• @BallsandBayonets
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      172 months ago

      I also assume that’s why she’s pretending to play ball with Harris. If she continued being an actual progressive the Democrats would never let her get nominated.

      • Yup, they were treating her as the reincarnation of Che Guevara since year one. They’ve been rigging the game specifically against her since before she even got a seat at the table.

  • aramis87
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    1272 months ago

    I don’t want her to be NYC mayor, either. I want her to be President!

    • @_stranger_@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      You’ll have to wait at least a year (or four for the next election). She’s legally too young to run for president as she’s only 34.

      • @lemonmelon@lemmy.world
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        52 months ago

        Likely not. She’d have been of age by the time she took office. It’s very slightly nebulous, but it’s more in line with precedent that she is already eligible. For further details, see Joe Biden’s initial term in Congress. He was 29 when he campaigned and was elected in the November 7th, 1972 election. He turned 30 on November 20th, making him of age when he took office in January of 1973.

        AOC will turn 35 before the election even takes place, which suggests that she has even more of a claim to eligibility than Biden would have in '72. It’s all moot now, as the DNC (probably wisely, from the look of things now) chose to make the easier transition to the sitting VP as their candidate. There were several advantages to this strategy, but that’s a different discussion.

  • @OldWoodFrame@lemm.ee
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    682 months ago

    She’s obviously Bernie’s heir apparent and will replace him as The Left Wing Democrat to come in 2nd in the primaries now that he’s too old and she’s old enough.

    • @Barbarian@sh.itjust.works
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      232 months ago

      On a more optimistic note, a true heir to Bernie will know how to negotiate with the center left to accomplish some of their goals in exchange for the support of progressives to win elections.

        • Noxy
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          92 months ago

          Bernie is consistently farther left than AOC. One example: she voted to break the rail strike. He voted against.

          • @eacapesamsara@sh.itjust.works
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            -42 months ago

            You’re not wrong, AOC is certainly a stock liberal, however Sanders is center left. The US government is a right wing government with a right wing and far right party as the primary choices.

    • Drusas
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      62 months ago

      It’s too soon. She’s young; we want her to help the progressive cause for years and decades to come. If she were to become president in 2028, she would be retiring after she served, like every other president does, and we would lose her voice.

      • @grue@lemmy.world
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        332 months ago

        she would be retiring after she served, like every other president does, and we would lose her voice.

        That’s not a rule, you know. John Quincy Adams served in the House after being President, Andrew Johnson became a Senator, and Taft got appointed to the SCOTUS.

        • Drusas
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          -12 months ago

          I know, but it’s precedent. And I’m sure the secret service wouldn’t love her continuing to be active in politics.

        • Drusas
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          22 months ago

          Are you kidding me? She’s 34. She’s got like 30 years left until she’s old.

            • Drusas
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              12 months ago

              I have already explained that the reason to wait is so that she can be in politics longer and thus make a bigger impact.

              • @Valmond@lemmy.world
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                12 months ago

                Well I personally do not know how the future will turn out, so I think the best person for the best job right now makes the most sense.

      • @WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Let’s imagine a best case scenario for Democrats. Let’s imagine Trump is defeated in a landslide in November. And instead of reforming their ways, the national Republican party instead takes the path of the Republican party in states like California - continuing to double-down on losing policies. In other words, barring election losses, here is a path I could see for Democratic candidates:
        2024: Harris/Walz
        2028: Harris/Walz
        2032: Walz/AOC
        2036: Walz/AOC
        2040: AOC/?

        Walz is currently 60. If he won in 2032 and 2036, he would be 76 when his second term ended in 2040. That’s a perfectly viable age to be president. And a seasoned Walz would balance nicely with a younger AOC. Meanwhile, AOC will be 50 in 2040, still quite young by presidential standards. And by then, she would have 8 years as VP to shake off the sense that she is too young and inexperienced.

