• Heavybell@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Yeah, I keep hearing about how useless the dems are. I dunno what you guys can possibly do to fix things over there tbh. So I understand feeling hopeless.

    • korazail@lemmy.myserv.one
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      11 hours ago

      Here’s the solution: Go get involved locally.

      The Dems at the top are put there by the dems in the middle, and those are elected by the dems at the bottom. Find your precinct and join it. Simply being present adds weight to that precint, and then you can help choose who leads the district, and upwards until we get to the DNC chair and presidential candidates.

      Feel like your choice is nazi vs meh? Getting involved lets you push the meh closer to great. Voting all the time is half the equation, but if you feel like your choices are not great, then the solution is to help pick the choices.

    • TheMadCodger@piefed.social
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      1 day ago

      The Dems are primarily right of centre capitalists who think they’ll win if they appeal to the “centrists” between the two parties (hasn’t worked), and the Repubs are literal Nazis. So yeah, not great.

    • tempest@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      Americans are odd. They complain about “both sides” but a lot of them don’t participate in primary elections.

      There are definitely problems with the way the parties pick candidates but the primary is by far the more important election for those that consistently vote for the same party.

      • BakerBagel@midwest.social
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        1 day ago

        It’s a Charlie Brown and the football situation. You can only fall for the same bait and switch so many times before you just give up. In a democracy it leads to voter apathy. And primaries are poorly run. If it isn’t a prominent one, you likely won’t find much information on the candidates prior to the primary election, and for the president, they sre pretty much decided by 4th one so if you’re state does a later primary, chances are that your preferred candidate has already dropped out by the time you can actually vote for them.

        • Kindness is Punk@lemmy.ca
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          1 day ago

          To my knowledge Americans have never given Democrats a chance, the Democrats haven’t had a majority capable of pushing a bill through without Republican participation since 2008 and Republicans have been remarkably consistent at pulling the party together to stonewall Democrats so they look ineffective.

          I mean the Democrats are often ineffective but at least punish them for the failures they make on their own merits, like the recent agreement to reopen the government.

          • Niquarl@lemmy.ml
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            1 day ago

            They had a majority in the House from 2006 to 2010 and from 2008 to 2014 in the Senate. It’s not like the GOP has been in power forever. And again in the Senate from 2022 to 2024 and from 2018 to 2022 in the House.

            There’s a reason why some people dont really believe in them

            • Kindness is Punk@lemmy.ca
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              1 day ago

              I was referring specifically to Senate, however it’s a long messy history, let me go on GovTrack.us and see if I can find the senate records to explain what I mean

              Edit: there it is,

              ✓On the opening day of the One Hundred Seventeenth Congress, the U.S. Senate was comprised of 51 Republicans, 46 Democrats, 2 Independents (who caucused with the Democrats), and 1 vacancy. No candidate received a majority of votes in the general election for Georgia’s class 2 seat or in the special election for Georgia’s class 3 seat. Runoff elections for both of the state’s Senate seats were scheduled for January 5, 2021. Democratic candidates won both elections. Following the inauguration of Vice President Kamala D. Harris on January 20, 2021, the Senate had a Democratic majority, comprised of 50 Republicans, 48 Democrats, and 2 Independents (who caucus with the Democrats). The Vice President is able to cast tie-breaking votes in the Senate. See United States Senate, “Party Division,” https://www.senate.gov/history/partydiv.htm. Office of the Historian: history@mail.house.gov Office of Art & Archives, Office of the Clerk: art@mail.house.gov, archives@mail.house.gov

              The below information is a tie which effectively allowed for stonewalling. Yes if all Democratic senators, 2 independents and the vice president voted together they could push things through. However the fact of the matter is they don’t tow the party line like Republicans and vote more independently. Perhaps a party failure but I see that as a tenant of a functioning democracy.

              You could make the argument against an enemy willing to use those tactics not using them Is a failure to the people but I’d argue the smarter thing as individuals would be to blame Republicans and vote them out of positions of power.

              And before that the last time they had a majority was 2009 to 2011

              • Niquarl@lemmy.ml
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                23 hours ago

                Yes of course I am not personally sympathic to GOP but at least they seem to be giving their voters want they want on their key issues. Do D do this? If you want people to want to vote for you need to give the impression, even falsely, that you will deliver and the democrats seem to have lost the ability to do that.

                • Kindness is Punk@lemmy.ca
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                  20 hours ago

                  Agreed but it’s much easier to give voters what they want when you spend billions on propaganda either directly or indirectly through Russian state actors. More like they acted in their own interest and dreamed up a narrative to convince the common man it was there’s too. Now, no doubt they’re effective political tools, hats off to them but it’s a lot easier to align men with their own greed than a common path forward for society.

        • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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          1 day ago

          A big part of the problem is the length of the “primary season” and spreading out votes over the course of several months.

          This makes it really hard to sustain a budget, especially for grassroots candidates…but also sets up frontrunners in a big way.

          IMO primaries would have a different outcome if they were all held on one day and we limited primary campaign season to like 3 months tops.

          I’d say something about superdelegates but the fact is that parties and primaries aren’t really a part of the process. People treat the GOP and DNC like they are official government branches when really they are just more like a private club. They let us have a primary. If the bylaws say they can override the primary, that’s the bylaws. If people disagree with it, then either the bylaws get changed or a new club gets founded.

          The problem, then, is that our voting system ultimately necessitates no more than two major parties. Since the winner is the one with the most votes*, it’s very easy for two parties that align on many fronts to actively work against each other…see Ralph Nader in Florida in 2000. And it takes a huge shift to uproot an established party.

      • Jhuskindle@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Ah yes victim blaming. We work 60 hours or more a week to keep th slights on but also gotta figure out who’s running on our exact platforms and show up to vote when we don’t get paid and find the voting stations because fuck all? Yeah ok it’s my bad for not voting in primaries lol

        • Clent@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 day ago

          Yeah ok it’s my bad for not voting in primaries lol

          Yes.

          Excuses don’t change anything, the person in this meme has them too.