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portlander23

(2,078 posts)
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 11:43 AM Jan 2017

Registered Voters Who Stayed Home Probably Cost Clinton The Election

Registered Voters Who Stayed Home Probably Cost Clinton The Election
Harry Enten
FiveThirtyEight

Registered voters who didn’t vote on Election Day in November were more Democratic-leaning than the registered voters who turned out, according to a post-election poll from SurveyMonkey, shared with FiveThirtyEight. In fact, Donald Trump probably would have lost to Hillary Clinton had Republican- and Democratic-leaning registered voters cast ballots at equal rates.

Given how closely party identification tracks with vote choice, the disparity in turnout probably cost Clinton the election. SurveyMonkey did not ask non-voters whom they would have voted for, but we do know that more than 90 percent of self-identified Democrats who cast a ballot voted for Clinton and more than 90 percent of Republicans voted for Trump. Moreover, voters who didn’t identify with or lean towards either party were slightly more likely to prefer Clinton to Trump. That means that had the non-voters cast a ballot in accordance with their party identification, Clinton’s advantage over Trump nationally would have expanded by about 2 to 3 percentage points. That almost certainly would have been enough to flip enough states for her to win the Electoral College.

The biggest reason given by non-voters for staying home was that they didn’t like the candidates. Clinton and Trump both had favorable ratings in the low 30s among registered voters who didn’t cast a ballot — both had ratings in the low 40s among those who did vote. That’s a pretty sizable difference. So why was Clinton hurt more by non-voters? Trump was able to win, in large part, because voters who disliked both candidates favored him in big numbers, according to the exit polls. Clinton, apparently, couldn’t get those who disliked both candidates — and who may have been more favorably disposed to her candidacy — to turn out and vote.

More harmful for Clinton was which young voters stayed home: minorities. Among white voters, voters 18-29 years old made up 30 percent of voters who did not participate in the November election. Among young Hispanic voters, that climbs to 43 percent. Among young black voters, it was an even higher 46 percent. That generally matches the findings of the voter data released in some Southern states showing that young black voters were especially likely to stay home in this election. Younger black voters were far more likely to support Bernie Sanders in the primary, suggesting that there simply was not the enthusiasm for Clinton’s candidacy as there was for Obama’s in 2012. Clinton’s favorable rating, for instance, was about 10 percentage points lower among the youngest black voters compared to the oldest black voters in the SurveyMonkey poll.

