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The future’s bad, the future’s orange – politicalbetting.com

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  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,735
    This is not dignified. This is the wrong speech.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,950
    edited November 2024
    ...

    The problem with Trump is you can be his bestie today and tomorrow you wake up to see he is tweeting that you are "Two Tier Kier, that is what they call him in Englander, very bad person, they say mean things, I never really liked them, lock em up"....
    The pillow talk from Nigel won't help Starmer.

    Trump should demand an immediate General Election under threat of nuclear attack insisting only Reform are on the ballot.
  • Americans make shit decisions that we strongly disagree with.

    Like going independent in the first place.

    And playing FOOTball with their hands?
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,497
    Harris: “While I concede the election, I do not concede the fight.”
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,131
    edited November 2024
    biggles said:

    This is not dignified. This is the wrong speech.

    Imagine if Trump was standing there saying I don't have to be loyal to the president or the parliament, only god and country, and I will continue to fight, fight, fight.....and i will fight...and fight...and fight...you must fight...every 3rd word.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,786

    Harris: “While I concede the election, I do not concede the fight.”

    Never! Never! Never!
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 54,942

    And playing FOOTball with their hands?
    And not understanding the importance of a wicket rather than just throwing the ball.

    No wonder they screwed up.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,798

    Well, not everyone in the Empire had the same rights as the British in Britain. So, no, that wasn’t the entire point.
    Indeed the entire point was that we ruled them, against their will if required.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,939
    MaxPB said:

    I half agree with this, but at the same time if companies can't export to the US export prices for those goods will fall for the UK so that's a net benefit for us while we still maintain basically our existing exports to the US. What's more is that our exports to Europe are primarily services where we are highly competitive for both prices and quality. Any recession will drive more European companies to UK imports because we come in cheaper and offer a more comprehensive service, especially in tech infrastructure and finance, two of the big growth industries in the EU. I understand the tendency to see doom and gloom at a time like this, yet I'm not sure it's going to materialise in anything like the form you are worried about.

    The bigger issues will be domestic, we're still selling £150bn in extra gilts over 5 years and chances are the US government is going to add a lot of debt so we're competing for the same money and we need to hope that bond prices don't fall or we're all fucked.
    A tarriff generated world recession/depression might well do that to us.
    It's not as though there aren't precedents.

    What worries me is that tariffs have a particular appeal for someone like Trump, of course.

    The Political Economy of Tariff Exemption Grants
    https://jfqa.org/2024/07/30/the-political-economy-of-tariff-exemption-grants/
    We investigate whether firm-level political connections affect the allocation of exemptions from tariffs imposed on $550 billion of Chinese goods imported to the United States annually beginning in 2018. Evidence points to politicians not only rewarding supporters, but also punishing opponents: past campaign contributions to the party controlling (in opposition to) the executive branch increase (decrease) approval likelihood. Our findings point to quid pro quo arrangements between politicians and firms, as opposed to the “information” channel linking political access to regulatory outcomes....
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,387
    biggles said:

    This is not dignified. This is the wrong speech.

    Does it matter?
  • If Trump was standing there saying I don't have to be loyal to the president or the parliament, only god and country, and I will continue to fight, fight, fight.....there would be hell to pay.
    If he started talking about loyalty to parliament that would be the definitive sign of his senility.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,735
    edited November 2024
    She hasn’t really congratulated him or wished him well. There are certain things you just do in a democracy, and that’s one of them. She and Biden need to show they are the bigger people.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,131
    edited November 2024
    Does Harris have any other words in her vocab than fight?
  • biggles said:

    She what congratulated him or wished him well. There are certain things you just do in a democracy, and that’s one of them. She and Biden need to show they are the bigger people.

