in Florida.
So, I don't want to hear Democratic leaders lamenting the loss of an election by 20 or 30 thousand votes in a state we should have won, when they could have garnered a win if they had been proactive.
Think about this. Republicans are purging Democratic voters with little push back and we are losing votes because Democratic precincts have faulty machines. No offense, but I think we know who is at fault here.
BobbyDrake
(2,542 posts)Baitball Blogger
(48,034 posts)Last edited Wed Dec 14, 2016, 03:57 PM - Edit history (1)
I spell out the entire thing to you and you still refuse to see it. They can SUE for equality! When the State is forced by the courts to upgrade their machines they will probably yell poor mouth. The DNC can ensure that they do not avoid their responsibilities by donating the money!
Jesus. How much easier can this be. Maybe we're trapped in this cycle because nobody can think outside the box. SUE, SUE, SUE. The rest will become obvious.
BobbyDrake
(2,542 posts)Not sure why it's not sinking in yet. You just seem to want any excuse to blame the DNC somehow, which maybe makes you feel good but accomplishes nothing.
Baitball Blogger
(48,034 posts)it goes into a kitty you weren't even aware was even proposed. For example, I donated just before the final election, thinking the ad was a generic kitty for commercials, and it ends up on my financial statement as Hillary Clinton's victory fund. How the hell did that happen.
Look it, unless you work for the DNC, your opinion is just an opinion.
If anyone wants to find an answer out of our predicament, my suggestion is to sue the states that are still using antiquated machines. If not the DNC, then someone who wants to take over the vacuum in leadership that we presently are experiencing.
BobbyDrake
(2,542 posts)How stereotypically progressive of you.
Baitball Blogger
(48,034 posts)Of course you did, and by the way, this IS the 2016 Postmortem forum where progressives can discuss what went wrong during the 2016 election. I haven't said anything that would have alarmed another progressive, IMO.
As I pointed out, the problem is that the DNC has run out of ideas. If they are not willing to think outside the box, we need another organization to step up and try something new. Because, there is no reason for us to pump money into political campaigns for candidates who can't get elected based on the sloppy vote counting due to faulty machines.
Does that make sense to you? I'll break it down further, in case I'm going too fast: Why are we donating money into political campaigns, when votes our bleeding out at the election ballot level? You just don't send good money after bad.
BobbyDrake
(2,542 posts)The DNC may be flawed, but that's because it's made up of people. People aren't perfect, but most of us try our best, rather than standing on the sides, doing nothing and criticizing anyone else for trying. Whatever alternative organization you come up with (assuming you can stop telling everyone about how you know everything and must always be correct, absent any qualifying evidence, long enough to attract more support outside of your core Purity Circle and form it in the first place) is going to be flawed the same way, and for the same reason.
Because let's be honest: if you were going to do the hard work, you'd be doing it, instead of wasting time tearing down all the other Democrats who are doing the work. But you're not, so....
Baitball Blogger
(48,034 posts)calling. But think about what it is you are settling for. Democratic candidates have to sell themselves to the voters; they have to convince them that they are good managers and are capable of running an efficient organization. Do you think the DNC does that for them? Hell no. Quite the opposite. It always comes down to a few votes lost in a battle state that could have been won if it weren't for the bleed-out due to antiquated or faulty machines. If they were running a business, they wouldn't last long.
The same problem year after year. So, in sum, if the Democratic organizations showed more leadership, it wouldn't be difficult to find more bell ringers or phone bank callers.
HoneyBadger
(2,297 posts)If they could be identified as broken months before, they can be fixed.
former9thward
(33,424 posts)The COUNTIES control voting machines not the State. Many counties, especially in the urban areas like Detroit, are controlled by Democrats. So yes, if there are issues, the DNC has a responsibility to act where they can.
BobbyDrake
(2,542 posts)And certainly does not provide private funding for public equipment.
Another losing "blame the DNC (because even progressives need an "Other" to demonize, apparently)" argument.
LovingA2andMI
(7,006 posts)The Secretary of State Control the Voting Machines with are distributed to County Clerks and then, Local Clerks. At that point, the Local Clerk is responsible for machines and collaborations of the machine, along with notifying the County and State if the Machines are having issues.
Else You Are Mad
(3,040 posts)Let's get rid of every type of voting machines and go back to paper ballots only.
jonno99
(2,620 posts)will fill in the circles for the folks we're voting for. That paper gets scanned into a machine for easy counting - as well as storage & security. Then, if there is a question, it is easy enough to rescan the whole lot.
