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Texas Is Changing Quickly Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=51556"><span class="small">Ronald Brownstein, The Atlantic</span></a>   
Saturday, 07 September 2019 08:15

Brownstein writes: "The fundamental force that has shaken the GOP's hold on Texas is that for the first time in decades, voters there are behaving in patterns familiar from other states."

Campaign signs are seen outside a polling station on the last day of early voting in Dallas, Texas, in 2018. (photo: Mike Segar/Reuters)
Campaign signs are seen outside a polling station on the last day of early voting in Dallas, Texas, in 2018. (photo: Mike Segar/Reuters)


Texas Is Changing Quickly

By Ronald Brownstein, The Atlantic

07 September 19


The wave of House Republican retirements from the Lone Star State is exciting Democrats who want their party to compete more aggressively there.

ack in the fall of 1992, Bill Clinton, the Democratic presidential nominee, pressed his campaign manager to schedule a two-day bus tour for him across Texas, a state he believed was within his reach. The campaign manager resisted the idea: He said Texas was too hard to win, too expensive to compete in, and too much of a diversion from other states more likely to go for Clinton. The candidate got his way, but his top aides ultimately blocked a full-scale investment in the state.

Twenty-seven years later, that Clinton campaign manager, the veteran Democratic strategist James Carville, has a very different view about whether the party’s next presidential nominee is going to mount a serious effort in Texas.

“I think of course they will,” Carville told me on Wednesday after news broke about the latest Texas Republican to announce his retirement from the U.S. House. “They’d be crazy not to. You have to look at how fast the white vote in Texas is shifting. That’s the story.”

Not all Democrats agree, of course, that the party’s presidential ticket should devote the time, money, and organizing effort required for the uphill quest to recapture Texas, a state no Democratic presidential nominee has carried since Jimmy Carter won 51 percent of the vote there in 1976. “It is just too expensive,” said a senior adviser to one of the top Democratic presidential contenders, who requested anonymity to discuss internal strategy. “You would keep Arizona and Georgia in play first.”

But the fact that Democrats are debating at all whether to contest Texas at the presidential level is a measure of how quickly politics are changing in the nation’s second-largest Electoral College prize. Regardless of whether the Democratic nominee invests in Texas, the party is mobilizing a serious effort to win back the state House of Representatives, where Republicans now hold a nine-seat advantage; contest five or more Republican-held seats in the U.S. House; and challenge Republican Senator John Cornyn more formidably than it did in 2014. The continuing wave of congressional retirements among Texas Republicans—a “Texodus” that reached five in number on Wednesday with the announcement from Representative Bill Flores of Waco—has added to the sense that the state is becoming competitive once again after an extraordinary two decades of complete Republican control.

“Republicans seem to think the last cycle was an aberration,” says Bill Miller, an Austin-based lobbyist who has run campaigns for politicians in both parties, referring to Democrats’ improved performance across the board in Texas in 2018. “It wasn’t an aberration. It was a cycle that indicated that change is coming and you will have to fight for dominance. It’s not going to be handed to you. That’s the lesson, the takeaway.”

The fundamental force that has shaken the GOP’s hold on Texas is that for the first time in decades, voters there are behaving in patterns familiar from other states. Democrats are showing gains in the state’s diverse, well-educated metropolitan areas, even as Republicans retain a crushing lead in small-town, exurban, and rural areas, as well as some suburbs.

The significant Republican advantage outside of major cities has so far proved decisive in state elections. But the explosive gains for Democrats inside the metropolitan areas—driven by the twin forces exerting influence in other areas of the country, growing diversity and improved performance among college-educated white voters—have put the party within range for the first time in years. And while the state overall still clearly tilts toward the GOP, the places driving its population growth are those where Democrats are gaining, according to state demographers.

A one-party “yellow dog” Democratic state from the Civil War into the 1970s, Texas was closely contested between the parties through the 1980s and early 1990s. But in 1994, the young George W. Bush beat the tart-tongued Democratic Governor Ann Richards in her reelection campaign. His victory marked a decisive partisan shift: Democrats haven’t won any statewide races in the Lone Star State since that year. They held on to the state House until 2002—one of Bush’s selling points in his first presidential race was his ability to work with Democrats in the legislature—and since then Republicans have controlled every lever of state government. “It’s been a full generation,” Miller says.