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Registered Voters Who Stayed Home Probably Cost Clinton The Election (Original Post) portlander23 Jan 2017 OP
Stay at homes .......? suston96 Jan 2017 #1
Yup. I know 4 or 5 passionate Sanders supporters who stayed home. lamp_shade Jan 2017 #2
Please slap them all in the face with a dead trout for me... Blue_Tires Jan 2017 #12
They're all family... all very young adults... probably not even registered to vote. lamp_shade Jan 2017 #22
Election losses in this country are often sharp_stick Jan 2017 #3
Comey cast more doubt and many people just gave up and stayed home. riversedge Jan 2017 #4
Nah! Not buying it. brush Jan 2017 #5
The 538 analysis is based on actual polling data. Jim Lane Jan 2017 #20
How do you exit poll non-voters? brush Jan 2017 #21
You're confusing two different concepts Jim Lane Jan 2017 #24
++++ NO !!!! ++++ Clinton got nearly as many votes as 2012 Obama !!! uponit7771 Jan 2017 #6
True, but the population of registered voters increases each year as well karynnj Jan 2017 #18
Thanks for nothing, stay-at-homes. (nt) Paladin Jan 2017 #7
Ok. So why do those of us who are angry at Bernie for attacking her get shit for that? kcr Jan 2017 #8
Because it makes the assumption.... vi5 Jan 2017 #10
Nothing in this says that they would have been motivated to vote for HRC had there been no primary karynnj Jan 2017 #19
Agreed. Never again let a non-Dem with no allegiance to the party run as a Dem brush Jan 2017 #23
I hope the DNC implements this policy liquid diamond Jan 2017 #43
Yes! brush Jan 2017 #44
Yeah... that's a great solution kenfrequed Jan 2017 #47
You and your types liquid diamond Jan 2017 #49
"My types"? kenfrequed Jan 2017 #63
Well said! LiberalLovinLug Jan 2017 #77
Perfect example of our losing strategy. HassleCat Jan 2017 #76
Post removed Post removed Jan 2017 #62
Your concern is noted hueymahl Jan 2017 #72
Agreed HRC2020 Jan 2017 #57
CNNventional wisdom that's been kicked to the curb daily for two months. nt ucrdem Jan 2017 #9
It is Politics 101 earthside Jan 2017 #11
who the fuck has to be inspired to vote . keeping trump out of the white house wasnt inspiring Ohioblue22 Jan 2017 #15
Being registered to vote and subsequently voting should be inspiring enough. Iggo Jan 2017 #29
they take it for granted Ohioblue22 Jan 2017 #30
Only a narcissist has to be "inspired to vote" - especially with Trump as the alternative. yardwork Jan 2017 #50
BernieBro eom HRC2020 Jan 2017 #59
Well, I hope they ellie Jan 2017 #13
Peer Pressure Is A Powerful Tool otohara Jan 2017 #14
Those assholes will get theirs. liquid diamond Jan 2017 #45
This really isn't true, and blaming it on "minorities" makes it worse. ucrdem Jan 2017 #16
You are using two different numbers. kenfrequed Jan 2017 #48
Clinton and the DNC did not help themselves, but they still should have been able to beat Trump, and JCanete Jan 2017 #17
Clinton just didn't inspire the young voters as seen by these numbers. jalan48 Jan 2017 #25
The young voters that BS "inspired" couldn't be bothered to come out and vote for BS SFnomad Jan 2017 #34
Let's face it-Hillary as inspirational wasn't happening. jalan48 Jan 2017 #35
And that isn't why she lost. If that's all it took, BS would have won the primary SFnomad Jan 2017 #38
Given how late he started and with no money-it's anybody's guess. jalan48 Jan 2017 #39
FFS, you people sure do have one excuse after another #smh SFnomad Jan 2017 #42
Hillary Inspired Millions of Young Women.. I know a lot of BS fans Cha Jan 2017 #51
Yeah, maybe next time we'll put country above ego? Just a reminder; JTFrog Jan 2017 #58
I guess you need to tell that to the people who didn't vote or are we still blaming the voters? jalan48 Jan 2017 #60
Because we had a spoiler drumming up division. Not really that hard to pinpoint. nt JTFrog Jan 2017 #61
Take a look at the candidate's favorability ratings. jalan48 Jan 2017 #64
It wasn't close. She won by 3 million votes. JTFrog Jan 2017 #65
If she won by 3 million votes why isn't she the President then? jalan48 Jan 2017 #66
Russia. Comey. GOP. Duh. nt JTFrog Jan 2017 #67
Russia, Comey and the GOP made voters stay home? Wow! It's hopeless then. jalan48 Jan 2017 #68
Fake news and hacking from Russia. Division from the spoiler. Comey and his fake announcement. JTFrog Jan 2017 #69
It's everyone else's fault is the message then. Got it. jalan48 Jan 2017 #70
Whatever helps you sleep at night. nt JTFrog Jan 2017 #71
Victim-hood is a losing mindset. It will only lead to more losses. jalan48 Jan 2017 #74
Yes, because ignoring all of the things that actually happened is a winning strategy. JTFrog Jan 2017 #75
Which begs the question of why that 41% did not vote. guillaumeb Jan 2017 #26
I stayed home that day. TonyPDX Jan 2017 #27
Registered voters who stayed home are fucking morons. Iggo Jan 2017 #28
They will have blood on their hands mcar Jan 2017 #31
"The biggest reason given by non-voters for staying home was that they didnt like the candidates." andym Jan 2017 #32
She had a 3 million vote lead over Trump. Rex Jan 2017 #33
They cost us dearly. Not Clinton. NCTraveler Jan 2017 #36
Clear support for candidates was low so why didn't DNC get a candidate who could garner more? snowy owl Jan 2017 #37
The voters of the Democratic Party picked Clinton, and by a wide margin at that. StevieM Jan 2017 #52
But, But They at Least Preserved Their Ideological Purity Hum Jan 2017 #40
Does this include voters who wanted/tried to vote but were prevented from doing so by suppression EffieBlack Jan 2017 #41
and RUSSIA? LaydeeBug Jan 2017 #46
Flagged for Review? You Better Believe it! FSogol Jan 2017 #53
Like all things, way too late. JTFrog Jan 2017 #55
Yep I sit next to a Sanders supporter jzodda Jan 2017 #54
There's not really any single cause. Orsino Jan 2017 #56
Reason 5,236 from the North West. NCTraveler Jan 2017 #73
So whether you hate Sanders or love Sanders, its agreed he would have won. LiberalLovinLug Jan 2017 #78