This election cycle has me baffled - it shouldn't be this hard. Not given the technology we have.
Else You Are Mad
(3,040 posts)And, it was made intentionally hard by the right wing. If any other nation had our utterly insane, state-by-state rules, the US would be calling for UN observers to ensure that there are no irregularities.
Baitball Blogger
(48,034 posts)jonno99
(2,620 posts)TheFrenchRazor
(2,116 posts)though, because the PTB like it this way.
BeyondGeography
(40,014 posts)Major problem with the chief engineer as well.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)Quite frankly, the Clinton campaign seemed less focused on a scientific approach as finding excuses to avoid the nitty-gritty, unglamorous aspects of running a campaign.
The below excerpts are really stunning--given that there's pretty good science that in-person contact is by far the most effective means of persuasion.
...
Michigan operatives relay stories like one about an older woman in Flint who showed up at a Clinton campaign office, asking for a lawn sign and offering to canvass, being told these were not scientifically significant ways of increasing the vote, and leaving, never to return. A crew of building trade workers showed up at another office looking to canvass, but, confused after being told there was no literature to hand out like in most campaigns, also left and never looked back
...
The only metric that people involved in the operations say they ever heard headquarters interested in was how many volunteer shifts had been signed up though the volunteers were never given the now-standard handheld devices to input the responses they got in the field, and Brooklyn mandated that they not worry about data entry. Operatives watched packets of real-time voter information piled up in bins at the coordinated campaign headquarters. The sheets were updated only when they got ripped, or soaked with coffee. Existing packets with notes from the volunteers, including highlighting how much Trump inclination there was among some of the white male union members the Clinton campaign was sure would be with her, were tossed in the garbage.
...
Most importantly, multiple operatives said, the Clinton campaign dismissed whats known as in-person persuasion no one was knocking on doors trying to drum up support for the Democratic nominee, which also meant no one was hearing directly from voters aside from voters theyd already assumed were likely Clinton voters, no one tracking how feelings about the race and the candidates were evolving. This left no information to check the polling models against which might have, for example, showed the campaign that some of the white male union members they had expected to be likely Clinton voters actually veering toward Trump and no early warning system that the race was turning against them in ways that their daily tracking polls werent picking up.
Boxerfan
(2,533 posts)Is very concerning...
Too
Ridiculous
Out
Loud
Laughing
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)we can to do the best job we can.
Boxerfan
(2,533 posts)And the obvious influence- Far more substantial than Michigan-and also ignore the voter role purges & no paper trail Diabold machines....
Blame the Hillary campaign.
No reality in your concern.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)so we can learn from them.
Do you think NFL teams spend hours reviewing video just looking for bad calls from the refs?
Else You Are Mad
(3,040 posts)The Hillary campaign lost due to their poor campaigning in swing states. If you think it was just the fault of the boogeyman Russians, you don't understand how poorly Hillary campaigned in the swing states she lost.
Did the Russians personally stop Hillary from campaigning in Michigan or did she decide that herself? Did the Russians go to every blue collar household that voted for Obama in 08 and 12 and blackmailed them to vote for Trump or did Hillary not win over their votes like Obama did?
Jean-Jacques Roussea
(475 posts)Hindsight is 20/20. Hillary campaigned in Michigan. It just wasn't effective. Propaganda isn't something so easily cut through by a good public speaker. The "campaigning" our political arena was used to was a negative feedback loop and only fed Trump. "Get out and vote" initiatives ignited his base.
This election was out of control and couldn't be won by a politician or political campaign. It was a reality tv show. Hillary should've hired the Kardashian producer.
Else You Are Mad
(3,040 posts)Because we all know he knows how to appeal to the dumb downed Americans and he has no morals, he just cares about money.
HoneyBadger
(2,297 posts)That seems wrong. How many endorsements were there, how much money, how many volunteers, how many buses? There were days when I would see 30-40 Hillary buses on the road. Trump funded his campaign with hats. He could barely get any GOP endorsements. A little tweaking would have made a difference. I think that having the campaign headquarters in Michigan would have made a difference.
Jean-Jacques Roussea
(475 posts)But she by no means had a campaign that was lacking by our current standards. She had a great campaign. Sure she could've directly met with every single demographic that we lost in the 2016 election, but we had no way of knowing that we would lose them. The evidence is only glaring in hindsight.