That dominance was self-perpetuating as Democrats lost any dependable funding base and could not organize serious challenges in many races. “We didn’t have any communication going to large chunk of voters during these years … and that snowballed on us,” says Glenn Smith, a veteran Democratic strategist in the state. “As our volume on advertising and communication to Texas voters fell, we fell further and further behind in sort of a vicious circle downward.”

Democrats tried an array of approaches to overcome the GOP advantage: In 2002, for instance, they assembled a “dream team” composed of the party’s first Latino gubernatorial nominee, Tony Sanchez; an African American nominee for U.S. Senate, Ron Kirk; and a prominent white Democrat for the powerful position of lieutenant governor, John Sharp. Republicans swept all three races. In 2014, Democrats tried to splinter women from the GOP coalition by nominating for governor the state senator Wendy Davis, who became a national celebrity by mounting a 12-hour filibuster against a restrictive Republican-backed abortion bill in the state legislature. The Republican Greg Abbott beat her by 20 percentage points (and later easily won reelection in 2018).

Notwithstanding Abbott’s big wins, the first cracks in the GOP’s Texas fortress emerged earlier this decade. In 2012, Barack Obama still lost the state by 16 percentage points and 1.2 million votes. But he carried four of the state’s five largest counties: Harris (including Houston), Dallas, Travis (including Austin), and Bexar (including San Antonio). Within the big five, he lost only Tarrant County (including Fort Worth). Across those five counties overall, Obama amassed a 131,000-vote advantage. Democrats suddenly had a platform in the state’s largest urban centers from which to challenge Republican hegemony.

Two years later, in 2014, Davis carried those five counties by a narrower combined margin, just 98,000 votes. But in 2016, like population centers almost everywhere, metropolitan Texas recoiled from Donald Trump’s brusque racial nationalism: Clinton posted a 562,000-vote advantage across the big five counties. Like Obama, she lost Tarrant, but she substantially improved on his victory margin in the other four. Obama, for instance, carried Harris County by just 1,000 votes; Clinton won it by 162,000.

The Democrat Beto O’Rourke pushed this advantage even further in his narrow 2018 Senate loss to the Republican Ted Cruz, winning all five of the larger counties. Between them, he had a combined margin of 790,000 votes—six times what Obama won in the same places just six years before.

Richard Murray and Renée Cross of the Hobby School of Public Affairs at the University of Houston track these political trends with a broader measure of metropolitan Texas: the 27 counties in the state’s four largest metro areas, Houston, Austin, San Antonio, and Dallas/Fort Worth. They’ve found the same evolution over time. Across those four regions, the GOP share of the vote in presidential races dropped from 60 percent, with Bush in the 2000 race, to just below 50 percent, with Trump in 2016. Clinton became the first Democratic presidential nominee to carry the combined vote in those four population centers since favorite son Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964. The GOP erosion in metro Texas continued in 2018: Cruz, according to Murray and Cross, became the first top-of-the-ticket candidate to lose all four since Barry Goldwater in that 1964 race.

For many observers of Texas politics, the most striking developments have come in the Dallas area. “If you think about the history, Texas went from being a Democratic state to a Republican state first and foremost in the Dallas suburbs,” says Joshua Blank, the research director of the Texas Politics Project at the University of Texas at Austin. “That was an era in which white middle- and upper-middle-class voters were choosing to leave the cities and move to these places that were very homogenous and like-minded, and that’s where Republicans started to build power.”

Now, though, the suburban growth “is not people trying to get away from the cities,” Blank says. “It’s younger Texans trying to be close to the cities. Fundamentally, that’s a different kind of mind-set, and that’s a mind-set that tends to align more with Democratic candidates and the Democratic Party.” O’Rourke still lost the two giant suburban counties north of Dallas—Collin and Denton—but by less than 50,000 votes (compared with over 170,000 votes for Obama).