suston96

(4,175 posts)
1. Stay at homes .......?
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 11:50 AM
Jan 2017

Maybe so but I believe the control by the GOP of most of the voting districts in the country helped a lot.

Remember, getting out the vote is important but controlling the counters is the trick.

lamp_shade

(14,816 posts)
22. They're all family... all very young adults... probably not even registered to vote.
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 03:53 PM
Jan 2017

And they all live in other states; othewise, I'd whoop them all upside the head.

sharp_stick

(14,400 posts)
3. Election losses in this country are often
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 11:54 AM
Jan 2017

the direct fault of the people not interested in getting out. I enjoy pointing it out to them when they start whining about the outcome. Most of them aren't bright enough to connect the dots.

brush

(53,743 posts)
5. Nah! Not buying it.
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 12:04 PM
Jan 2017

Younger white voters, okay, but younger black voters favored Sanders over Clinton and therefore didn't vote?

Un-uh.

Sounds like a misreading of the black community and another attempt to blame AAs for the election loss.

The first being that AAs didn't turn out as strongly for Clinton as they did for Obama. That was so stupid it was as if no brain was even used by those pushing that argument. She got 90 some percent of the black vote, which is very, very strong, but of course she nor anyone else was going to get a bigger percentage in the AA community than the first black candidate ever.

Get real, folks.

Ninety some percent of older black voters turned out for Clinton and we're to assumed they had no influence over their sons, daughters, nephews and nieces?

Again, not buying it. I think 538 is wrong again. We saw the crowds in all those Sanders rallies. There were hardly any AA faces in those crowds.

 

Jim Lane

(11,175 posts)
20. The 538 analysis is based on actual polling data.
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 03:43 PM
Jan 2017

If you're "not buying it" based on your gut feelings or anecdotal observations of rallies, and if you regard those sources as more reliable than exit polls, then that's where you and I disagree.

You should also note that the section of the 538 article that you refer to isn't talking about black voters. It's talking about young black voters. The passage states:

More harmful for Clinton was which young voters stayed home: minorities. Among white voters, voters 18-29 years old made up 30 percent of voters who did not participate in the November election. Among young Hispanic voters, that climbs to 43 percent. Among young black voters, it was an even higher 46 percent.


This isn't blaming AAs generally, since it would follow from these data that older black voters who didn't vote would be a lower percentage of those who stayed home.

As for support for Sanders, it's true that Clinton beat him among blacks as a whole. The argument made by 538, however, is in the context of younger voters. It's based on exit poll data showing that Sanders, who generally beat Clinton among younger voters, even beat her among younger black voters:

But an analysis of 25 states that held primaries and where exit polls were conducted by NBC News showed that one of Sanders' challenges is that younger blacks are not voting in large numbers. Sanders, according to the exit polls in these states, received 52 percent of the votes of African-Americans under 30, compared to 47 percent for Clinton.


