Andrew Yang Ends His Presidential Campaign

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Andrew Yang Ends His Presidential Campaign




Mr. Yang, an entrepreneur with no previous political experience, mounted a long-shot campaign that promoted a universal basic income and persisted well beyond expectations.

MANCHESTER, N.H. — Andrew Yang, an entrepreneur with no previous political experience who evangelized a universal basic income and warned of the perils of automation, ended his longer-than-long-shot bid for president on Tuesday night after a yearslong campaign that endured even as those of members of Congress and governors fell away.

Speaking to supporters inside a ballroom in Manchester, N.H., as the state’s primary results were coming in, Mr. Yang said “endings are hard” and that he had intended to stay in the race until the end.

“I am the math guy, and it’s clear from the numbers we’re not going to win this campaign,” he said. “So tonight I’m announcing that I am suspending my campaign.”

Mr. Yang’s campaign has spent considerable time and resources in the state and was banking on the backing of its many independent voters. Mr. Yang had signaled in recent interviews and emails to supporters that he would need to vastly outperform expectations in the Granite State for his campaign to continue.

The end comes a week after Mr. Yang, 45, failed to win any pledged delegates in Iowa despite spending a significant share of his war chest on ads there.

Mr. Yang’s decision to exit the race closes out one of the Democratic primary’s most surprising story lines, removing a candidate who developed a fiercely loyal following of disaffected voters from across the ideological spectrum and intrigued even skeptics with his wit, levity and relentless positivity.

The son of Taiwanese immigrants, Mr. Yang was one of about a half-dozen viable Asian-American candidates to ever run for president. He became something of an involuntary torchbearer for Asian-Americans as he grappled with how to discuss his identity on the trail and how to address and confront racism.

But it was Mr. Yang’s plan to give every American adult $1,000 a month that formed the foundation and rationale for his run. Aware that a candidate beginning with essentially no name recognition and few traditional credentials would face stiff odds, Mr. Yang often told audiences that he had not initially wanted to run for president, because he was not “crazy.”

But he would add that during a trip to Washington, he was told that if he wanted the government to do anything about job loss caused by automation, he would need to bring a “wave” crashing down on the heads of bureaucrats. His run for president, he said, amounted to that wave.

Mr. Yang enjoyed steady growth from under the radar as higher-profile candidates took turns as the front-runner and absorbed the media scrutiny and attacks from rivals that came with that status.
But two days after Mr. Yang’s underwhelming performance in Iowa, his campaign laid off dozens of staff members from a team that had ballooned from fewer than a dozen people to over 200. Despite having raised more than $30 million over the course of his presidential campaign — a remarkable sum for a political outsider — Mr. Yang’s team had only $3.7 million in cash on hand at the start of this year, according to federal filings.
In an email to supporters last week, he suggested he would need to finish in the top four in the New Hampshire primary for the campaign to get “the boost” it needed — a goal he failed to achieve.

Mr. Yang’s base of political support consisted mostly of young and male voters — some progressive, some who previously supported President Trump, and many in between. His departure from the race could aid Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, whom many of Mr. Yang’s most loyal fans said they had voted for in 2016.But given that Mr. Yang’s support in the polls never exceeded the mid-single-digits, no candidate is likely to be significantly helped by his exit. Indeed, at rallies and town halls throughout the primary, many members of the so-called Yang Gang said they had never been involved in politics before encountering Mr. Yang.His plans moving forward were not immediately clear, though senior campaign officials would not rule out a return to politics. “We are just getting started,” Zach Graumann, Mr. Yang’s campaign manager, said Tuesday.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/09/...lback=false&imp_id=438993197&imp_id=139083322

Speaking to reporters later that day, Mr. Yang was asked if he would consider running for mayor of New York City. “I wouldn’t rule anything out,” he said.

Early in his campaign — sometimes in front of audiences of a few dozen people or less — Mr. Yang, the Schenectady, N.Y.-born former head of a test-prep company and a nonprofit organization, often sounded the alarm about what he called the “fourth industrial revolution.” Automation, he warned, would bring mass unemployment, chaos and even violence if no remedy were pursued; free money combined with a more human economic system, he argued, would buffer American society against its worst effects and help restore people’s dignity.

The candidate and a small campaign staff labored in relative obscurity for about a year until February 2019, when Mr. Yang went on a popular podcast and raised hundreds of thousands of dollars overnight. From there, he began a slow but steady rise, raising millions of dollars each quarter and moving from less than 1 percent in the polls to 4 and 5 percent early this year. His political operation grew and formalized.
Unlike several more experienced candidates, Mr. Yang qualified for all of the 2019 Democratic debates, and he appeared to grow more comfortable on the trail and the debate stages. At a debate in the fall, moderators asked the candidates about automation, a moment of pride for Mr. Yang.

By the time the Iowa caucuses arrived, Mr. Yang was one of just 11 people in the field, which had at one point ballooned to two dozen.
But Mr. Yang’s modest rise also coincided with increased scrutiny of his policy proposals, his past treatment of employees and his handling of topics like race and gender. The news media began digging into the cost of his universal basic income proposal; he was criticized for saying at a debate, “I am Asian, so I know a lot of doctors”; and he faced claims of gender discrimination from campaign volunteers and past employees.
Still, when Mr. Yang ostensibly kicked off his campaign in February 2018 by announcing it in an article in The New York Times, few would have expected him to make a run so deep into the primary.