Midwestern Democrat
(822 posts)The Trump campaign was a chaotic mess and the candidate himself was a disgrace. I think if the nominee had been a more respectable GOP candidate (Romney, Jeb Bush, John Kasich, Marco Rubio) with the full support of his party and a top of the line campaign operation, I think we would have been behind from May on. Gary Johnson's vote increased by 3 million from 2012 to 2016 - I think almost all of that goes to the GOP if it's not Trump. I think NH, CO, VA, and possibly NV flip to the GOP if it's not Trump. Maybe we hold onto MI if it's not Trump - but I think WI and PA fall even harder and maybe MN falls too.
BeyondGeography
(40,014 posts)They're on record as saying they were 2-5 points off in the states they lost. Here they thought they were going to win by 5, so they were six points off. In a battleground where they had been burnt before in the primary.
When your numbers are that far off, everything's off.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)they had a strong culture of data analysis, but a very weak one for data collection
BeyondGeography
(40,014 posts)geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)jonno99
(2,620 posts)that the 2016 voters would be the same folks - with the same attitudes - who voted in 2012 & 2014.
FBaggins
(27,702 posts)Which is the same error in assumptions that drove do much of the polling to error.
McKim
(2,412 posts)A basic problem with the campaign was that most communication was top down not bottom up.
If it had been more bottom up they might have self corrected. As a person who grew up in a home where mom and dad did not finish high school, I saw this slow freight train wreck coming . I left messages at the DNC but they didn't listen.
bettyellen
(47,209 posts)Literature.... sounds strange to me how they're insisting g these things didn't happen. There were weekend and evening phone banking planned at all the offices around here too- so I don't buy the part where it says the offices had no activity.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)bettyellen
(47,209 posts)And a few random anecdotes as cited in this article don't mean much to me. I volunteered mostly on the phone, got several calls asking me if I could show up in person to do x y and z in a swing state as well as digitially being informed of those opportunities every day.
The only big issue I heard about with signs and bumper stickers was that many were afraid of vandalism because things got so ugly. I got enough harassment from wearing a tee or buttons in my liberal town to know that fear was unprecedented, and real.
But I have to say for every anecdote in that story, I have two that say the opposite. To me it reads as if it was written with an agenda. I followed the polls close enough to watch the media coverage impact her badly at certain times and while they ended up failing us, I think the run away negativity from the MSM hurt us more than any other factor. Reporting lies as if they were truth all season long. I think that's the most crucial factor.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)We've heard a lot about Clinton's all-star data crunching team in Brooklyn, with their algorithms, quantitative skills, etc.
What do we know about Clinton's data collection efforts--the process of making sure the data and the assumptions that went into computer modeling programs actually measured the reality on the ground?
They intentionally avoided trying to publicly act as if they wanted to win Michigan based on their stupid head fake theory.
Not smart.
bettyellen
(47,209 posts)We relied on polls that were off. And they tanked a week before by more points than she lost by.
So yeah, we'd not be having this conversation except for the Comey letter.
I will say I know a lot of people were hesitant to do face to face because of the ugliness- and how that ugliness started during the primaries with Sanders supporters calling us every name in the book. There was a lot of fatigue here from the anger that fueled other people's candidacies. And the media amplifies it and focused on it all year.
I've worked in campaigns for many years and that was what struck me as very different this year.
HoneyBadger
(2,297 posts)But I got a few free tshirts and as many stickers as I wanted when I volunteered.
bettyellen
(47,209 posts)The app was pretty amazing. I'd like to see a more robust analysis, because I don't think knocking on doors did it for Trump, either.
LovingA2andMI
(7,006 posts)In The area WE live in -- Campaign Office Managers were overworked and underpaid. They were paid upwards to $3000 a month to work 6 days at week, upwards to 12 hours a day. That's ridiculous, period, with an expectation that work will get done and properly (cross-checks for data entry, planning local phone-bank events, sending emails, coordinating with local candidates, running an office and more).
Next, at the beginning of offices opening in the local area, the Hillary Campaign was CHARGING (yes, charging) $10.00 a sign for a Hillary sign? REALLY?
What local folks were going to pay for a yard sign, when yard signs SHOULD BE FREE to supporters? This caused Hillary signage not to be on the ground in any type of mass until early October and even after October when they stopped "charging" for signs -- only at half mass then. Key point, by then Trump supporters, had signs littered in rural areas for sure -- and in SOME urban areas.
Also, volunteers were few and far to come by until the second week of October. Why? Well, it was told over and over again, Michigan was 5-7 points in favor of Clinton.