(from "Huge Split Between Older and Younger Blacks in the Democratic Primary" (emphasis added))

That's a plausible basis for suggesting one factor in the actual outcome: Younger black voters were less likely to be inspired by Clinton's candidacy and were therefore less likely to vote.

brush

(53,743 posts)
21. How do you exit poll non-voters?
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 03:46 PM
Jan 2017

And why is there no mention of concerted repug vote suppression instead of strong suggestions that young AAs were too lazy to go out and vote to keep a known racist out of the White House?

 

Jim Lane

(11,175 posts)
24. You're confusing two different concepts
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 04:27 PM
Jan 2017

The exit polls from 25 primaries indicated that Sanders beat Clinton among black voters younger than 30. Maybe the polls were wrong, or maybe there was a markedly different trend in the unpolled primaries, but this information is certainly relevant to the question of how young black voters regarded Clinton.

You go on to find a "strong suggestion" of laziness and no mention of other factors such as voter suppression. First, there is no suggestion of laziness. You're bringing that up only to try to lump the 538 analysis in with racist views of blacks as inherently lazy and shiftless.

Second, what you contend wasn't mentioned was, in fact, mentioned:

There are, of course, a lot of reasons people don’t vote. In addition to not liking their choices, some people don’t have the time to vote (they can’t get off work, for example). Others are dissuaded or prevented from voting by barriers like voter identification laws.


This particular piece focused on the information available from the post-election Survey Monkey poll. The poll asked non-voters about their party affiliation or identification. The 538 piece used that fact as a proxy for how the nonvoters would have voted. It didn't pretend to be a comprehensive analysis of all the factors affecting the election. Discussing one aspect of the election doesn't equate to dismissing all the others.

karynnj

(59,498 posts)
18. True, but the population of registered voters increases each year as well
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 02:36 PM
Jan 2017

I suspect that the analysis should also look at the higher number of voters for Trump than for Romney.

I think this may be somewhat similar to 2004, where especially in the swing states, Kerry got more votes in every area than their goals. He got slightly more than 8,000,000 more votes than Gore, who had won the popular vote in 2000. He lost because Bush pulled out an additional almost 11,000,000 than he did in 2000.

Similar to 2004, when many ugly anti gay referendums were placed on the ballots of many states, including several swing states, there were many usually non voting evangelicals in rural areas who were motivated to come to the polls. In 2016, Trump LED the hate that brought out people not motivated to vote for Romney.

kcr

(15,315 posts)
8. Ok. So why do those of us who are angry at Bernie for attacking her get shit for that?
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 01:02 PM
Jan 2017

It's clear he cost us and cost us dearly. He was clearly a significant factor.

 

vi5

(13,305 posts)
10. Because it makes the assumption....
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 01:26 PM
Jan 2017

..that those people would have voted for her if Bernie hadn't been in the race, and/or that the stuff Bernie said was anything they had not heard or thought themselves before the primary. And there is no evidence to back that up other than pointing to a few general polls prior to the primary that said Clinton was "admired", with zero evidence that those numbers included any of the people who sat out this election.

I knew very few Bernie or Bust voters but the ones I did were never under any circumstances going to vote for Hillary Clinton, even if they had never heard the name Bernie Sanders.

karynnj

(59,498 posts)
19. Nothing in this says that they would have been motivated to vote for HRC had there been no primary
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 02:56 PM
Jan 2017

fight at all. There were also people who Sanders motivated in the primaries who had not been motivated to vote at all -- who did follow his call and that of many of his voters to vote for HRC. How many - I do not know. I do know that buses left places in Vermont to help HRC in NH in the general election. Clearly many were Sanders supporters speaking to people who voted for Sanders in the primary. NH was close -- yet, it would be presumptuous to say the visits of Sanders himself and the canvassing assist from VT won that very close state.

brush

(53,743 posts)
23. Agreed. Never again let a non-Dem with no allegiance to the party run as a Dem
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 03:56 PM
Jan 2017

Last edited Tue Jan 10, 2017, 03:41 PM - Edit history (1)

Other Democrats know better than to attack the party, and they know when to concede instead of continuing the attacks when they've lost.