James Dickey, the chair of the state Republican Party, is also intently watching the Dallas area. He notes that Republicans won nine state House seats—the exact number Democrats need to capture the chamber—by five percentage points or less, and that seven of them are in the Dallas/Fort Worth metro area. “The question is whether that is a trend, or a [temporary] dip,” he told me. “The answer is: That depends on us. Will we do the work necessary to make sure to win back the geographic areas that we had as recently as 2014?”

Democrats’ gains in metro Texas have been helped by two currents. The first is growing diversity. Since 2010, census figures show, the state has added 1.9 million new Latino residents, 541,000 African Americans, and 473,000 Asians, along with just 484,000 whites. That translates to nonwhites accounting for six of every seven residents the state has added over nearly the past decade. The demographer William Frey of the Brookings Institution shared figures with me that show whites accounting for only about one-third of the state population younger than 30. Many of the suburban counties that once delivered reliable Republican majorities have changed substantially. “These are not the suburbs of the 1960s and 1970s,” Blank says. “These suburbs are significantly more diverse; they are significantly younger.” Since 2010, the number of eligible Latino voters has increased by at least 10 percent in five of the six suburban U.S. House districts Democrats are targeting next year, while the African and Asian American populations have grown even faster in most of them.

Both in 2016 and 2018, exit polls show that nonwhites cast 43 percent of the statewide vote. But the march toward a majority nonwhite electorate has been significantly slowed by lackluster turnout, particularly among Latinos. The Democratic firm Latino Decisions recently reported that while turnout from eligible Latinos in Texas soared from 1.1 million in 2014 to 1.9 million in 2018, the number of nonvoters dwarfed those who participated: 1.7 million Latinos who were registered to vote did not turn out, and 2 million more who are eligible have not yet registered. That huge gap threatens to again dilute the community’s impact in 2020, and despite all of Trump’s provocations, many Democrats are skeptical that the party knows how to significantly increase Latino engagement in Texas—a state with few unions that can organize these voters (as they do in Nevada) and with restrictive laws that hobble voter-registration drives.

More rapid change has come among white-collar whites. Republicans for years predominated among these voters in Texas, even as the bloc in other parts of the country moved toward the Democrats. In 2016, Clinton won only 31 percent of whites in Texas holding at least a four-year college degree, virtually unchanged from the meager 28 percent Davis attracted in the 2014 governor’s race, according to exit polls.

But in 2018, amid the backlash to Trump among college-educated whites almost everywhere, O’Rourke’s share spiked to 44 percent. That closely tracked Trump’s erosion with those voters: November’s exit poll put the president’s approval rating among college-educated whites at 53 percent, a notable decline from his 62 percent share of their vote in 2016. Polling this June from the University of Texas and the Texas Tribune hinted at potential further erosion: It showed that college-educated whites in the state split exactly in half on whether they approved of Trump’s job performance and whether they now leaned toward reelecting him or backing a Democrat in 2020, according to results provided to me by Blank.

If there’s stronger turnout in 2020 among Latinos, Asians, and African Americans, even something close to a split among college-educated whites might be enough to allow a Democratic presidential candidate to withstand a towering Trump margin among nonurban, evangelical, and blue-collar white Texans.

The big question for Democrats is whether that prospect justifies the enormous resource investment that Texas would require. Carville, the skeptic in 1992, believes the balance of factors now tilt toward yes. That’s in part because he thinks the amount of money available to the nominee and any super PACs supporting that person will be unprecedented in 2020.

“The problem is the dollars,” Carville says. “If somebody says in a staff meeting, ‘If you guys go ahead and do this, you are going to spend X million on a state where you have 35 percent chance to win, where we could take that money and crank it up in, say, North Carolina,’ I understand the attraction [of that argument]. But there’s going to be so much money in this cycle, and given the role of soft money and everything else, the actual campaign doesn’t have to spend that much.

“The [Chuck] Schumer people are going to be like, ‘Fuck, we have a chance at a Senate seat,’” Carville added, referring to the Senate minority leader. “The House people want to compete. I think the pressure on the Democrats to play in Texas is going to be enormous.”

