All splitting the left would accomplish is assuring Republicans never lose again. It’s the inevitable result of a First Past the Post voting system.
The more effective way of doing things is to primary all the corporate Dems and reform the Democratic Party from within. AOC did it in her district and there’s no reason it can’t work in others.
The Republicans are never going to lose again anyway. I am strongly suspicious of the outcome of the last election; there’s enough evidence to warrant at least an independent investigation of the voting software in states with abnormal down-ballot voting. The Democrats no longer have a shred of power to pursue any opposition; they have that up when Kamala walked away from the discrepancies and Biden made no effort to investigate in his remaining time.
I do agree on principle that, with FPTP voting, you need to vote strategically for the least bad person who has any chance of winning. The game has changed, now, though. Republicans have stacked the courts and gerrymandered their states, ensuring no chance to investigate attempts to defraud elections. The Democrat party has been utterly impotent in combating this, and demonstrated an appalling incompetence at ensuring the the system remains incorrupted and uninfluenced by foreign interests. They’ve actively participated in Corporate influence with Citizens United and the Patriot Act. I voted Hillary, but fuck her for supporting that shit.
If there’s a next election, and if there’s a party with reasonable polling numbers comparable to the D party, I might vote for them. Otherwise, I’ll vote D again.
But: the time to split or reform the party is now. Not at the general election, but now, while there’s time to lay the groundwork and build momentum. Because overthrowing a dictator is going to take a lot of momentum, and the D party has none of it.
the old Democrats can get behind the new leftists then. they’ve shown their cowardice plenty already, they can kowtow to the left instead of the right for once
All splitting the left would accomplish is assuring Republicans never lose again. It’s the inevitable result of a First Past the Post voting system.
The more effective way of doing things is to primary all the corporate Dems and reform the Democratic Party from within. AOC did it in her district and there’s no reason it can’t work in others.
The Republicans are never going to lose again anyway. I am strongly suspicious of the outcome of the last election; there’s enough evidence to warrant at least an independent investigation of the voting software in states with abnormal down-ballot voting. The Democrats no longer have a shred of power to pursue any opposition; they have that up when Kamala walked away from the discrepancies and Biden made no effort to investigate in his remaining time.
I do agree on principle that, with FPTP voting, you need to vote strategically for the least bad person who has any chance of winning. The game has changed, now, though. Republicans have stacked the courts and gerrymandered their states, ensuring no chance to investigate attempts to defraud elections. The Democrat party has been utterly impotent in combating this, and demonstrated an appalling incompetence at ensuring the the system remains incorrupted and uninfluenced by foreign interests. They’ve actively participated in Corporate influence with Citizens United and the Patriot Act. I voted Hillary, but fuck her for supporting that shit.
If there’s a next election, and if there’s a party with reasonable polling numbers comparable to the D party, I might vote for them. Otherwise, I’ll vote D again.
But: the time to split or reform the party is now. Not at the general election, but now, while there’s time to lay the groundwork and build momentum. Because overthrowing a dictator is going to take a lot of momentum, and the D party has none of it.
the old Democrats can get behind the new leftists then. they’ve shown their cowardice plenty already, they can kowtow to the left instead of the right for once
This is exactly the message. I’m certain that’s what AOC’s point was.