Poll: Views of Democratic Party hit lowest mark in 25 years
Source: CNN
Washington (CNN)Favorable views of the Democratic Party have dropped to their lowest mark in more than a quarter century of polling, ...
Only 37% of Americans have a favorable opinion of Democrats, down from 44% in March of this year. A majority, 54%, have an unfavorable view, matching their highest mark in polls from CNN and SSRS, CNN/ORC and CNN/USA Today/Gallup stretching back to 1992.
...
But the Republican Party isn't doing any better, with just 30% of Americans holding a favorable view. That's essentially the same as September, when the rating hit its lowest point in polling back to 1992, but down from 42% in March. A broad 6 in 10, 61%, have an unfavorable opinion.
Read more: http://www.cnn.com/2017/11/07/politics/cnn-poll-republicans-democrats-taxes/index.html
Nice try, CNN. So the RePutins are also at their worst polling in 25 years, and it is substantially worse than the Democrats, but you picked Democrats as the headline?
Rather blatant bias, don't you think?
TheCowsCameHome
(40,169 posts)And better yet, do something about it.
I'm not concerned about how the headline was written. 2018 is coming. Get busy.
jalan48
(13,916 posts)lagomorph777
(30,613 posts)And make it truthful.
And don't be afraid to support issues that RePutins will vote down. That will make the RePutins look bad, not us.
jalan48
(13,916 posts)former9thward
(32,165 posts)No, fortunately...
mpcamb
(2,883 posts)Today in America poor people don't look as poor, but they have the same minimal hopes for improving their lives. Few of those people in the 30s voted for Hoover. Why in hell did they vote for trump??
Clearly we missed the message. Candidates who can connect with the downtrodden are going to be winners if you can get the downtrodden and the middles to vote their best interest.
Hate to say it but our leaders in congress are Nancy P, 77, and D Feinstein, 84, not exactly our best voices for the gaining youth vote. Who's poor? Young people! Give them healthcare! Say it's a RIGHT! LEAD!
Quit nibbling away at the edges and dive in!
emulatorloo
(44,274 posts)RKP5637
(67,112 posts)BlueIdaho
(13,582 posts)I love soaring rhetoric and lofty goals but they come after solving the kitchen table problems of ALL Americans.
jalan48
(13,916 posts)BlueIdaho
(13,582 posts)If we dont have solutions for all sorts of Americans then we dont belong in power.
Honeycombe8
(37,648 posts)They wake up, get the kids ready for school, get dressed, everybody commutes to work or daycare or school, everybody spends the day working or learnin', everybody gets home in the evening and Mom or Dad rustles something to eat for everyone, hopefully there's some time to watch tv, do the dishes, and go to bed....to do it all again tomorrow.
Mom is underpaid, one of the kids is being bullied, the public school isn't as good as it used to be, Dad may get laid off and has hurt his leg, they don't have squat saved for their senior years, Mom's worried about her mother getting senile.
What they care about is health care, wages, daycare, the public school system, whether there's a park nearby for the family to enjoy without having to spend money or go too far, that utilities don't cost too much, that taxes don't go up, the cost of groceries and household items, that someone's looking out for smog in the air and this climate thing they hear about, public transportation.
What they want to know is...who cares about ordinary Americans like us? Who has our concerns in their thoughts when they pass bills? Who's looking out for us? We work hard, we're productive citizens, we vote. We may not be rich, but we are middle America. We count. Who will protect Social Security for us? Medicare? Our meager retirement accounts? Healthcare? Who will care that our kids deserve a good education if they work hard, even though we're not rich?
question everything
(47,599 posts)only us, the political junkies do.
We have to offer a real choice: secure retirement, good education, preparing for good paying jobs. Not enough to say that mining jobs are gone - offer some hope.
I think that we saw across the board last year and, this year in special elections, that just bashing Trump does not work.
emulatorloo
(44,274 posts)Last edited Tue Nov 7, 2017, 07:28 PM - Edit history (1)
And they are just pulling that out of their asses for obvious reasons.
Some Voters do indeed care about Russian interference.
If some voters aren't concerned then it is our responsibility to let them know why foreign interference in our elections are a big deal, not enable Trump cover-up artists.
Additionally you wrote:
"We have to offer a real choice: secure retirement, good education, preparing for good paying jobs. Not enough to say that mining jobs are gone - offer some hope."
That's what we ran on in 2016 and that's why voters most concerned about jobs and the economy voted for the Democratic candidate for president.
"Not enough to say that mining jobs are gone - offer some hope."