 

liquid diamond

(1,917 posts)
43. I hope the DNC implements this policy
Tue Jan 10, 2017, 02:59 PM
Jan 2017

immediately. The fringe left be damned. They can start their own fucking party if they are so damn miserable in ours. Sanders the independent helped create this fucking disaster.

kenfrequed

(7,865 posts)
47. Yeah... that's a great solution
Tue Jan 10, 2017, 06:10 PM
Jan 2017

If we didn't win we should definitely shift to the right AND shrink the party.

Those two things will definitely help us win.


The only thing you have convinced me that needs to be shrunk is this silly and divisive Postmortem Forum.

 

liquid diamond

(1,917 posts)
49. You and your types
Tue Jan 10, 2017, 10:04 PM
Jan 2017

are not going to hijack our party. You are a minority. We had a primary and kicked your asses. Deal with that. Again, if you don't like it, start your own party. Your type can easily be replaced by those who didn't vote this election.

kenfrequed

(7,865 posts)
63. "My types"?
Wed Jan 11, 2017, 11:33 AM
Jan 2017

Where is this magical middle that is going to accommodate your moving to the right and cutting the left of the party out?

The Republican party has moved to fascism and they have bled very little support. Do you honestly imagine that there are some special super-moderates out there that sat out this election because fascism didn't scare them and centrism didn't excite them? Where do you imagine they are going to come from?

I actually showed up to pull the lever for your flawed candidate because that is what you do when your candidate doesn't win the primary. Most of us that showed up for caucuses and primaries did that. This hate you have for the left is not going to win you anything.

"Hijack the party" indeed. The House, the Senate, most statehouses and governors, and the supreme court all held by Republicans? You should be inviting a Hijacking about now. Our only hope, and note that I said 'our,' is a very populist progressive agenda that will reinvigorate the working class and you are not going to get that with platitudinous incrementalism, flag-waiving militarism, or paeans to the to greatness of entrepreneurial-ism. That time is past and the 90's have been over for quite some time. What is needed is a new New Deal.

We need bold progressiveness. We need to embrace that energy.

Response to liquid diamond (Reply #43)

 

HRC2020

(13 posts)
57. Agreed
Wed Jan 11, 2017, 11:18 AM
Jan 2017

BS was the #1 reason for Hillary losss. His dishonest attacks on Hillary brought us the Trump disaster. His BernieBro took it a notch up. They were very passionate at #NeverHillary and were successful in painting Hillary as the most corrupt and vile politician using social media. They used dishonest or false memes like Hillary was profiting from the prison industry, Haiti. Everything good about HRC they turned into bad.

earthside

(6,960 posts)
11. It is Politics 101
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 01:47 PM
Jan 2017

The Clinton candidacy was simply uninspiring to a lot of voters in the states where it counted.
And the Clinton campaign did not effectively counter this trend ... as evidenced by the lack of Clinton GOTV in Wisconsin.

Blame Sanders; blame racism; blame Comey; blame the Russians -- one of these days just step-up to the plate and acknowledge the failures of the Clinton campaign in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania.

That is all.

 

Ohioblue22

(1,430 posts)
15. who the fuck has to be inspired to vote . keeping trump out of the white house wasnt inspiring
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 02:19 PM
Jan 2017

enough? well you got the government you deserved good luck

Iggo

(47,534 posts)
29. Being registered to vote and subsequently voting should be inspiring enough.
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 05:18 PM
Jan 2017

Participating in the peaceful overthrow of the government should be inspiring enough.

These people don't know how good they have it.

yardwork

(61,539 posts)
50. Only a narcissist has to be "inspired to vote" - especially with Trump as the alternative.
Tue Jan 10, 2017, 11:07 PM
Jan 2017

I have no patience with such weak minded foolishness.

 

HRC2020

(13 posts)
59. BernieBro eom
Wed Jan 11, 2017, 11:27 AM
Jan 2017

BernieBros painted Hillary as the architect of TPP. I believe that is the reason for the rust belt failure. I have had some Berniebros claim that Hillary wanted to export their job but they succeeded in exporting hers. I wish we could force BS out of everything democratic! Nader repeat!!!

