• @agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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        156 months ago

        Centrist Democrats will. Leftists who understand the basics of American elections will. Fence sitters will stay home, and terminally online leftists will vote third party out of protest, and thus the God King will ascend his golden throne.

        • @cmbabul@lemmy.world
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          26 months ago

          Hey! I’m a terminally online extreme leftist and I’m 100% voting Biden or whoever the fuck the DNC puts out to stop the fascism

          • Congratulations, you have been promoted from “terminally online Leftist” to “Leftist who understands the basics of American elections”.

        • @Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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          -16 months ago

          Centrist Democrats will.

          Last time centrists didn’t get their very first choice, they formed a PAC to get McCain elected.

          • @agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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            6 months ago

            Not a very materially significant portion of them, since he wasn’t elected. I fear the terminally online leftists have convinced themselves they represent a silent bloc of significant size, and that outwardly embracing their policies would gain Democrats more voters than they alienate.

            Certainly, Dems need every vote they can get, and every tiny 1% bloc helps in a tight race. But centrists are a much bigger bloc than the far-left, and scaring them off is a net loss. Democrats are yucky, but Republicans are poison, big tent for yucky or get force-fed poison.

            • @Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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              106 months ago

              As always, anyone to the left is significant enough to blame for every loss a neoliberal earns, but not significant enough to listen to.

              • I’m talking to you about the practical benefit of voting for a particular candidate, not blame. Leftists comprise maybe 5% of registered voters. Centrist Neo-Libs comprise probably 30+%. Leftist turnout is significant in tipping a close election, but not enough to carry it without the Neo-Libs.

                Neo-Lib candidates are better for Leftists than Fascists are. On every single metric, they are better, or at the very worst equal. Even if you consider the Ratchet model, the keep-things-the-same party is objectively better than the ratchet-to-the-right party. At least it gives you time to popularize Leftist policies and candidates. The further we ratchet to the right, the harder it is to promote the Left.

                • @Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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                  16 months ago

                  The further we ratchet to the right, the harder it is to promote the Left.

                  Which is why your wing of the party loves doing it.

                  • Not my party, not my wing. I categorize myself as one of the “Leftists who understand the basics of American elections” mentioned above. I vote strategically, because a Leftist isn’t one of the top two names on the ticket. The name with an R next to it is significantly detrimental to the advancement of Leftist policy, the name with the D next to it is also detrimental, but to a far lesser degree.

                    Until an effective Leftist’s name takes one of the top two spots on the ballot, the math is simple: D > R. Even if both are negative, so long as D > R, the choice e is D, every time.