    I remember when somebody once said, if they go low, we go high.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,735

    Does it matter?
    On one level no, it’s not my country and not my business. But on an another level, as someone who thinks the world needs a non-Trumpite USA in 4 years, the Democrats need to be bigger and better than Trump was.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,497

    Imagine if Trump was standing there saying I don't have to be loyal to the president or the parliament, only god and country, and I will continue to fight, fight, fight.....and i will fight...and fight...and fight...you must fight...every 3rd word.
    “Now is the time to mobilise…”
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,131
    edited November 2024
    biggles said:

    On one level no, it’s not my country and not my business. But on an another level, as someone who thinks the world needs a non-Trumpite USA in 4 years, the Democrats need to be bigger and better than Trump was.
    Also the US is a very divided and polarised country, at least two people have tried to kill Trump in the same number of months.....just because Trump is knobhead, you don't inflame that.
  • Does Harris have any other words in her vocab than fight?

    Rage, rage, rage, against the dying of the light.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,487

    Am I the only person who always reads this brand name in my head as "tit-leist"?
    I think the same. It’s because golfers are tits.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,433

    And playing FOOTball with their hands?
    Nothing wrong with that. My ex Royal Navy uncle calls rugby Union football all the time.
  • moonshine said:

    Thiel I agree. Musk I don’t, his heart is in the right place even though he can be socially clumsy, and he’s repeatedly proven capable of greatness.
    This is the Musk who has used his media empire to amplify far right conspiracy theories and disowned one of his own kids for being trans? I think this goes beyond social awkwardness, and no amount of skill in the rocket department can offset it.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,135

    The Tories’ loss was historically bad, the Dems’ loss wasn’t. Yes, both should look at why they lost, but one lost by a small margin and one was stamped on by a mammoth in DMs.
    The Democrats may have lost the popular vote in a Presidential election for only the second time since the end of the Cold War. Against Trump.

    The defeat is notable historically not principally because of its scale, but because of who the defeat was against.
  • Harris: “While I concede the election, I do not concede the fight.”

    "We will not go quietly into the night! We will not vanish without a fight! We're going to live on! We're going to survive!"
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,135
    edited November 2024
    Sean_F said:

    The Democrats’ support for trans’ rights outweighed their support for women’s’ rights.

    And , ballot initiatives meant you did not have to vote Democratic to support abortion rights.
    I think the latter point has proved to be particularly important. It demonstrates that abortion is now primarily an issue at the State level, rather than the Federal level. This should help the Democrats in elections to State Assemblies, which they have particularly struggled at over recent decades.

    This might change if the Republican trifecta at the Federal level pushes for anti-abortion Federal laws.
  • I think the latter point has proved to be particularly important. It demonstrates that abortion is now primarily an issue at the State level, rather than the Federal level. This should help the Democrats in elections to State Assemblies, which they have particularly struggled at over recent decades.

    This might change if the Republican trifecta at the Federal level pushes for anti-abortion Federal laws.
    Vance has championed a Federal abortion ban.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,735

    You are not being very magnanimous in victory William. Those should be her last defiant words as she faces Trump's firing squad.

    I thought she was a revelation during the campaign. It's just a pity she couldn't change the minds of 5% more voters in the rust belt. They chose instead to vote for a seditious felon.

    I knew PB was a right wing melting pot, but I didn't expect as many previously shy Trumpeters to fall out of the furniture to the extent they have.

    This place is getting far too extreme for a centrist dad.

    Trump is a convicted felon, an adjudicated rapist and stole state secrets, and you are all convinced Harris was the worst candidate. What's wrong with you all?
    I don’t think many on here are actually Trump supporters are they? Not least because, like the country, most on here completely disagree with him on Ukraine.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,149
    If this election was being conducted as a popular vote contest, it probably wouldn't been called yet, because there's an outside chance it could end up as something like 50/50 between them.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,735

    Vance has championed a Federal abortion ban.
    Vance is like Jenrick, in that it makes it worse when you don’t even believe it.
  • SteveSSteveS Posts: 200
    MaxPB said:

    I half agree with this, but at the same time if companies can't export to the US export prices for those goods will fall for the UK so that's a net benefit for us while we still maintain basically our existing exports to the US. What's more is that our exports to Europe are primarily services where we are highly competitive for both prices and quality. Any recession will drive more European companies to UK imports because we come in cheaper and offer a more comprehensive service, especially in tech infrastructure and finance, two of the big growth industries in the EU. I understand the tendency to see doom and gloom at a time like this, yet I'm not sure it's going to materialise in anything like the form you are worried about.