 

otohara

(24,135 posts)
14. Peer Pressure Is A Powerful Tool
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 02:09 PM
Jan 2017

Sanders and his celebrity nasty-ass surrogates hammered his "tweedle-dee tweedle-dum" message that both parties are the same. I saw all the hateful Hillary memes and fake stories about Hillary...passed around with glee by so called progressive Millennials

They were encouraged to vote 3rd party or not at all and so they did.
Now they are silent as well with the alt-left media types who encouraged the message.




 

liquid diamond

(1,917 posts)
45. Those assholes will get theirs.
Tue Jan 10, 2017, 03:11 PM
Jan 2017

They threw away their future out of spite by helping trump win the presidency. They can have fun living under oppressive Supreme Court rulings over the coming DECADES. Stupid motherfuckers.

ucrdem

(15,512 posts)
16. This really isn't true, and blaming it on "minorities" makes it worse.
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 02:29 PM
Jan 2017

First of all, voters cast ballots in record numbers in 2016, both before and on election day:

PBS: more than 58% of eligible voters went to the polls during the 2016 election
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/updates/voter-turnout-2016-elections/

WAPO: More votes were cast in 2016 than in 2012
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2016/11/15/more-votes-were-cast-in-2016-than-in-2012-but-that-doesnt-mean-turnout-was-great/

Secondly, claiming that minorities, "young black voters" specifically, were "harmful for Clinton" is pernicious and amounts to blaming Cheato's triumph on lazy black people:

More harmful for Clinton was which young voters stayed home: minorities. Among white voters, voters 18-29 years old made up 30 percent of voters who did not participate in the November election. Among young Hispanic voters, that climbs to 43 percent. Among young black voters, it was an even higher 46 percent.

Does this writer not realize that the GOP has been doing everything in its evil power, legal and otherwise, to disenfranchise POC, and furthermore that in swing states like PA and MI it's impossible to determine whether votes that were cast were ever counted?

kenfrequed

(7,865 posts)
48. You are using two different numbers.
Tue Jan 10, 2017, 06:14 PM
Jan 2017

The percentage of eligible voters is different than the number of eligible voters.

In 2012 the percentage of eligible voters that showed up was 62% (compared with the 58% that showed up in 2016 that you cite)

As far as the "more votes were cast in 2016 than 2012" That can be accounted for by population growth in the area of eligible voters.

 

JCanete

(5,272 posts)
17. Clinton and the DNC did not help themselves, but they still should have been able to beat Trump, and
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 02:30 PM
Jan 2017

if we had a Fourth Estate, they would have. But since we don't, in my opinion their biggest failing was to not take on the corporate media along with corporate interests, because trying to be the neutral arbitrator between corporations and people at the bottom is really not that inspiring(not enough to create a serious groundswell of support), and because the corporations might be willing to make those concessions if it comes to it, but since they own the messaging, it rarely ever comes to it.

jalan48

(13,842 posts)
25. Clinton just didn't inspire the young voters as seen by these numbers.
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 05:08 PM
Jan 2017

Maybe we can try a new approach next time.

 

SFnomad

(3,473 posts)
34. The young voters that BS "inspired" couldn't be bothered to come out and vote for BS
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 05:27 PM
Jan 2017

Which is why BS lost the Primary.

Young voters are consistently the segment of voters that vote the least. And clearly, it doesn't matter if they're inspired or not.

jalan48

(13,842 posts)
35. Let's face it-Hillary as inspirational wasn't happening.
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 06:29 PM
Jan 2017

Bill has it, Obama has it, Bernie has it and a number of others as well. She's a self professed policy wonk which just doesn't play well on the campaign trail.

 

SFnomad

(3,473 posts)
38. And that isn't why she lost. If that's all it took, BS would have won the primary
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 10:46 PM
Jan 2017

and BS had his ass kicked by nearly 4 million votes. So clearly, inspiration isn't everything.

jalan48

(13,842 posts)
39. Given how late he started and with no money-it's anybody's guess.
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 10:51 PM
Jan 2017

Had he started in 2012 or earlier like she did-I think he wins.