In other words, no sense of panic to force folks leaning 3rd Party, No Party or just not sure -- snap to the reality Trump could be elected. Add to that, Clinton FAILED to VISIT S.E. Michigan part of the State (Democratic base) during the last three weeks of Election 2016 Campaign.
Lit drops were a waste of time and money by this point. The ONLY THING that might have turned this sinking ship around was Robo-Calls, Human Calls to Voters, a new message just for Michigan voters directly by Clinton, littering the state with her presence, and new commercials targeting why she was against NAFTA and would bring back Michigan jobs.
Let's be frank -- Robby Mook and Jennifer Palmeri were complete failures to Hillary's Campaign. They both should have had an immediate response Counterattack to "Wiki-Leaks/FBI" BS. They knew or should have known what emails and communications were hacked. Clinton should have held nearly daily Pressers plus rallies, along targeted Press Releases for certain states, and a strong Counter-Response strategy to handle this. The Campaign HAD the money to make this happen.
That's the story in Michigan. As for other places, we would be interested what other think about Clinton Campaign on-the-ground operations in Pennsylvania & Wisconsin.
INdemo
(7,020 posts)Hillary Clinton won this election period. Why the Democrats aren't in their scratching and clawing the fucking Republicans is no different than 2000 and 2004 and 2014.Except for a few Democrats in Congress that are not owned by the Corporate Mafia the others sit on their hands and give us nothing but lip service and Bullshit ..."well you know we will take a look at this in January hearing" Bull shit we are screwed.
To think in this World any other country would be calling for new elections after witnessing an election theft aided by Russia but no the most powerful nation on earth has now become nation of Fascist leaders.
PoliticAverse
(26,366 posts)reality check next Jan. 20th.
Jean-Jacques Roussea
(475 posts)=/= presidency
PoliticAverse
(26,366 posts)Jean-Jacques Roussea
(475 posts)I hope our illuminati overlords exercise their constitutional duty
INdemo
(7,020 posts)but the damned thing was stolen after years of planning by Republicans
treestar
(82,383 posts)geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)LyndaG
(683 posts)Last edited Wed Dec 14, 2016, 07:39 PM - Edit history (1)
President Obama and the Democrats saved the auto industry pretty much. Many Republicans stated they would've let it die.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)Exilednight
(9,359 posts)Sure, she's a Clinton, but she's not Bill.
She doesn't have the enthusiasm of Obama, the charisma of Bill or the excitement of a Kennedy.
Persondem
(2,092 posts)Pointing such idiotic fingers is totally counter productive.
Clinton lost because the country in effectively gerrymandered and 80k too many people in 3 states believed a serial liar. Throw in 30 years of BS "investigations" a well timed Comey BS letter and there you have it.
Put the blame where it belongs.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)We don't want the party to repeat her campaign's, or its own, mistakes.
Persondem
(2,092 posts)future election ... unless we somehow get a Clinton-Trump rematch in 2020.
All other general lessons have already been hashed out ad nauseum.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)be factors in how we contest future elections?
LovingA2andMI
(7,006 posts)If the voting machines are not fixed in Michigan, if the State is not PROPERTY worked for its votes, if a Campaign believes "poll data" over what folks are screaming from the ground....
Michigan might be lost for Democrats in 2020 too.
Hopefully, the next Campaign and Campaigner will not make these mistakes. As for the voting machines in Michigan -- State Democrats must keep in pressure on the Secretary of State to correct this issue, FAST.
Persondem
(2,092 posts)Elections are always going to pull the strings from the top or do you not recall how OFA really annoyed local dems in 2008 and 2012? Or perhaps you are just not as involved. Data was all over the place; the problem was not much of it was the right data. Can you predict what data will be important in 2020? It's all easy with hindsight, but the reality is 2016 was a freak election. Judging future outcomes by the exception rather than the rule is folly. Particularly when the media landscape is so skewed. You can play these analysis games all you want. Don't mean nothin' for 2020. The thing to do is get ready for 2018, that's the battle to concentrate on, not some freak election with very unique candidates that will not repeat in 1000 years.
Crunchy Frog
(26,977 posts)If you don't want to see this sort of thing, the best advice I can give you is to hit that little button at the top of the page called "Trash this forum".
There are some people who entertain the crazy belief that future bad outcomes can best be prevented by figuring out how previous bad outcomes occured and trying to not repeat the same mistakes. Why not let those crazies have their own little corner, and you don't even have to know it's there.
Persondem
(2,092 posts)Assuming we do not have a Clinton-trump rematch. And while you are at tell me what part of this OP hasn't been stated 10-12 times already in the Postmortem forum?
