Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

Forum rules
1.) No personal threats.
2.) No doxxing/revealing personal information.
3.) No spam.
4.) No circumventing press restrictions.
5.) No racism, sexism, homophobia, or derogatory posts.

Post a reply

Confirmation code
Enter the code exactly as it appears. All letters are case insensitive.
Smilies
:points: :-D :eyeroll: :neutral: :nmr: :razz: :raging: :-) ;) :( :sick: :o :? 8-) :x :shock: :lol: :cry: :evil: :?: :smirk: :!:
View more smilies

BBCode is ON
[img] is ON
[flash] is OFF
[url] is OFF
Smilies are ON

Topic review
   

If you wish to attach one or more files enter the details below.

Expand view Topic review: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by Jamiet99uk » Thu Aug 23, 2018 4:23 pm

My Advocate, Guilty? AYE

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by Octavious » Wed Aug 22, 2018 1:16 pm

It's an old Chinese proverb, Jamie.

Mighty Arsehole, Great Aroma

It's meaning is largely self explanatory, and applied to politics essentially means a leader who acts like a bastard tends to have the biggest impact.

Self Moderation Note: Any member who mentally read the proverb with "that accent" has committed a racial act and must silence themselves for a fortnight

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by Jamiet99uk » Wed Aug 22, 2018 12:39 pm

What does MAGA stand for?

My Attorney Got Arrested

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by brainbomb » Tue Aug 14, 2018 11:23 pm

You cant explain that

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by Stressedlines » Tue Aug 14, 2018 6:58 pm

if a factory closes, it closes, but that does not mean others dont open, or existing wonts dont expand their production lines.

You find ONE factory that loses, but when actual numbers say the complete opposite, i often grasp how trump won.

If you oppose him,oppose him on facts, but making up stuff is what drives people to him, even if they dont like him

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by Randomizer » Tue Aug 14, 2018 5:04 pm

This is one that was closed due to parts price increase:
https://money.cnn.com/2018/08/08/news/c ... index.html

Others are still in wait and see mode until they can see if they can sell at higher prices. Some places bought ahead of tariffs going into effect to lock in lower prices. Among them are Trump campaign for 2020 from China.

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by Stressedlines » Tue Aug 14, 2018 1:55 pm

radomizer, from a few sources, can you cite where it says factories are closing, since Manufacturing jobs and production domestically are WAY up over the past year I think I read 140K new manufacturing jobs in the past 6 months thats not a sign of 'Factories closing" unless it fits your narrative

Keep in mind, I am not a big Trump cheerleader, but the economy will slow down eventually regardless but signs are not pointing to it right now.

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by Jamiet99uk » Tue Aug 14, 2018 10:05 am

leon1122 wrote:
Mon Aug 13, 2018 10:13 pm
brainbomb wrote:
Mon Aug 13, 2018 7:52 pm
Within the Black community, Trump approval is at 2%
You missed a digit there, brain.
Within the Black community, Trump approval is at 02%

There I fixed it.

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by brainbomb » Tue Aug 14, 2018 1:08 am

I certainly believe that almost any democrat would be a better President than Trump. But im a radical liberal, so my opinion is quite biased. I have seen alot of really piss poor candidates and joke candidates like dwayne the rock johnson, Oprah and others claim interest in running. Part of my issue with that is it makes us look dumb. Ive heard Biden floated as an option which isnt going to inspire the base much, or draw in new voters. Senator warren would be a rather dull choice for anyone other than radical liberal voters.

So currently, I havent been all that optimistic or impressed. I think the midterm election results will be very important in shaping how trump governs when he has to work with a divided government. The democrats reshaping congress will probably pursue impeachment which is, in my opinion just more of the same stupid shit.

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by Randomizer » Mon Aug 13, 2018 11:41 pm

The tariffs from countries retaliating to Trump are already causing plant closings, raised prices, and talks of a slowing economy when the next round goes into effect. States where Trump did well are being targeted with tariffs and people vote against losing money. There is enough anecdotal reports from Trump voters that won't vote for him again to worry Trump.

Carter lost over the Iranian Hostages. It wasn't a coincidence that their release was Reagan's inauguration day. If there hadn't been the military rescue failure, Carter could have gotten reelected for standing up to the Iranians.