 

SFnomad

(3,473 posts)
42. FFS, you people sure do have one excuse after another #smh
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 11:24 PM
Jan 2017

BS had talked about running for President for nearly a year and a half before he official announced in April 2015 ... which means he had either talked about or was running for over 2 years before Iowa. How many other bad excuses do you have?

Maybe you should also ask yourself why, after being a member of either the House or Senate for over 25 years, that BS's fellow Congresspersons didn't support him. When the first votes were cast in Iowa in Feb 2016, Clinton had accumulated almost 200 pledges of support from Representatives and Senators ... BS had 3.

Cha

(296,848 posts)
51. Hillary Inspired Millions of Young Women.. I know a lot of BS fans
Wed Jan 11, 2017, 12:37 AM
Jan 2017

who voted for stein.

Hope they're happy.. they helped get a climate change denier in the WH.

 

JTFrog

(14,274 posts)
58. Yeah, maybe next time we'll put country above ego? Just a reminder;
Wed Jan 11, 2017, 11:25 AM
Jan 2017

Hillary won the Primaries and the GE.

Fuck Russia.

jalan48

(13,842 posts)
60. I guess you need to tell that to the people who didn't vote or are we still blaming the voters?
Wed Jan 11, 2017, 11:30 AM
Jan 2017

At some point we need to look in the mirror and ask why so many voters stayed home.

jalan48

(13,842 posts)
64. Take a look at the candidate's favorability ratings.
Wed Jan 11, 2017, 11:41 AM
Jan 2017

Then ask yourself why she was the Party choice knowing she had such high negatives. Trump was the most disliked candidate in history, it shouldn't have been close.

 

JTFrog

(14,274 posts)
65. It wasn't close. She won by 3 million votes.
Wed Jan 11, 2017, 11:49 AM
Jan 2017

But keep on pushing those false narratives.

Russia. Comey. GOP. Focus please.

You guys keep saying that Bernie would have won. He couldn't even get close to Clinton. Were his voters too disillusioned by his constant negative rethoric? Why didn't they show up to win the primaries for him?



jalan48

(13,842 posts)
66. If she won by 3 million votes why isn't she the President then?
Wed Jan 11, 2017, 11:52 AM
Jan 2017

Hopefully we can look in the mirror at some point and address our mistakes. Constantly blaming others will just lead to the same results next time.

 

JTFrog

(14,274 posts)
69. Fake news and hacking from Russia. Division from the spoiler. Comey and his fake announcement.
Wed Jan 11, 2017, 12:19 PM
Jan 2017

Keep on trying to distract from what really happened.

Not fooling anyone.

But hey, whatever helps you sleep at night.

jalan48

(13,842 posts)
74. Victim-hood is a losing mindset. It will only lead to more losses.
Wed Jan 11, 2017, 01:21 PM
Jan 2017

We are never responsible for our own actions, it is always "the other" that creates our problems. Where will it end?

 

JTFrog

(14,274 posts)
75. Yes, because ignoring all of the things that actually happened is a winning strategy.
Wed Jan 11, 2017, 01:40 PM
Jan 2017


You know who else got busted hacking during the election season?

Hint: It wasn't Hillary.




guillaumeb

(42,641 posts)
26. Which begs the question of why that 41% did not vote.
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 05:13 PM
Jan 2017

How many were suppressed? I cannot find many Democratic politicians who are raising that issue.

TonyPDX

(962 posts)
27. I stayed home that day.
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 05:16 PM
Jan 2017

It didn't make any difference, though, since we vote by mail and my ballot was dropped off a week earlier.

mcar

(42,278 posts)
31. They will have blood on their hands
Thu Jan 5, 2017, 08:48 PM
Jan 2017

How many will die from lack of health insurance and Trump's wars? These non-voters bear responsibility for this.

andym

(5,443 posts)
32. "The biggest reason given by non-voters for staying home was that they didnt like the candidates."
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 05:12 PM
Jan 2017

From the article " Clinton and Trump both had favorable ratings in the low 30s among registered voters who didn’t cast a ballot"

That's what Comey, the GOP and Russian bad-mouthing through the media and social networks will do. Discourage voters from coming out. 2-3% nationally would have made it a strong victory for Hillary.