It's useless finger pointing and wasted energy to dwell on such things to this extent. 2018 will be here very, very soon and the apparently folks at DU are still more concerned with fighting the last war than the next one. If you know anything about history, you should know that that is very bad. Just ask the French.
Crunchy Frog
(26,977 posts)If you don't like reading postmortems of the 2016 election, then trash the forum so you don't have to see them.
Trump's not even being sworn in for more than a month. 2018 isn't going to be happening in the next few days or weeks. If you're so concerned about 2018 then trash the forum and probably get involved in real political activism, instead of wasting your time on a discussion board.
Persondem
(2,092 posts)future. You have in no way indicated how this could apply to 2020. It would seem then that your version of a postmortem and mine are different. To me "postmortem" does not mean pointless whining and finger pointing.
Oh and I have spent plenty of time over the last 15 years or so out in the world doing real ground level political activism. DU is just one of my political interests.
vi5
(13,305 posts)..where if true it was irrefutably poor campaign strategy and choices on the part of the Clinton camp, that so many people on here are saying "Let it go.....no Monday morning quarterbacking".
What makes it worse is that so many of those things (in person persuasion in particular) were being done in my state of NJ which is di-hard blue and wasn't even in question. Why those resources were spent here and not in Michigan or Ohio or Florida is beyond me.
But hey, when it comes to what Hillary's camp may have done wrong or things that were 100% in their control.....no sense looking back I guess, right?
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)The biggest practitioners of MMQBing are Sunday afternoon QBs.
vi5
(13,305 posts)are more than happy to spend endless amount of time obsessing over the roles of Jill Stein, Bernie Sanders, Milennials, "leftists", and any number of other factors for the loss.
Lil Missy
(17,865 posts)are still obsessing.
vi5
(13,305 posts)the people who were "obsessing over the roles of Jill Stein, Bernie Sanders, Leftists", etc. I didn't leave much room for ambiguity now did I? Those are the people who when an article or thread comes out that shows big campaign mistakes made by Clinton's people then suddenly want to look forward and not backwards.
I'm all for moving forward and not backwards, but it doesn't get to be selective.
Lil Missy
(17,865 posts)vi5
(13,305 posts)I didn't assume otherwise.
JCMach1
(28,067 posts)Not enough about sums it up...
C Moon
(12,556 posts)NRaleighLiberal
(60,500 posts)rather than a pack of dogs that chased the Hillary email squirrel.
HoneyBadger
(2,297 posts)"That is power, the mob is Rome. And while Commodus controls them he controls everything."
https://www.quora.com/Gladiator-2000-movie-What-does-the-mob-is-Rome-really-mean
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)NRaleighLiberal
(60,500 posts)elmac
(4,642 posts)and her campaign, this election was about big money, Russian hacks and sustained attacks against Democracy via fake news and thousands of paid bloggers, GOP states election fraud, Sniffles working with a Foreign enemy, the FBI working with a Foreign enemy, GOP congressmen and the Obama administration deciding to keep us in the dark about the depth of the Russian cyber attacks, the slave era electoral college, ect....
It was the perfect shit storm that no one, not even Sanders, could survive. Nothing but a serious revolution or civil war will fix this. The fascist state is here and our future is very, very bleak.
HoneyBadger
(2,297 posts)Add that to millennials and who know where you end up.
elmac
(4,642 posts)and latest "leaks" shows that Putin's attack may have been revenge against Clinton for what ever reason so taking away the FBI, Russian attacks may have made the difference but who knows what attack the fascists had ready for Bernie if he made it to the GE.
ehrnst
(32,640 posts)ooglymoogly
(9,502 posts)A blitzkrieg; a firing squad of unfounded lies and innuendo, eliminating the vote of the room temperatures, who are want to believe any conspiracy that suits their fancy; sleeper Comeys' illegal, clumsy and dastardly laying of hands on the scale; Russia and Wikileaks severe, deadly and most importantly, reckless involvement; the third way's stupid and short sited leadership of the party; (example; heavy support of blanch Lincoln and other full blown DENO'S while not supporting Bernie a liberal ). Lincoln, a dino, had no chance of prevailing when a more liberal candidate who the dem leadership snubbed, left without funds. all these things adding up, leaving long lasting consequences on Obamas' supprt and the midterms; thus falling on Clinton, who's base is now disheartened; Obamas' early disasters when he had a democratic senate and more moderate house. That, "third way"attitude, diminished the trust of the dem base, a severe blow to future elections; now add on this tin can; Andrea Mitchell, leading the charge, on a loop, literally a drumbeat, keeping the "email" story drummed up to a fever pitch, while many others wanted to just let it go after ("enough of her damned email" . But Andrea kept it front and center, chirping to her fellow reporters how big and important this story was when it was not, drumming this hypocrisy up to the election results.. And that is just a few; along with big money and many similar unseen's; a "perfect storm" in which Clinton had to sail sometimes blindly..... and still she won the vote by almost three million votes.