We did indeed offer hope: The Democratic candidate had concrete proposals for re-training/ education for coal miners so they could get good jobs in other fields.
The Republican nominee offered false hope, no plans. Additionally he told white people they were victims. Those are what made up the Republican "message" if you can call it that
It is great idea to make our message much stronger and loud and clear.
But let's get our facts straight, don't fall prey to Republican talking points, and not pretend we don't have a message when we do.
rockfordfile
(8,709 posts)I'm sure the GOP/trump and Russians would like that. They continue to push propaganda with the likes of Fox News.
BlueIdaho
(13,582 posts)1. We must safeguard our election process - that includes the actual voting process, AND it includes anyone from anywhere that seeks to violate the rules for electioneering. No one should get a free pass on violating the FEC - not even Putin.
2. We must start listening to and offering real solutions for the problems of ordinary Americans everywhere. We can do that. We have it in our genes. We have it in our history. There are 50 states, each one of them deserves a Democratic solution to their unique needs. There is no such thing as flyover country anymore.
zentrum
(9,866 posts)....that the repugs are more unpopular, but what is it that is generating so little enthusiasm for the Democrats? With Trump in the white house our ratings should be sky high. We damn well better figure how to address this.
jalan48
(13,916 posts)Fresh_Start
(11,330 posts)claiming the Democratic party is corrupt.
Maybe its something to do with a popular senator saying both parties are trying to cheat you for their own purposes.
Maybe its all the damn people saying the democratic party doesn't stand for anything when the issue is the democratic party is willing to stand for things even if those things aren't wildly popular.
Maybe its all the people saying the democratic party doesn't have a message... It has a message but the marketing of that message sucks.
Maybe its that all the big money interests have been paying for the brainwashing of the incurious masses for decades.
zentrum
(9,866 posts)....is not what's making the Democratic Party ratings be so low. Our Revolution arose out of the problem in the party. It didn't create it.
We've lost over 1000 seats/offices nationwide.
Fresh_Start
(11,330 posts)too unwilling to do the hard work at the grassroots level.
also democrats didn't have big money interests brainwashing the poor white middle class that others are taking advantage of them.
....1000 seats have not been lost only since 2016, when Our Revolution, (a grassroots movement if ever there was one) was founded.
DU is not the place to discuss why the party has been steadily losing power for over ten years, with the exception of the WH, and that was because we had a shiningly talented candidate. But we've lost governorships, House members, school boards, state legislators, election after election. It's the party itself that's doing this---not a critical wing of the party.
The tension and split in the party arose to address the issue of continuously waning power. Yes, it's messy but not examining what the deeper problems are is lethal. Are you really recommending that the Dems keep doing more of the same, more of what they've been doing over the last decade? Has it worked so far?
We need tougher, more charismatic, more courageous candidates (Warren, Schiff, Ellison come to mind.)
We need to scream to the rafters louder and louder about voter supression and gerrymandering.
We need much, much better messaging.
We're seen as out of touch, elitist, coastal. Instead of grousing about that, we need to out-wit that perception, address it with new strategies, new outreach.
Etc. For starters.
denvine
(802 posts)Burying our head in the sand and righteously pretending that our party has been doing just fine will be the death of the Democratic Party.
LeftInTX
(25,812 posts)Until I discovered something else he said, "Republicans are business majors and most of have studied some form of marketing research". "Democrats tend to be poly sci and public policy majors and aren't very good at marketing".
Duh...It is so obvious
lagomorph777
(30,613 posts)And he should be offered a seat at DNC HQ.
malchickiwick
(1,474 posts)Or would it be the seventh?
Either way, it seems like a major realignment is now pretty much inevitable.
*chaos ahead*
byronius
(7,413 posts)Damn are we doltish, in general. And it's probably going to get worse. And there will be a cost. And we probably won't learn until the bodies really start to stack up. And then it will be too late.
Voltaire2
(13,270 posts)Sunlei
(22,651 posts)instead of 20 NOT positive for Ds "Breaking news headline stories" filling the front page every day.
romanic
(2,841 posts)Amongst other things that need to fix a broken and stale party.
NurseJackie
(42,862 posts)emulatorloo
(44,274 posts)R B Garr
(17,019 posts)"Democrats suck" is old and stale.
emulatorloo
(44,274 posts)This is just a sorry retread of that idiocy. I used to hear my "liberal" friends regurgitate that one too.
Every 'new idea' mentioned in this thread was part of the 2016 platform, and specific policy plans and how to implement said policies were in HRC's speeches and on her website.
