The Obsession With White Voters Could Cost Democrats the Virginia Governor’s Race

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member
The Obsession With White Voters Could Cost Democrats the Virginia Governor’s Race
If Ralph Northam’s campaign is any indication, Democrats have learned the wrong lesson from 2016.



For all the analyses offered about the behavior of these voters in 2016, you hear almost nothing about the tactical and strategic decisions that led to the cataclysmic collapse of black-voter turnout. Of the first $200 million allocated by progressive outside groups for spending in 2016, zero dollars were directed to African-American voter mobilization. Zero. Despite the availability of multiple inspiring leaders of color in the mold of Barack Obama, the Clinton campaign opted to return to the days of fielding an all-white presidential ticket. In facing a Republican nominee whose candidacy was propelled by white racial fears and anxieties, the Democratic strategy was to largely ignore the racism and focus instead on Trump’s temperament. In the face of such neglect and disinterest, many black voters showed less interest in the election, and turnout plummeted to the lowest level in almost 20 years. A higher percentage of black voters turned out to vote for John Kerry than did for Hillary Clinton, and that precipitous decline cost her the pivotal states of Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania—and, as a result, the White House.

Rather than heeding last year’s wake-up call, Democrat’s continue to perpetuate this pattern of structural racism and implicit bias. Take the upcoming election in Virginia—a quadrennial political bellwether because it takes place the year after each presidential election. Smart electoral strategy should be predicated on empirical evidence and hard data, and the data in Virginia clearly illuminates the path to victory for Democrats. In off-year elections, turnout usually drops dramatically, lowering the threshold needed to secure a majority of the vote. Current Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe won the governor’s mansion in 2013 with about 1.1 million votes. It is the presidential elections that show the true size of the pool of progressive voters, and Clinton won nearly 2 million votes in Virginia last year. According to the exit polls, 53 percent of the Virginians who supported Clinton—1,047,518 voters—were people of color. That’s more than all of the people who backed the 2013 Republican gubernatorial nominee, Ken Cuccinelli, whose campaign garnered 1,013,354 votes.
 

SamSpade

Well-Known Member
They keep talking about some visual where his ticketmate - Justin Fairfax - has been blurred out - and how there's no mention of him in tons of material - as some kind of affront to black voters.

I really would be surprised if many voters had noticed at all without it being pointed out first.

But Democrats have historically assumed the black vote is always theirs, and as the Republicans DON'T think they will make much progress - they get less attention from both parties.

I'm not sure how this trend ever gets broken, but you can bet that a politician is never going to work hard for your vote if he knows he will always get it.
 

This_person

Well-Known Member
Democrats have historically assumed the black vote is always theirs, and as the Republicans DON'T think they will make much progress - they get less attention from both parties.

I'm not sure how this trend ever gets broken, but you can bet that a politician is never going to work hard for your vote if he knows he will always get it.

I think the trend gets broken when the vote of black people is no longer a given for the Democrats. When the majority of black people vote on issues, and recognize the combined incompetence and racism of Democrats in terms of how they govern, they will no longer be ignored by either party.
 

stgislander

Well-Known Member
PREMO Member
I do love VA politics. The political ads are very entertaining. MD is a snooze fest compared to VA.
 

Monello

Smarter than the average bear
PREMO Member
Blacks should take the advice of political sage Stephen Smith, the ESPN commentator:
What I dream is that for one election, just one, every black person in America vote Republican....
Black folks in America are telling one party, ‘We don’t give a damn about you.’ They’re telling the other party, ‘You’ve got our vote.’ Therefore, you have labeled yourself ‘disenfranchised’ because one party knows they’ve got you under their thumb. The other party knows they’ll never get you and nobody comes to address your interest.
 

SamSpade

Well-Known Member
Blacks should take the advice of political sage Stephen Smith, the ESPN commentator:

Exactly. Heard this same thing over and over - as long as you never vote one way and always vote the other - earning and keeping your vote is of no consequence.
And generally, that's what's been happening.

Then again, each side is mortally afraid that if they DON'T vote one way, the other side will tear them up.

We may have reached a point where the voters realize that neither side really cares about what they're getting done. Just as long as they keep their job.
 
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