Mr. Yang seemed self-aware enough to comprehend this. At a debate in December that had been winnowed down to seven candidates, Mr. Yang earned laughs when he remarked, “I know what you’re thinking, America: How am I still on this stage with them?”

In an interview last week, he reflected on his two years on the trail.

“Supporters come up to me just about every day and say, ‘Thank you, this campaign lifted me out of a depression,’ or ‘Thank you, this campaign made me feel so much better about my future,’” he said. “It’s really incredible.”

“And while you’re running, you don’t really reflect on these things because you’re trying to get to the next benchmark,” he continued. “But it’s very touching that this campaign has touched other people. It is something that I had hoped for, but I didn’t realize what it would feel like to actually see it.”
 
Too bad. Guess I'm not going to have to send my prints and DNA to the FBI, pay exorbitant licencing fees (likely negating my 1000 bux) and somehow convert my TT-30 and Star BM into a smart gun.

Much Disappoint.
 
Biden left New Hampshire early..He needs South Carolina, or he's done..He's gonna practice his Ebonics on the plane ride down there.. I predict some more crazy shit is getting ready to fly out of his mouth soon..Stay tuned..
 
I recall him having a stronger following until he said something or another about causing white people financial hardship or holocausting them or something. I don't really remember.
Ah yeah that. He said something along the lines of "rural america needing UBI in order to soothe them and make them complacent in accepting the fact that they are becoming a minority" That freaked the hell out of a ton of alt-right types.
 
We've gotten to the point where nothing will ever change for the party until absolutely every silver strand that's barely visible has been cut.

Sucks but it's true.

Yang bit the Wang and couldn't figure out why it bled. Goodbye.
 
I dunno if any of you have swung by reddit to observe their funeral procession, but you should.

lol

That reddit has some gold in it

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A lot of his supporters in the discord have already flipped to Trump.

Seems like it.

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That reddit has some gold in it

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Seems like it.

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Sad to see him go. He brought the perils of automation to the popular consciousness.

Edit: I suppose it's more accurate to say he brought policy solutions to the perils of automation to popular consciousness.

Edit 2: Yes, automation only has perils in a capitalist society
Top. Minds.
Yesterday I climbed up numerous un-shoveled, snowy, icy private driveways in rural NH just to chat with folks about Andrew Yang. I enjoyed Yang-ing some Berners and undecideds along the way.

I enjoyed every every bit of this journey and wouldn’t trade it in for the world. This movement did not end tonight. Yang-ism is going to make its return in the not too distant future. It’s up to us to keep pushing for humanity first and making it mainstream. We all know automation is coming and it’s up to us to keep forcing the issue in this race until everyone is talking about it.

I love you YangGang!! Best movement I’ve ever been part of! Your ethos is what made this all so awesome. Thanks!
Are people trolling these folks by declaring that by 2024 neighborhood canvassing will be automated yet? Feels like a missed opportunity.
What hurts the most isn’t that he lost - it’s that it never felt like he was actually given a chance thanks to the media.
Man, it's almost like nobody really cares about a fringe candidate whose only gimmick is a weird idea to solve a nebulous threat. No, it is the media who is wrong.
This campaign has opened my eyes to how asians get absolutely ERASED in American culture. I am so fucking disappointed in America. Yang was a once in a lifetime candidate.
Asians age in dog years. He will have to be put down before the next election cycle.
For some reason I can't post.

Andrew Yang suspended his presendtial bid and it is a wonder he lasted so long considering the bamboo ceiling he needed to break, as well as having to deal with white privilage, on the debate stage, live. Not once did moderators or in fact, anyone else on that stage go, "Hold up. Let's give the mic to the only colored person up here."

The candidates don't care about racial disparities (as they have proven). They only care about pandering to the vast majority, which includes this idea about being "woke."

When you are the only person of color and the topic is about inequality and you are not allowed to speak, speaks volumes of the debate moderators, MSM, and the DNC. It is all just optics and pandering to their basis.

Last year I was a vote blue no matter who. This year, I have already voted for him (thank you for early voting) in the primary, will be caucusing for his ideas in my precinct, and will not be voting blue no matter who again.

"I'm either going to win, or the other candidates are going to sound a lot like me." They already have started to sound a whole lot like you and have erased you. This is the typical Asian experience in the workforce, and no one will acknowledge it.

No other candidate has spoken about the special needs community either and made it a topic of conversation. He has been the only one to truly be inclusive in his campaign. Our needs as a community will continue to grow, and it saddens me that the DNC candidates that are left only sees them as slave workers when in reality, we should be valued because we are human. Not because of what we do as a job. We have intrinsic value because we're human.

As a Mom with two children, one of whom is Autistic-- my heart cries for parents who are poor and cannot afford the services needed. Or living in areas where there are literally dead zones. My heart cries for parents who don't know the resources available to them at an early age (18mo+) or that IDEA stops supporting them once they graduate out of high school.

My heart cries for the special needs community because it is a forgotten community and a community that gets taken advantage of.

Yang's campaign is the only campaign that truly practiced inclusivity.

If only I could have done more.
Ok, this is a troll. Has to be.
 
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