- Joined
- May 6, 2019
It is not as doubtful as one might think.... and at the same time more so. It really depends how they take their likely loss in 2020. For an example of a change to the good, we have the 2012 election. Republicans had worked themselves in a frenzy and had utterly lost the plot and were fracturing at every turn, ending in putting up Romney who was basically Obama With White Skin, and getting their asses handed to them. This forced them to examine themselves and lead to them becoming a more unified, pro-american citizen party.And it might be doubful then they could get 2024 in the bag as well.
The democrats could, in theory, follow the exact same path as the above description equally applies to them now.
The key difference and hence why I say possibly more doubtful is that there are several factors at play here so let me be a bit long winded.
First, the presidency. Obama got elected largely on a counter-bush narrative that he would change things. Trump was elected on a similar anti-obama narrative. What does this mean for the theoretical 2024 election? Well... it is unlikely that any anti-Trump message will reach a similar applause. Bush was an absolute nightmare that needed fixing, so obama could run on that. Obama at best stayed Bushes course and at worst MADE things worse. Trump, as much as I find him repugnant on a personal level, has gotten things done and has demonstrably made life better for the average american. This means, short of Trump doing something monumentally stupid, running on a "Fix Trump's America: platform like Obama and Trump did to their predecessor is non viable. This leads into,
Second, a uniting figure. Trump saved the Republican Party. Lets just acknowledge that fact out the gate. He provided a single, unified vision. Presented a single, unifed solution. And his voice now is what the majority of republicans follow. The fracturing that was tearing the GOP into bits was solved by those fracturing people realizing they had no pathway to power post 2012, and they rallied behind Trump because he presented them all the closest thing possible to an inter-party compromise. To the Evanglicals? They had Pence who was a BRILLIANT choice by Trump as it ensured they knew they would have his ear at the second highest position in the land. To the Right-Wing libertarians? He promised to absolutely tear apart Obama's legacy... and he did. To the Stock republicans? He provided clear solutions to modern problems that aligned with their principles. A key thing to note, Each of these factions has clear and concise complaints abut Trump, but they backed him anyway because he was willing to compromise between them and he gave them clear goals. The problem for the democrats in 2024 is that... I don't see how this is possible for them. Mind, I didn't see how it was possible for the republicans either but I did at least have some notions as to how it could theoretically be done. I have nothing similar for Democrats.
Also, @
MsStevieMarie
Pelosi has no ambition higher than the House speaker, she runs it like her personal kingdom and everyone from democrats to republicans has to kiss her ring to get anything done. She is just a grander scale of that middlemanager who refuses promotion because he wants total control of his employees.