The longtime Democratic strategist Tad Devine, who coordinated Electoral College targeting for the party nominees Michael Dukakis in 1988 and Al Gore in 2000, largely agrees.

“I think a Democrat has to take a close and real look at Texas in the general election for targeting purposes,” he told me in an email. Just forcing Republicans to spend time and money defending a state they have long considered “part of their base” would be valuable, he said. “And that calculus becomes even more important when you talk about mega states.” While, like most Democrats, Devine still considers Texas a reach in 2020, he added: “I also think with Trump you cannot rely on historical models. A number of states which should be considered safe Republican states may come into play because he is singularly a candidate who could lose almost everywhere.”

On the other side, skeptics argue that while the shifting tide may carry Democrats within range in Texas, the extensive resources in campaign time and money that would be required to actually surpass Trump there would be better spent in other states the party is more likely to win in the end. That’s a version of the argument Carville made to Clinton in 1992: Texas is never likely to be among the first 270 Electoral College votes a Democrat wins on Election Night; if a Democrat wins Texas, he or she has almost certainly already clinched the election.

“We’ll keep an eye on it, but it’s too expensive and looks to still be a steep climb in a winner-take-all race,” said one strategist from a top Democratic super PAC who requested anonymity to discuss its internal calculations. “Our goal is hitting 270, and there are states that are much more winnable where we are focusing our resources.”

The investment required to tip Texas may dissuade the Democratic presidential nominee from fully engaging there, especially after Clinton was fiercely criticized in 2016 for paying too little attention to the core states of Michigan and Wisconsin, both of which slipped to Trump by narrow margins. But at every other level—the state House, Congress, the U.S. Senate—Texas is guaranteed a more competitive two-party election than it has seen probably since 1990, when Richards won the governorship. Texas may still lean Republican, but as the “Texodus” suggests, the GOP’s advantage no longer looks impregnable.

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Wild Horses Will Ride Out the Hurricane as They Have for Centuries, With 'Butts to the Wind' Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=45360"><span class="small">Alex Horton, The Washington Post</span></a>   
Saturday, 07 September 2019 08:07

Horton writes: "It's not their first rodeo, said Meg Puckett, the nonprofit's herd manager. The wild horses instinctually seek cover in wooded high grounds, standing in tight circles with their butts out like a reverse phalanx."

Wild horses in North Carolina. (photo: iStock)
Wild horses in North Carolina. (photo: iStock)


Wild Horses Will Ride Out the Hurricane as They Have for Centuries, With 'Butts to the Wind'

By Alex Horton, The Washington Post

07 September 19

 

he hurricane with no name threshed across the Atlantic coast in mid-September 1713, ripping at tobacco crops and sending panicked colonists inland, where the storm’s destructive power found them. “Ships were drove from their anchors far within land, particularly a sloop in North Carolina was drove three miles over marshes into the woods,” one observer wrote.

By then, the Spanish mustangs already had made a home on North Carolina’s thin, boomerang-shaped Outer Banks for two centuries, passing down hurricane-survival skills to foals for generations spanning the state’s earliest European settlements.

And now, with Hurricane Dorian targeting the barrier islands, residents and tourists have been advised to evacuate and seek shelter.

But around 200 horses will stay and ride it out, as they have since the 16th century — seeking refuge under towering live oak trees with their “butts to the wind,” the Corolla Wild Horse Fund said.

It’s not their first rodeo, said Meg Puckett, the nonprofit’s herd manager. The wild horses instinctually seek cover in wooded high grounds, standing in tight circles with their butts out like a reverse phalanx.

“After all that time, the herd just knows,” Puckett told The Washington Post by phone on Thursday, as wind hummed in the background, announcing Dorian’s inevitable approach up the coast, before it made landfall at Cape Hatteras on Friday. “That information is passed down from generation to generation.”

Puckett’s group in Corolla, N.C., manages and conserves about 100 feral horses that roam the northern edge of the nearly 200-mile stretch of sand-swept barrier islands, along with an additional 17 that permanently reside in a stable.