AND THAT IS PRETTY MIRACULOUS!. I would have been mighty proud to have her as my president.
That said, Bernie was my first choice and I believe he could have won.
ooglymoogly
(9,502 posts)sighted, support. using new tiny keyboard.
jfern
(5,204 posts)Joe941
(2,848 posts)geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)He never had to withstand a hardcore rightwing demagoguing.
Never had WWC voters told that Sanders wanted to take their tax dollars and give it to lawyers' kids so they can get philosophy degrees, got baited about raising everyone's taxes, taking away everyone's private health insurance, etc.
Certainly he had strengths as a candidate that Clinton lacked, but he also had weaknesses she didn't.
Jim Lane
(11,175 posts)The outcome of a Presidential election, especially a close one, is usually attributable to multiple factors. I don't understand why so many people here seem to have trouble with that concept. One can analyze and learn from the Clinton campaign's tactical choices without thereby implying that James Comey doesn't exist.
Yes, the Republicans cheated. They also cheated in 2008 and 2012, but Obama did enough other things right to win anyway. Although we must keep fighting against voter suppression and the rest of it, the sad fact is that the Republicans will cheat in 2020 to some extent. We need to look for every opportunity to improve our campaigns.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)and ignore everything that went wrong in victory.
The party's accelerating weakness with WWC, exurban, and rural voters was an issue before 2016 and would have remained in desperate need of remedy even if Clinton had won. The rest of the scoreboard, from the House of Representatives on down, told us that.
Jim Lane
(11,175 posts)If Clinton had carried Florida and North Carolina, both of which were close, she would have won (with 276 electoral votes) despite the losses in the Rust Belt. "Brooklyn" would be brushing off criticisms of its choices in Michigan. One small silver lining from Trump's win is that analyses like those in the article you linked may get more attention.
Demsrule86
(71,021 posts)The election was stolen...stop trying to blame Hillary she won the millions of votes...cheating GOP is too blame.
SunSeeker
(53,656 posts)As Sam Wang noted, Comey's late-October letter moved opinion 4 points toward Trump. About half of this stuck, which was enough:
http://election.princeton.edu/2016/12/10/the-comey-effect/
https://twitter.com/SamWangPhD/status/807943268529041414
Then the second letter, instead of ameliorating the damage done by the first, just fired up Trump voters. As Nate Silver found, late-deciding voters (those deciding in the last week before the election) broke strongly against Clinton in swing states, enough to cost her MI/WI/PA.
https://twitter.com/NateSilver538/status/807986531243819008/photo/1?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/hillary-clinton-james-comey-fbi-letter-cost-election-a7468831.html
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)and he was literally forced to eat a bug.
Sure, late undecideds broke heavily for Trump. But, that's not entirely unexpected for the party out of power.
And even if Comey did put Trump over the line, that it was so close was due at least in part to the shortcomings of our candidate and her campaign.
HoneyBadger
(2,297 posts)Actually ATE an insect.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)SunSeeker
(53,656 posts)There is no perfect candidate. No candidate would survive an ominous letter from the FBI Director implying evidence has been found that has resulted in a criminal investigation of that candidate being opened. Everyone figured it must be serious to have prompted Comey to make the public announcement so close to the election, risking violation of the Hatch Act to make the announcement.
It is simply wrong to dismiss the Comey effect as the most demonstrable, objectively identifiable reason for her loss. It cost Hillary at least two points, depressed Dem turnout and fired up GOP turnout. It was the perfect October Surprise, timed just 11 days before the election, leaving no time to recover.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)virtually all of them can claim "but for" causation.
There's no such thing as a perfect candidate, but this wouldn't have happened to a candidate who wasn't under FBI investigation in the first place. I don't buy for a nanosecond that Clinton committed a criminal offense, but that home brew server was shockingly poor judgment.
SunSeeker
(53,656 posts)The Comey letters are the only demonstrable "but for" cause of the loss.