        This assumes Dems manage to win in 2024, 2028, 2032, and 2036. And that would be quite unusual by historical standards. However, considering the Republicans’ unprecedented efforts to destroy democracy, it’s not impossible. As long as they continue to champion destroying democracy, sane people, regardless of political beliefs, will recognize that they simply cannot be allowed into power until they reform their ways.

        However, If there is a loss prior to 2040, I would just move AOC to the forefront. Does Harris/Walz win in 2024 and then lose in 2028? Assuming we still have real elections at that point, I would put AOC at the top of the ticket in 2032.

  • @Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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    352 months ago

    Being NYC Mayor is harder than being President. You’ve got the same 24/7 spotlight and much less actual power.

    • @Buffalox@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      If Giuliani could do it how hard can it be? Seems that you don’t even have to have a grasp on reality.

        • @stoly@lemmy.world
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          82 months ago

          You mean the same Giuliani who lost an election and took a mob of racisr police to occupy city hall to prevent a black guy from being sworn in as mayor?

          • @Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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            82 months ago

            Someone lied to you.

            David Dinkins was Mayor before Giuliani.

            He lost his election.

            Rudy did bring a mob of cops to city hall, but they never “occupied” it.

            I hate Rudy as much as anyone, but keep the facts straight.

        • @gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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          82 months ago

          9/11 era Giuliani was also more or less working directly with the Russian mob, because he did a great job in the years leading up to it of scraping out the Italian mob (say what you will about them, but at the end of the day, they were staunch anti-fascists), leaving an enormous power vacuum that the Russian mob quietly filled. It was very much a situation of “better the devil you know” that was categorically and intentionally ignored. Organized crime is of course not great, but at the same time, the Russian mob is on a whole different level - not to mention, they’re effectively a branch of the Russian state.

    • @WoahWoah@lemmy.world
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      172 months ago

      In some ways you have more concentrated power.

      To quote a mayor of NYC: “I have my own army in the NYPD, which is the seventh biggest army in the world. I have my own State Department, much to Foggy Bottom’s annoyance. We have the United Nations in New York, and so we have an entree into the diplomatic world that Washington does not have.”

    • @WoahWoah@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Mayor is generally a demotion. Mayor of NYC is like being an authoritarian over a small but major nation with large, critical economy and the 7th largest army in the world. So arguably that would actually be a large step up for AOC, if we’re just talking about pure power and authority.

      • @OldWoodFrame@lemm.ee
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        222 months ago

        NYC is 7.4% of the US economy. I’m saying that to agree with you, that’s bigger than Florida, bigger than every state other than CA, TX, and (obviously) NY.

        • @WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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          The real issue isn’t that being mayor of NYC isn’t a serious and respectable position; it obviously is. The real issue is that being mayor of NYC is a political dead-end, especially for a Democrat. NYC is fundamentally very different from the rest of the country; it’s unique. Nowhere else in the country is anywhere near as urban as NYC. Nowhere else in the country has a greater share of its population that commutes via walking and public transit. Nowhere else in the country has such a large share of the population living in multifamily housing.

          Comparing it to entire states or other nations isn’t just about economics. It very much is a world unto itself. Its boroughs have their own unique cultures and even dialects! NYC has such a unique identity; it is a nation within a nation. If NYC broke off from the US, it could absolutely be perfectly viable as a city-state like Singapore. No other place in the country could as easily pull that off as NYC could. The lifestyle, the culture, the history, and even the language of NYC is markedly different from everywhere else in the country. It is part of America while being a part from America.

          The point is that NYC is insular and unique. And to most of the country, NYC is a very alien world. The places where the vast majority of Americans live look nothing like NYC. And if you serve as the mayor of NYC, you will be forever linked to that alien place. To most Americans, NYC means the biggest of big cities, and all the political realities that entails. If you are a mayor of NYC, you will forever be seen as not really representing and understanding the way the vast majority of Americans live. You’ll be forever linked to old money, old-school big city Democratic machine politics. There’s often talk of “real America,” and NYC is the polar opposite of that. And that just is never going to be popular in the places that you need to win over in order to win the Electoral College.