The state’s Park Service manages another group of about 100 horses on the southern tip of the island chain, Puckett said, and an additional 50 or so are privately managed.

Puckett stayed behind to care for the stabled horses after stocking up on hay, grain and water. ID tags braided into their manes will help track them should they break free.

The stabled horses have either been injured or habituated to human touch and food, which necessitated their removal from the wild, she said. The horses never leave their care once they enter the stable.

Origin legends for the mustangs have persisted nearly as long as they have found a home on the islands and thrived in the salty marsh.

They are thought to be descendants of horses that swam ashore after the shipwrecks that ringed the Outer Banks with such frequency that the region has been called “the Graveyard of the Atlantic.”

Others believe they were simply abandoned by the Spaniards after various violent clashes with Native Americans and English settlers.

The horses are remarkably resilient in the harsh conditions, where fresh water and vegetation often give way to sand and salt. And they don’t scare like domesticated horses. Facing a hurricane or a threat, they endure. “It says a lot about their resourcefulness and hardiness,” Puckett said. “They have an incredible will to survive.”

That will has been tested by humankind this past century.

An estimated 5,000 wild horses lived on the entire stretch of the Outer Banks in the 1920s, Puckett said, but soon after Works Progress Administration projects sprang up, they were deemed a nuisance and slaughtered in large numbers after bounties were placed on their heads.

Now, development has diminished their habitat, pushing them to the fringes of the barrier islands. And since they are a nonnative species, they don’t meet some criteria for federal endangered-animal protection, CBS News reported.

In 2010, the Spanish mustang became the state horse of North Carolina, even as their future remains far from certain. Conservationists have focused their efforts on genetic diversity to keep mares and foals healthy, Puckett said.

Their loss would be a chip on the cornerstone of U.S. history. Horses linked battlefield communications in the Revolutionary War, churned under cavalrymen in the Civil War and carried frontiersmen on their backs ever westward.

All those horses have wild North Carolina mustang in their blood, Puckett said.

A favorite of hers is Amadeo, a chestnut-colored stallion in his 30s. Amadeo was blinded in a fight in 2013 and swept into a rip current. Rescuers plucked him from the water using Jet Skis and tow ropes. Now, he’s a 650-pound diplomat for conservationists.

“He loves kids,” Puckett said.

She is not concerned over Dorian’s approach. Many hurricanes have come and gone for 500 years, and the horses remain.

If they ever disappear, it’s unlikely that a hurricane will be the culprit.

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A Summer of Unprecedented Brutality in Moscow Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=46742"><span class="small">Masha Gessen, The New Yorker</span></a>   
Friday, 06 September 2019 12:53

Gessen writes: "It's true that the Kremlin has been cracking down on dissent for seven years, and nothing has qualitatively changed in that time, but the arrests continue to multiply, prison terms grow longer, and the brutality becomes more brutal. Once in a while, the cruelty of the authorities comes into sharper focus."

Moscow authorities refused to issue permits for most of the protests that have taken place in the city this summer, and the police and National Guard put them down brutally. (photo: Sergei Bobylev/Getty Images)
Moscow authorities refused to issue permits for most of the protests that have taken place in the city this summer, and the police and National Guard put them down brutally. (photo: Sergei Bobylev/Getty Images)


A Summer of Unprecedented Brutality in Moscow

By Masha Gessen, The New Yorker

06 September 19

 

ver the past couple of months, the city of Moscow has seen an unprecedented number of large, confrontational protests, which have been met with unprecedented brutality from the authorities. It’s true that the Kremlin has been cracking down on dissent for seven years, and nothing has qualitatively changed in that time, but the arrests continue to multiply, prison terms grow longer, and the brutality becomes more brutal. Once in a while, the cruelty of the authorities comes into sharper focus. This summer, prosecutors tried to strip two sets of parents of their parental rights because they took children to the protests. This past week, the police took a Moscow man from his home in the evening, leaving a sleeping twenty-month-old child alone. On the whole, though, the process of stamping out political difference is monotonous and repetitive. Things just keep getting worse.

