Bloomberg obviously thinks that four years from now isn't the best option. Reminds of one former Democrat supporter (below in picture with Bloomberg and Clinton).Bloomberg spoke at the RNC in 2004 to praise George Bush and the Iraq war and gave money to Republican candidates in 2016. — Maw
Political parties can make their own rules how they want.As premature as it is to say anything about the Democratic Convention in July, I suspect that it'll be brokered, that is, no candidate will emerge from the primaries with enough delegates to be nominated (principally because of Bloomberg & Steyer). Rules changes in 2016 suggest 'Superdelegates' - the Democrats own mini- Electoral College - will be poised select the nominee (by breaking deadlock on the convention floor). — 180 Proof
If the parties select the candidates and there is nearly complete overlap in major donors support - control of the agendas - of (both) parties, then the differences are narrow enough that the electorate in the general election are reduced to shoppers in Walmart choosing between cases of Bud Lite & Miller Lite (or gonorrhea & syphillis :vomit:). The herd's getting more and more restless, even rambunctious, lifting their snouts from the slop to grunt their growing unease-to-displeasure with merely ratifying "acceptable" choices made for them by oligarchs. If we don't get it right before the conventions, then we get Wrong or Wronger at the polls in the general. I'm no populist but they have a point - have had it for decades (and not just under their baseball caps) - and the b.s. gumbo is at a boil since even they now see that Live Poor, Vote Rich never has and never will "trickle-down" as advertised.Political parties can make their own rules how they want.
What really matters is the general election. — ssu
Bernie — Xtrix
Biden — Xtrix
What party is most successful depends quite a lot of the actual leaders and the people. And not just on right wing or left wing party gets everybody. The traditional blue collar worker voting for the left is quite far from the woke student voting left. Just as a traditional conservative is from the alt-right. The support of a party doesn't follow just from it's agenda. How it would play out, only God knows.But the big business, especially military industrial interests would hate that, as they would lose all their power, so they have to promise people those things respectively and then deliver on nothing but their own self-interest. If they split in four like suggested, the Trump Republicans and “centrist” Democrats would die completely because our electoral structure naturally gravitates towards two parties. — Pfhorrest
What a multiparty system does is that it creates the necessity of coalition administrations. This has one extremely important effect: the political parties have to work together.
Who really thinks that a "democratic socialist" can command enough votes? I'm a socialist, but most people are not, and I just don't see a DSA candidate winning. — Bitter Crank
Those are the things in politics. If the coalition cannot work together, then the administration doesn't work. Usually the government falls on a "no confidence" vote. If nobody is willing to work together, then nothing happens. But Republics can work too, you know. One party rule isn't the only answer.Or a no-confidence vote, one or the other. The ties that bind the coalition are rarely as solid as multi-party proponents like to pretend.
If "working together" means silencing or otherwise modifying a platform in order to appease the coalition and to achieve consensus, then maintaining the coalition and power becomes the prime motive over implementing party policy. Coalition becomes little more than bargaining between political elites, dressed up as compromise. — NOS4A2
One [finding] is the nearly total failure of “median voter” and other Majoritarian Electoral Democracy theories. When the preferences of economic elites and the stands of organized interest groups are controlled for, the preferences of the average American appear to have only a minuscule, near-zero, statistically non-significant impact upon public policy. — Princeton research paper
Beating Trump shouldn't be the goal, transforming US politics and aligning it more with what a majority of people want should be the goal. — Benkei
This presupposes that the majority doesn't want what Trump offers. What you mean to say is that your hope is that US politics is brought into alignment with something you find more palatable. — Hanover
I'd argue on the other hand that if the Democrats wish to win, they need to move back to the center, instead of continuing to drift left because that shift is reactionary to Trump and not the result of a sudden desire by middle America to emulate European liberalism. — Hanover
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