And why are you using the right wing propaganda term "home brew server"? It was a private, secured server, which was never hacked. Her use of private email was not some "home brewed" idea she came up with, but was recommended to her by a prior Secretary of State (Colin Powell) and was in keeping with precedence set by the prior two Secretaries of State who used private email accounts, and warranted by the archaic email set up of the State Department at the time. Seriously, you want to legitimize the GOP bullshit? The Republicans would have picked up something to investigate and sensationalize about ANY candidate we ran. They certainly would have savaged Sanders and his wife.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)And it sure as shit was a lot closer in WI and PA and MI than Clinton's data team thought it was.
SunSeeker
(53,656 posts)dawg
(10,728 posts)It would've been a pretty impressive electoral college victory, coupled with a crushing popular vote mandate.
We'd all be talking about what geniuses we were, and how smart we were to have done the very things all the articles like this one now lament.
Of course, that's all just one dawg's humble opinion. But the vote was so close in those states, I can't imagine that the letter didn't make a significant difference.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)them when we win, just like we tend to focus on single explanations and solutions when we fail.
A narrow, improbable loss like this shows that every single relatively minor problem is capable of making a major difference, especially if the effect is cumulative.
dawg
(10,728 posts)Secretary Clinton ran a competent, professional campaign. Considering the mood of the electorate and the various outside influences on the election, it wasn't enough.
But too much navel-gazing is, in my opinion, counter-productive.
If Mr. Trump is able to deliver on the promises he made to his voters, they'll vote for him again. On the other hand, if he cocks everything up to the extent that I suspect he will, they will bolt. In which case, a campaign identical to the one we just ran would be sufficient to win a crushing victory.
Assuming, you know, that our votes still count.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)But failure does tend to focus the mind on improvement.
"I should do better" is less motivational than "I desperately need to do better."
HoneyBadger
(2,297 posts)2020 he is incumbent. Pretty big difference with the ex RNC head in his corner. And he can start fundraising now. I would not expect the 2020 campaign to look remotely like 2016.
dawg
(10,728 posts)If he hasn't, then maybe it wasn't all that big of a deal after all.
(But we both know he's gonna screw the pooch from day one.)
Rex
(65,616 posts)We should just skip over anything negative, so C-levels can get back to destroying the country.
Thanks.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)Rex
(65,616 posts)of our face, we just grow back another head.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)Crunchy Frog
(26,977 posts)Too much alert stalking.
True Dough
(20,257 posts)There are too many people here who are complacent about the status of the Democratic party. They are angry that the election was stolen from Hillary but have little energy to devote to improving party policies and philosophy. It's obvious some changes are needed. Even if the Dems won the election, it would have been by a small margin. So one can argue for an overhaul or insist that only minor tweaks are needed, but to sit back and do nothing more than moan and groan about Comey and the Russians won't do a damn bit of good in 2018 or 2020.
Yes, the electoral process could use some changes as well. But it's not an either/or proposition. Movements can exist to tackle both electoral reform and Democratic party soul searching.
pansypoo53219
(21,724 posts)SunSeeker
(53,656 posts)Meanwhile, 47% wanted the next president to be more conservative.
http://www.cnn.com/election/results/exit-polls/national/president
emulatorloo
(45,567 posts)bettyellen
(47,209 posts)ehrnst
(32,640 posts)mfcorey1
(11,060 posts)cyber attacks, gentrification, voter suppression, an hacking of voting machines.
LisaM
(28,599 posts)We should have won Michigan in a landslide, Wisconsin too. But this isn't just about Hillary and the campaign she did or didn't run. These states are being run by unpopular far-right governors, both are heavily gerrymandered, and both are quickly and thoroughly doing what they can to dismantle voting rights (I'm less familiar with Pennsylvania, so can't comment there), get rid of unions, and put in as many deterrents to democracy as they can. They barely represent their own constituents, yet act as if they have mandates to be quasi-dictators.
Snyder should not have been re-elected. Walker should not have been re-elected. Both were. Hillary actually out-performed Russ Feingold in Wisconsin, but he should also have been elected, he was very popular when he was a Senator and did an amazing job.
When the margins are high enough to matter, we don't notice all the discrepancies. When the margins are razor-thin, as they were in MI, WI, and PA, and they all favor a party who shouldn't have won, it's easy to wonder. The Republicans don't sit there and boo hoo about messaging. They don't care if they win by one vote or one million votes. They treat the outcome as the same (Dems don't).
The minute these Republican governors got in, they starting gaming the system. We can wring our hands over making giant messaging changes because 70,000 votes in three states couldn't balance out a 2.8 million voter majority, but I think we're better off ensuring a fair and accessible system in which everyone can vote very easily.
