Democrats don’t know how voters
think. They cannot communicate with them, for sure, as they lost every
swing state this cycle. Over 80 percent of American counties had a
rightward shift, with some of the most dramatic moves toward Donald
Trump and the Republicans coming from wealthy, urban enclaves—the
natural habitat for extremist left-wing lunacy. Jobs and the economy
helped foment this change, along with the general lawlessness that
infests the cities, thanks to soft-on-crime district attorneys.
It's a brutal repudiation of the Democratic Party and the snobby ‘we
know better because we’re college educated’ ethos that’s engulfed
liberal America. You don’t know what’s better—that’s why you lost. That
attitude only breeds candidates who voters want to stab, shoot,
disembowel, and burn. The Democratic Party isn’t a big tent, and it’s
hyper-exclusionary. It’s why a new poll from Echelon Insights is bound
to make liberals vomit.
Not only are Republicans viewed more
favorably than Democrats, but voters also support the Trump transition.
The president-elect is coming into Washington with a bill of goodwill
from the voters. Talk about spitting in the face of these rich, dumb
college kids who thought they could gaslight us on the economy,
immigration, inflation, and law and order. It gets back to the basics
here. In the words of the late Andrew Breitbart, if you can’t sell
freedom [to voters], you suck (via Puck News):
Heads
are indeed exploding around Washington as Democrats confront the
depressing consequences of their 2024 election faceplant and members of
the press brace for four more long years of push alerts and a frenzied,
near-constant workload. But according to the latest poll from Echelon
Insights, which is partnering with Puck for research about the American
electorate, voters are generally giving the Trump transition the benefit
of the doubt. Echelon polled registered voters from November 14-18,
just as news cycles were popping off with Trump’s cabinet announcements,
and found that 53 percent of voters approve of the way Trump is
handling the transition. Only 40 percent of voters disapproved.
That’s
to be expected after an election, when voters usually welcome an
incoming president with some goodwill. But with Trump, there’s a
political paradox at work: While Trump himself remains personally
unpopular, voters still want him to succeed. A sizable majority of
voters (58 percent) say it’s likely “the country will start to head in a
better direction in 2025,” while only 38 percent said the opposite. The
percentage of Americans who say the country is on the right track is
still low (30 percent), but it’s up by a few points compared to
Echelon’s final pre-election poll in October.
[…]
With
Democrats flagellating themselves over their inability to connect with
voters who don’t shop at Whole Foods, a majority of Americans (51
percent) now have an unfavorable opinion of the Democratic Party. Adding
salt to that wound: Trump’s current favorability rating (49 percent) is
higher than those of Harris (47 percent) and President Joe Biden (42
percent). The Republican Party is also now viewed more favorably (48
percent) than the Democratic Party (44 percent).
Democrats are
staggering into a kind of political wilderness they haven’t seen since
John Kerry’s loss in 2004. In a survey of Democratic voters, the Echelon
poll found no clear standard-bearer as the party tries to figure out
what’s next. Yes, it’s a bit of a silly exercise to wonder about who
Democrats might run in 2028, but the lack of any obvious answer just
underscores the uncertainty within its leadership structure. Asked who
Democrats would vote for as their nominee in four years, Harris was far
and away the top pick—the only Democratic figure with double-digit
support. But only 41 percent named Harris, with the large majority of
Democrats looking elsewhere. Unlike Republicans in the Trump era,
Democrats have no tradition of looking to the past for their
presidential nominees. It’s difficult to imagine Harris making the case
that she should lead the party moving forward.
And there it is, folks. The voters who Democratic pollsters might
have missed since these people also lack nuance: voters might not like
Trump, but they support his policies and want him to succeed. That’s
hard to gauge. The president-elect has a mandate and political capital;
you bet he will spend it.
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