The impetus for the protests is a so-called election scheduled for September 8th. Moscow has a legislature, a rubber-stamping body that effectively reports to the mayor but is, formally, directly elected. This year, thirty-nine people who are not in the mayor’s pocket and do not belong to one of the Kremlin-controlled political parties tried to run for seats in the legislature and were not allowed on the ballot. Each of them had to submit around five thousand signatures. (The exact number depended on the exact population of the district.) Election officials generally threw out the signatures, often claiming that the signatories did not exist, even when these people, some of them well-known in the city, insisted that they had indeed signed the candidate’s petition. In mid-July, seventeen of the candidates who were denied a spot on the ballot called for constituents to meet with them in a central Moscow square—a gathering that would have been protected by law if the city had actually recognized them as candidates for political office. The city, however, declared the planned gathering an illegal protest.

A series of actual protests—pickets, marches, and rallies—followed over the course of the next seven weeks. The city refused to issue permits for most of these protests, and the police and National Guard put them down brutally. On July 27th, Moscow police set an all-time record for the city and the country by detaining at least 1,373 people in one day. Many of those arrested were badly beaten, and many of those beatings were captured on video that circulated on Russian social networks.

As the protests escalated, the city seems to have decided to take the troublemaker candidates off the streets. At one point, eight of them were behind bars. Ilya Yashin, a longtime activist and one of the unrecognized candidates, was placed under arrest five times in a row, for ten days each time: every time Yashin was released from jail, he was picked up by police at the gate, taken to court, sentenced to another ten days’ administrative arrest, and transported back to jail. Another candidate got two arrests, for a total of forty days; another got three arrests, for a total of twenty-five, and so on.

Another series of arrests has clearly been intended to scare people away from the protests. Fifteen people have so far been accused of inciting a riot or of violence against the police during the protests. (On September 3rd, charges against five of them were dropped.) The prosecutor’s office went to court to try to remove a one-year-old child from his parents because they took him to a protest—thereby, according to the charges, endangering his life and abdicating parental responsibility. Another couple faced the same charges for strolling in or possibly near the protest with their three daughters.

The intimidation operation is big. There are reportedly eighty-four detectives involved in criminal cases stemming from the protests. The large team has been rushing cases through at breakneck speed. On September 3rd, a Moscow court handed down a five-year prison sentence in the case of Vladislav Sinitsa, who was first arrested only a month earlier. Sinitsa was arrested for tweeting what the court interpreted as a call to violence against children of law enforcement officials. On September 4th, two men, Yevgeny Kovalenko and Kirill Zhukov, were sentenced to three and a half and three years behind bars, respectively, on charges stemming from the protest on July 27th. On September 5th, a Moscow court sentenced the thirty-four-year-old software engineer Konstantin Kotov to four years in prison for repeatedly violating the rules of protest—a peculiar, rarely used law that allows prosecutors to charge a person with a crime for repeated administrative violations. Kotov was arrested just three weeks ago. In some smaller cases, where the sentence involved only a fine, the courts didn’t even bother with a hearing, according to the human-rights site OVDInfo. Why waste time on speeches and testimony when the outcome is preordained?

Why is the regime unleashing such spectacular and effortful fury on a few candidates for offices with no power and next to no chance of winning in rigged elections? A common interpretation is that the Kremlin is scared. Vladimir Putin’s popularity is slipping, and even a rigged election can stress the system to the point where its rusty structures give. This could well be true, but it is also true that the system Putin has built is so opaque that we will not know how thoroughly it has rusted until it actually collapses. That may happen this year, or in five years, or in ten. Until then, we can be sure only of what can actually be observed: Russia today has more political prisoners than at any point since the collapse of the U.S.S.R., in 1991, and, in fact, many more than it had when the last Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev, decided to release most of them, in 1987. As long as the current regime exists, this number will grow, as will the length of prison sentences and the brutality of enforcers. This is how freedom shrinks: once the vector has been established, there are no turning points, only the movement of the relentless, freedom-eating machine.