We could run a different candidate and (wrongly, I think) re-brand our values, but the Republicans would figure out another way to cheat. Because cheating is what they've got. Their results in government are pathetic. Their social hate message is ebbing away and they know it. All they have left is working the system. It's to their shame that they don't mind winning this way, their eternal shame - it's a complete lack of moral compass - but if we figure out how to move 70,000 votes, they'll counter with some other dirty play.
We need to get voting back on track. Now.
emulatorloo
(45,567 posts)It has a Republican tilt.
They can be pretty biased when it comes to Democrats.
They are Especially fond of using 'anonymous' sources to smear Democrats and spinning their 'reporting' about Democrats as negatively as possible.
As I said upthread, I think the paragraph asserting Clinton campaign was not knocking doors and doing face to face persuasion is unmitigated bullshit.
lapucelle
(19,532 posts)every weekend in September and October to knock on doors and make the case for Hillary and Kate Mc Ginty.
It was a large operation with hundreds of volunteers. I had friends doing the same in Ohio. That's why I'm bewildered by this:
Most importantly, multiple operatives said, the Clinton campaign dismissed whats known as in-person persuasion no one was knocking on doors trying to drum up support for the Democratic nominee,
ucrdem
(15,703 posts)Why didn't we listen when they told us how much they hated her etc.
triron
(22,240 posts)The Trump campaign in collusion with Putin and the Russians along with Comey's assistance and with the lame MSM produced the con job that resulted in this.
synergie
(1,901 posts)I was in MI, and we were knocking on doors, talking to people and listening to them.
Know what we heard? A bunch of bitter, ignorant folks who bought the Bernie nonsense about "rigging", who kept spouting out RW talking points and claiming that's why they were just too darned precious to vote.
Talk to these people and the ones who were not completely brainwashed, and they were shocked to learn some simple facts about the woman they had been taught to hate. They literally didn't realize that it was important to vote in local elections, and that's why they were busy railing about whatever BS they'd heard about on the internet from those frothing a lot, and using very few facts, and not seeing actual progress.
Also, MI came out to vote. Their votes were not counted. 75,000 in Wayne county were not counted. Instead of actually addressing the ways in which people were disenfranchised, folks concerned about their purity were busy foaming at the mouth about things being rigged.
These were not all Bernie supporters, many of whom were dedicated both in the volunteer sphere and the organizers. These were the ones contributing to the 10,000 who voted for Trump, the 80,000 who supposedly didn't vote for president. We won't know how many those truly were due to the GOP dirty tricks to NOT COUNT VOTES, but the ones we saw while the recount actually progressed (it ended the day it would have been finished in the largest counties), idiots who wrote in Bernie, and didn't bother to vote for anyone else on the ballot. They didn't even check the straight party box, not for the Greens, not for Dems (which would have made a HUGE difference in MI).
There were some bitter Berners, and there were people with some people with legitimate complaints about how the campaign was run, that happens in ALL elections, but this politico hit job is pure bunk, and that's from a ground level view.
The votes were there, people showed up, in nearly record numbers and the enthusiasm was most definitely there, but the votes were not counted. Not in key Democratic, and minority areas. 87 freaking broken machines in Detroit that were not counted. That's why she lost MI. And the Nazi vote. MI has lots of them, that people seem to forget that little tidbit. The militias came out. They came out to harass the campaign offices. They came to drive by and spew abuse. They were out in force with the army of Trump lawyers and every single corrupt Republican who did everything they could to NOT count votes, to purge people from voter records, etc.
There were other issues on the ground, but in no way does that touch the fact that VOTES WERE NOT COUNTED!!!!
Nor does it account for the purity patrol who literally screwed everyone with their complete nonsense, even when the threat of Trump became more and more clear. Let's not forget that part of the equation, which is the one that MOST affected MI.
standingtall
(2,954 posts)but her mistakes are not why she lost. Voter suppression,FBI and Russian hacks.
What makes some Democrats have so much faith in the system that they refuse to even believe that election was possibly hacked. If the Russians hacked the DNC hacked the RNC and hacked a U.S. election agency after the election. What makes you so sure they didn't hack on election day? Some will say there is no solid proof. Like what? A video tape catching a hacker in the act? There is good reason to suspect it. Even still if the Russians hacked,if the republicans hacked, or a combination of Russians and republicans hacked or no one hacked at all this election being stolen should be part of the message we should be pounding away for the next 4 years.