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by brainbomb » Mon Aug 13, 2018 11:10 pm

Im not delusional. 24 hour news cycle talks about how much trump is collapsing but its not necessarily substantive. Democrats have no candidate yet 2 years out, when Obama ran in 08 he was already popular by summer 06. And was establishing a following

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by brainbomb » Mon Aug 13, 2018 10:57 pm

Leave it to leon to scour the web for the most distorted, most unlikely poll data.

Numbers range from 13% and lower in every other poll im seeing.

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by brainbomb » Mon Aug 13, 2018 10:55 pm

Octavious wrote:
Mon Aug 13, 2018 10:28 pm
Out of interest, brainbomb, what groups of voters who opted for Trump in the last election do you think have been put off him by his time in office?
It just depends on Ohio, Wisconsin, Michigan, Florida, and Penn.

How voters in the blue collar states feel hes done. Wrt to the economy they probably feel pretty good.

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by Octavious » Mon Aug 13, 2018 10:28 pm

Out of interest, brainbomb, what groups of voters who opted for Trump in the last election do you think have been put off him by his time in office?

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by leon1122 » Mon Aug 13, 2018 10:13 pm

brainbomb wrote:
Mon Aug 13, 2018 7:52 pm
Within the Black community, Trump approval is at 2%
You missed a digit there, brain.

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/wash ... ges-racism

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by brainbomb » Mon Aug 13, 2018 9:16 pm

Thus my question was, is rampant consistent unpopularity enough to get a guy thrown out? Or does he need to get indicted or impeached for there to be a chance for a democrat.

Im not ruling out that eventually trump gets impeached

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by Hellenic Riot » Mon Aug 13, 2018 8:33 pm

The Democrats have already run one campaign on "not being Trump" and lost. If they do it again, they're either pure idiots or outright insane. Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results is the definition of madness, after all.

The status quo sucked, which is why people didn't vote for it. The Democrats need to offer something different - not the same thing as Trump, obviously, but also not just to go back to "Pre-Trump" situation. For all his faults, Trump is fulfilling far more of his campaign promises than most politicians ever do - which is why his approval rating is staying at broadly the same level. Attacking him for who he is clearly won't work, because everyone has heard before already. To change minds and win voters over, they need to offer something new and better.

And no, Bernie Sanders is most likely not the answer, mostly because of how old he'll be come 2020. 2020 is, much like with any incumbent President, Trump's to lose. Unless he makes a major unpopular policy reversal a la "Read my lips: No new taxes", which seems rather unlikely given his general disregard for anything people say, then it'll take a wildly different and bold candidate to beat him.

Aside from Bush Snr's Tax U-Turn, it took something of the level of the disasters of Vietnam (Johnson) or the back of the Watergate Scandal (Ford) to restrict a President to a one term elected leadership since WW2, with the sole exception of Jimmy Carter. And Ronald Reagan didn't get in by offering the same sort of politics as either Carter or the years before him.

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by brainbomb » Mon Aug 13, 2018 7:52 pm

Within the Black community, Trump approval is at 2%

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by brainbomb » Mon Aug 13, 2018 7:49 pm

Greg_the_republican wrote:
Mon Aug 13, 2018 4:19 pm
Contrary to popular belief, at least half of America approves of Trump. The people who dislike him are the ones getting media attention. The fact is, he has done a great job as president so far. Lots of jobs, foreign relations with North Korea, etc. I think if the left could look past their perception of him and instead focus on what he has actually done, he’ll easily win a second term. He’s got my vote in 2020.

Contrary to your above statement 42% approval is not 'at least half'. Trump approval has stayed at or below 42% over a year. His approval last toppd 43% in march 2017.

What has been accomplished with North Korea? Thats interesting to say. Is Dennis playin more basketball or something?

Re: Is widespread dislike of Trump enough to propel a Democrat to Presidency?

by brainbomb » Mon Aug 13, 2018 7:46 pm

Jamiet99uk wrote:
Mon Aug 13, 2018 12:23 pm
It depends which Democrat. Last time they chose a poor candidate.
You are not wrong. But the issue this time around would be if they choose Bernie, wouldnt the argument be he couldnt even beat Hillary in the Primary, how can he beat Trump?

Its the same argument people made regarding Hillary being unable to beat Obama in the 2008 primary season.

Top