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RSN: Pragmatism Won't Win the Presidency Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=63"><span class="small">Marc Ash, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Friday, 06 September 2019 08:28

Ash writes: "The New York Times recently decided to make what has been painfully obvious about Joe Biden and his campaign from the onset the subject of a feature story."

Former vice president Joseph R. Biden campaigning in Manchester, N.H. (photo: Elizabeth Frantz/NYT)
Former vice president Joseph R. Biden campaigning in Manchester, N.H. (photo: Elizabeth Frantz/NYT)


Pragmatism Won't Win the Presidency

By Marc Ash, Reader Supported News

06 September 19

 

he New York Times recently decided to make what has been painfully obvious about Joe Biden and his campaign from the onset the subject of a feature story. In typically understated tones, the Times informed us, Joe Biden’s Poll Numbers Mask an Enthusiasm Problem. Indeed.

In the piece Patrick Murray, director of Monmouth University Polling Institute, was quoted as saying from Iowa, “I did not meet one Biden voter who was in any way, shape or form excited about voting for Biden … They feel that they have to vote for Joe Biden as the centrist candidate, to keep somebody from the left who they feel is unelectable from getting the nomination.”

Author Jill Filipovic asked the simple question, Does Anyone Actually Want Joe Biden to Be President? The question remains on the table still.

I also touched on what I called Biden’s enthusiasm deficit twice recently. Once on June 11 and again on June 26.

Why is voter enthusiasm so important in presidential politics? Everything hinges on it, starting with turnout. The Democratic strategy seems to rely at its core on the belief that Donald Trump is so egregious, so offensive that voters will turn out solely to defeat him, even if the alternative doesn’t inspire them. But that isn’t the history of US presidential elections.

You can make the case that George H.W. (Poppy) Bush won the 1988 election without a great deal of voter enthusiasm. But he was riding the coattails of one of the most popular presidents in US history, Ronald Reagan. It also bears noting that he was a one-term president.

Beyond that, you are hard pressed to cite a single instance of voters putting a candidate in the Oval Office as a matter of pragmatism. You can rest assured that the issues hurled on the kitchen table across America by Donald Trump will be raw red meat, and unless the Democratic base gets equally inspired, their candidate will likely be dead meat.

But it’s not just the Oval Office. The downstream Congressional races often follow the trend of the presidential contest. Victories in the Congressional races will have a huge impact on the legislative impact any president can have. One very bad sign for Hillary Clinton was that the Democrats were faring poorly in the Senate and House races. A sure sign that there was no popular groundswell.

For the Democrats and their cable broadcasting allies to construct a false meme that Biden is the “secure and intelligent” choice sells out the process, denies reality, and invites disaster. Like it or not, Joe Biden has failed twice in his presidential bids and has no meaningful popular support now. That’s not a good truth or a bad truth, it’s the plain truth.

Sanders and Warren have the hearts and minds of the voters. The Democratic party needs to get busy nurturing and encouraging that rather that subverting it.

The Democratic base, for their part, need to become more vocal and assertive about their feelings. Left to the DNC and the cable giants, Joe Biden might well be installed as the Democratic nominee. That would be a recipe for disaster.

It’s time to start pushing the point.



Marc Ash is the founder and former Executive Director of Truthout, and is now founder and Editor of Reader Supported News.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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Robert Mugabe: Hero, Villain, Human Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=51549"><span class="small">Elsie Eyakuze, Al Jazeera</span></a>   
Friday, 06 September 2019 08:28

Eyakuze writes: "This is the country that Mugabe helped build. This is the country Mugabe helped destroy."

Robert Mugabe. (photo: Reuters)
Robert Mugabe. (photo: Reuters)


Robert Mugabe: Hero, Villain, Human

By Elsie Eyakuze, Al Jazeera

06 September 19


Robert Mugabe helped build Zimbabwe and helped destroy it.

obert Mugabe has died. May he rest in peace.

He was one of the engineers who built the foundations of modern-day Zimbabwe.

If you ever get the chance, please visit Zimbabwe. It is home to music and fields of maize for as far as the eye can see. There are parks in the middle of the capital.