 

Rex

(65,616 posts)
33. She had a 3 million vote lead over Trump.
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 05:21 PM
Jan 2017

As much as I would like to blame people that cannot defend themselves here, I suspect the Electoral College had something to do with her loss. However, if people would have showed up in numbers (like in 2008) it might have made an EC difference.

Dunno, I am still trying to figure out how 87k folks = 2.8 million folks. I've been told it has to do with representation, but I just cannot see it.

 

NCTraveler

(30,481 posts)
36. They cost us dearly. Not Clinton.
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 06:42 PM
Jan 2017

They were fooled into thinking their was no difference. Many of them should be the people we target. It's just not that easy with the simpleton crowd.

Trump will proudly represent said dumbfucks.

snowy owl

(2,145 posts)
37. Clear support for candidates was low so why didn't DNC get a candidate who could garner more?
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 08:06 PM
Jan 2017

Favorability ratings were out there for all to see. So why did DNC stick with one? Sanders showed that many base democrats were unhappy. Young people stayed home - no fault of Sanders. DNC got it's pick while citizenry Republicans got theirs.

StevieM

(10,500 posts)
52. The voters of the Democratic Party picked Clinton, and by a wide margin at that.
Wed Jan 11, 2017, 01:01 AM
Jan 2017

If Bernie wanted to be the nominee he could have gone out and gotten more votes, especially among minorities.

 

Hum

(31 posts)
40. But, But They at Least Preserved Their Ideological Purity
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 11:06 PM
Jan 2017

And I sincerely hope they enjoy the next 4 years. Or at least until the nuclear war. whichever comes first.

 

EffieBlack

(14,249 posts)
41. Does this include voters who wanted/tried to vote but were prevented from doing so by suppression
Sun Jan 8, 2017, 11:20 PM
Jan 2017

laws across the country?

 

JTFrog

(14,274 posts)
55. Like all things, way too late.
Wed Jan 11, 2017, 10:56 AM
Jan 2017

A year and a half of trolling DU with propaganda and division.

jzodda

(2,124 posts)
54. Yep I sit next to a Sanders supporter
Wed Jan 11, 2017, 09:47 AM
Jan 2017

And to my left is a non voter. The Sanders supporter kept the anger at HRC. She said maybe Trump will destroy both parties. She stayed home. The other told me that Trump and HRC are the same and so why vote?

All the many hours of conversations I failed to convince them that Trump must be stopped.

Orsino

(37,428 posts)
56. There's not really any single cause.
Wed Jan 11, 2017, 11:03 AM
Jan 2017

There are a bunch of factors the significance of which is unclear, but which people like to blame preferentially.

I get different people wanting to address and maybe solve their favorites, but we're not entitled to conclude that any one cost us the election.

LiberalLovinLug

(14,164 posts)
78. So whether you hate Sanders or love Sanders, its agreed he would have won.
Wed Jan 11, 2017, 03:26 PM
Jan 2017

And probably won the Senate at least as well.

Whether you are/were in the Hillary camp and think his "attacks" on Hillary together with his Bernie Bro army staying home cost her the election

or you believed in him from the start

Fact is he had even higher positives than both Clinton and Trump. So by this article's premise if those voters would have had a choice to vote for Sanders, they would have come out. And surely if Hillary had lost the primary all these pro-Clinton voters in here would have held their noses and voted for Bernie right? Especially after Hillary would have conceded and endorsed him. I mean that's all they scold about in here.

And I can see why young black voters would prefer Sanders. He is the one promising free college tuition, a $15 hr min. wage, along with justice reform. Why wouldn't they want a future like that?

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