clubgop wrote: ↑Mon Mar 18, 2019 3:39 pm
StCapps wrote: ↑Mon Mar 18, 2019 3:20 pm
clubgop wrote: ↑Mon Mar 18, 2019 3:15 pm
You are wrong about 72, more on that later. But you are presupposing an outcome here you can't presuppose here. Trump has the mo, and I believe he has an advantage but he can still easily lose this race.
72 is the only time the Dems went with a far-lefty to run against an incumbent POTUS in the last five attempts by either party, every other time, they picked a middle of the road milquetoast centrist, like Mondale, Dole, Kerry or Romney who had no chance against Reagan, Clinton, Bush or Obama.
4 out of 5 times, it's a Biden-like politician winning since 1972, 1 out of 5 times it's a Sander-like politician winning since 1972.
See those are alot of assumptions and associations that don't have to be associated. 3 claims there.
Middle of the road
Milquetoast
Centrist
Mondale Yes on all 3.
Dole Yes on the first 2 not so sure about the third.
Kerry No, Yes, No
Romney Yes on all 3.
And consider the opponents Reagan, Clinton, Bush, Obama
all career politicians. Trump is not that. The narrative might be that the career politician is the true incumbent or at least that might what the press and the democrats, but I repeat myself, be the narrative they push.
Trump is an incumbent, underestimating an incumbent because he's not a career politician, will cause the Democrats to lose by an even larger margin than they otherwise would. When running against an incumbent likely to be re-elected, the electable milquetoast centrist lane winner, wins 80% of the time since the changed the system in 1972.
Kerry was very Romney-esque, flip flip flop, flip flop anonymous, won the electable centrist lane, even if he wasnt the most centrist candidate running, that isn't the point, the point is he was close enough to center, to win over the centrists. He who wins the centrist lane of Democrat or Republican primaries, wins the nomination, the vast majority of the time, especially when running against an incumbent POTUS.
Now there is still a good chance the Dems go 1972 all over again in 2020, and get steamrolled like McGovern, but more often than not, they choose not to do that, historically speaking.