Someone upthread actually repeatec the wingnut talking point that we just told miners their jobs were gone and we 'didn't offer hope'. We had a solid plan for miners of retraining/education for new careers. SMH at all this nonsense.
Am all for Dems strengthening their message. But the idea we have no message is wrong.
zentrum
(9,866 posts)...ideas. We just aren't very good at explaining them. Charisma matters in politics. Sad, but true.
I think Warren is fantastic at explaining Dem ideas. Bernie less so, but he speaks with a conviction makes him trustable. Even to Repugs.
emulatorloo
(44,274 posts)R B Garr
(17,019 posts)sound as phony as when the Limbaughs of the world do it. It's usually someone's character they impugn because the ideas are definitely there.
I would like to see Democrats hit back more all the way around, though. Messaging included, yes. This win tonight is a huge win for the naysayers and phony critics -- we have plenty of unity on display.
still_one
(92,526 posts)womens rights, workers rights, etc, by rose pesky establishment Democrats who made those thing a reality
Tarheel_Dem
(31,257 posts)allies by the Democratic party. "Broken and stale" seems hyperbolic even for the most hardened Dem haters.
Skidmore
(37,364 posts)Democrats? If you do you may want to actually talk to them. Not my experience at all.
FakeNoose
(32,917 posts)So I guess we're even!
The_Casual_Observer
(27,742 posts)brush
(53,978 posts)anti-Dem agenda.
Let's not fall for such blatant bullshit.
Lucky Luciano
(11,267 posts)Last edited Tue Nov 7, 2017, 11:40 PM - Edit history (1)
Though not sure if it is their worst in 25 years.
emulatorloo
(44,274 posts)diva77
(7,684 posts)GaryCnf
(1,399 posts)We can blame whatever and whomever we want but the fact is that our strategy of catering to middle of the road voters has been a failure since it started in 1992. What's tragic is that it cost us an election in which we had the most progressive platform in history and a candidate who COULD have credibly run on it, Hillary Clinton.
The party dogma that elections are won in the middle is not true and never has been. Many Democrats claim that it was Bill Clinton's attention to moderate voters which brought us victory in 1992. It was not. In fact, it was a right wing third party candidate siphoning off GOP voters.
In 1992, Perot funneled off:
12% of the GOP vote in Louisiana
13% of the GOP vote in Georgia
10% of the GOP vote in Tennessee
21% of the GOP vote in Missouri
13% of the GOP vote in Kentucky
15% of the GOP vote in West Virginia
18% of the GOP vote in Iowa
the GOP vote in Minnesota
21% of the GOP vote in Wisconsin
19% of the GOP vote in Michigan
20% of the GOP vote in Ohio
(Aside: Curiously, Jill Stein's 2% takes the blame for our 2016 loss - as opposed to the abject failure of the "play to the middle" strategy to EVER pull majorities in key battleground states - whereas Perot's 1000% better performance is overlooked in the haste to proclaim the political "brilliance" of the 1992 campaign.)
The FACT is that Bill Clinton won ONLY because the GOP could not keep Ross Perot in the fold. Our refusal to admit that fact and instead continue the "play to the middle" strategy has put us in the pit we are in now.
I am glad that Perot gave us those elections, BUT to credit a campaign that would have failed if not for Perot is simply denial.
It is especially tragic this time. We had a brilliant platform and an eminently credible candidate. Unfortunately, our national campaign continued the to follow "play to the middle" playbook. Deny it all you want, but here are the campaign's ads:
http://www.p2016.org/adsg/adsgeneral.html
Count the number of ads standing up for Michael Brown, or even Black Lives Matter. Count the ads standing up for the millions of undocumented workers who have not reached the kind of heights that makes them palatable to middle of the road voters. Count the ads saying something that has even the slightest chance of offending those middle of the road voters that party leaders have incorrectly deemed "essential" to victory since 1992.
You won't find many.
We are the party of the oppressed. We have a platform which vows to fight for the oppressed. What's more, the oppressed far outnumber the privileged.
Our campaigns and our candidates need to reflect it.
Morris64
(78 posts)Loyd
(309 posts)Madam45for2923
(7,178 posts)Bernardo de La Paz
(49,075 posts)lagomorph777
(30,613 posts)Wwcd
(6,288 posts)Michael Catalani
Associated Press
Democrat Phil Murphy defeated Republican Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno on Tuesday in the New Jersey race to succeed term-limited Gov. Chris Christie,
https://www.google.com/amp/www.sun-sentinel.com/fl-reg-dems-win-gov-races-20171107-story,amp.html
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