          The one exception to this is if you are running as a Republican. A Republican, by nature, seems to be antithetical to big-city Democratic politics. You’re not as tainted by it. This is why Giuliani actually had a not-completely ridiculous shot at being president for awhile (but even that required being mayor during 9/11.)

          Being mayor of NYC is a noble thing. But in terms of national politics, it is a political dead-end. You could probably run for a US Senate seat from New York after being mayor of NYC. But if you serve as the mayor of New York, your chance of ever being president is essentially zero. NYC is simply seen as far too alien by the rest of the country to elect a mayor of that place as president.

          A a politician, run for mayor of NYC if you wish. But do so knowing that if you win, you will have to forever write off the chance of being president of the United States.

            • @WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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              32 months ago

              You confuse cities for Cities. Take a look at this graphic Again, NYC is a universe unto itself. Nowhere else even comes close.

              Yes, the vast majority of the US lives in cities, but most live in sprawling low-density suburbs, which are a type of city. And even for those who live in central cities, even those are mostly composed of low-density neighborhoods. 3/4 of Americans commute by car. And while I cite commute, realize it goes far beyond this. The vast, vast majority of Americans who live in cities live in neighborhoods that physically look nothing like the neighborhoods of NYC. Walking to work and picking up the ingredients for dinner at your local corner bodega is not a normal experience for the vast majority of Americans.

              NYC is absolutely a statistical outlier when it comes to the rest of the country. It is a nation within a nation.

      • @Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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        42 months ago

        Thanks to the antics of old time Mayor Jimmy Walker and Tammany Hall, a lot of NY’s power is controlled by the Governor of NY State.

        • @WoahWoah@lemmy.world
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          22 months ago

          That’s really only true with the emergency powers of the governors office. Given the power to appoint 40+ commissioners in NYC and the de facto power the mayor exerts over NYC (despite de jure description) is immense. Give the political, police, and financial power of NYC, I would say the mayor still exerts more authority than the governor.

          That being said, the governor of NYC has the power to declare a state of emergency and wildly broaden his power to near authoritarian levels. If that were to occur and then the governor and mayor were to somehow end up toe-to-toe, it would be interesting. But in actual practice, I think that might be a more even match up than you think.

          • @Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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            12 months ago

            On the other hand, the mayor is point man for literally hundreds of crises. Lindsay had a good shot at becoming President, and lost it because of a snowstorm; Dinkins got screwed by a Korean grocery store boycott.

            All three major networks have stations in NYC, plus Fox News and CNN, plus the NY Times and the Wall Street Journal. That’s not counting the Congressional delegation and the New York Stock Exchange.

            The mayor is under a microscope with no Secret Service protection.

            Now let’s pivot to what ‘real power’ is. Let’s put Lex Luthor as US President and as NYC Mayor. Either way, Lex can have one person killed anywhere in the world, but only as President can he start a war of bring a nation to their knees.

            I estimate that Lex could get a billion in brides and kickbacks in one term in office; he could call the Saudis on Inauguration Day and have $50 billion in a Swiss account by the ned of the business day.

  • @frezik@midwest.social
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    132 months ago

    If she wanted to be President, mayor of NYC isn’t a path that’s out of the question. It’s one of the only places where the office of the mayor gets a lot of national attention. It can be more prestigious in practice than NY governor.

    That said, former NYC mayors haven’t exactly done well in runs for the President, either. Rudy ran in the Republican primary in 2008, and his performance was summed up as “noun verb 9/11”. Bloomberg tried in the Democratic primary in 2020, but nobody wanted to vote for a stodgy billionaire. I conclude that this would not be a good fit for her if she wanted to be President. This conclusion comes to you from two datapoints, which is the typical level of data to produce strong conclusions in the media.

    • @Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Mayor of New York seems like a pit trap. I admire the city from afar but any meaningful way of making it better will be met with red tape, corruption, and mob like fuckery.

  • HobbitFoot
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    72 months ago

    I feel like she might go for Senator in 2028.

    Outside of Trump, Presidents typically win a state office before going on to President. While AOC could go for governor, I don’t see her really going for that role.