The women and men are lovely underneath that veneer of British manners that they have been cursed with. They are stern, yet kind.

If you love contradictions, you have to go there. And if you want to know what patience looks like, well, you have to go there. It doesn't matter, you just have to go there. Pretend to be a researcher into the post-colonial experience of racial politics or whatever excuse you need to justify your pilgrimage. Just go.

You may awake in the morning to people singing outside your hotel room, singing hymns to the Lord at the very break of dawn as they tend to the land, open up the office, give praise for another day. As beautiful as an adhan to my coastal ear.

It is ridiculously bucolic up in there, everywhere nature is pushing up an offering. Would you like some greens? A homegrown tomato, perhaps? We all garden out of necessity in our African cities, but still, these people have some skills. Few sights in the world are as gorgeous as a fine full-fatted and long-horned Ankole...yet some of the cattle I saw in Zimbabwe made me glance at them. Just a bit, I didn't stare too hard, that would have been disrespectful.

This is the country that Mugabe helped build. This is the country Mugabe helped destroy.

If you try to talk to Zimbabweans, they will not tell you anything of import until you are ready to really listen. There is a shield of politeness, a grim determination that is necessary to the everyday work of being dependable and productive and willing to survive. It is necessary to keep the pain of unfairness from crushing one's soul. Stoicism, God, hard work, few words, and political correctness. Maybe even in that order.

Do you want to know about Zimbabwe? Let me tell you a story: The guy who drove me from the hotel to the airport in Johannesburg said he was completely floored by Zimbabweans' work ethic. That's why they help him run his establishment. This was in South Africa. South Africa could learn so much from Zimbabwe. We all could.

This is the country that Mugabe helped build. This is the country he helped destroy.

What my gracious South African host (and no, he wasn't "white" so don't even try trolling) doesn't know is that I managed to charm his breakfast cook into talking to me a bit before he came along. She has kids. She is grateful for the work. She covers her mouth when she laughs. Her family is back home and they need the remittances. She kept me company of a cold morning and would have sat down to a cup of tea if she wasn't being so...professional.

I asked a friend to help me figure this article out. I said: "Friend, what can a person of my generation actually say about Robert Mugabe?"

And my friend said: "Robert Mugabe built a foundation for a country. Meditate on that."

I cannot join the throngs who fear to speak ill of the dead. I cannot immortalise him with scant regard for the villainy that he brought into this world. No. I will respect his legacy by talking about him as though he was a man, a neighbour, and someone who never did quite understand what to do with all that success. Let us honour him for having been thoroughly, demonstrably human. Nobody knows what to do with that much success. Therein lies our lesson.

We all want our heroes to be flawless, and our villains to lack good qualities. It makes the world so much simpler. But have you ever visited a country that has stoically refused to give in, year after year, without a functioning currency? People who must barter for milk while taking care of their grandmothers, and still manage to smile at us stupid strangers who reduce their story to a failure of economic policy and the encounter of black and white? People who are strong. Not stupid-strong like: I want to spear everything. No. Real-strong, like: We are going to survive this and do our best - whatever may come - and still have heart.

This is the country that Mugabe helped build. The same one he helped destroy.

Robert Mugabe was part of the liberation of a country that subsequently had to survive him as best it could. Yes, it is paradoxical. When he was good, he was good and when he was bad, he really messed up. But does that break the foundation that he helped to build for Zimbabwe?

If you can't be the teacher, be the lesson. This is the year of autocratic populism, so let me do my job as a griot and try to sing us all to a better place.

Robert Mugabe was a complex and complicated man, for whom many of us would have wished a better end, but we saw this coming. We participated in his demise, though, didn't we? Nobody survives that much "success", which is why term limits were invented.

Let us learn not to break our leaders by making them kings for life. Let us appreciate what foundations they have built and, on those foundations, build better governments, more inclusive societies. Let us save our sons - and daughters, but mostly sons - from the ravages of egomania.

Let us try to forgive them their sins.

And let him rest, in peace. You did what you did, Uncle Bob. It was quite the life.

Farewell.

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