    The bigger issues will be domestic, we're still selling £150bn in extra gilts over 5 years and chances are the US government is going to add a lot of debt so we're competing for the same money and we need to hope that bond prices don't fall or we're all fucked.
    It depends on how elastic the supply is. If it’s in elastic, then suppliers will dump on non-Us markets, potentially at a loss, to offload stock and maintain liquidity. Long term prices will go up.

    If it’s an elastic market, then they will reduce supply and prices will go up due to a loss of efficiencies of scale.

    I’m a big fan of free markets!

    S

  • You are not being very magnanimous in victory William. Those should be her last defiant words as she faces Trump's firing squad.

    I thought she was a revelation during the campaign. It's just a pity she couldn't change the minds of 5% more voters in the rust belt. They chose instead to vote for a seditious felon.

    I knew PB was a right wing melting pot, but I didn't expect as many previously shy Trumpeters to fall out of the furniture to the extent they have.

    This place is getting far too extreme for a centrist dad.

    Trump is a convicted felon, an adjudicated rapist and stole state secrets, and you are all convinced Harris was the worst candidate. What's wrong with you all?
    Trump 294 EVs
    Harris 229 EVs

    :innocent:
  • This is the Musk who has used his media empire to amplify far right conspiracy theories and disowned one of his own kids for being trans? I think this goes beyond social awkwardness, and no amount of skill in the rocket department can offset it.
    Musk I think is, on an emotional level, like a dangerous child, who's got
    hold of the car keys because he's intellectually far ahead of his emotional age.

    He may already be the most powerful person in the world, from some points of view.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,579
    Dignified concession speech from Harris with a clear message that the fight continues
  • Every successful Elon Musk company he did not found.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,939
    biggles said:

    She hasn’t really congratulated him or wished him well. There are certain things you just do in a democracy, and that’s one of them. She and Biden need to show they are the bigger people.

    All that's nonsense.

    Having spent two months arguing his election would be disastrous for the US, and having bring called everything from prostitute, to imbecile, to "crap", to fascist by him, why would she "wish him well" ?

    Don't gaslight us with that crap..

    What she did say:
    .. I know many people feel like we are entering a dark time, but for the benefit of us all, I hope that is not the case...

    She conceded, and recognised the importance of such concession in a democracy. Pretending that his administration is likely to be anything other than baleful would be normalising him in advance.
  • biggles said:

    I don’t think many on here are actually Trump supporters are they? Not least because, like the country, most on here completely disagree with him on Ukraine.
    There’s a strand of thought on here that considers Trump will be good for Ukraine, due to ‘reasons’.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,131
    edited November 2024
    HYUFD said:

    Dignified concession speech from Harris with a clear message that the fight continues

    It really wasn't though. Dignified is you accept the result, you thank everybody who was involved, you wish the new president well, hope the country continues to improve and say we must go away and consider why the American public didn't entrust us this time around.

    Now I am sure Trump would have been a mega asshat, but that doesn't mean you should go to his level.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,579

    Americans make shit decisions that we strongly disagree with.

    Like going independent in the first place.

    Indeed, though I see even Harris made clear in US eyes the democratic transition of power is what distinguishes it from monarchy and tyranny. Though I have to say our last transition of PM and monarch was rather more dignified than their 2021 transition
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,619

    25 minutes, finally!

    Difficult wank?
  • glwglw Posts: 10,308

    I knew PB was a right wing melting pot, but I didn't expect as many previously shy Trumpeters to fall out of the furniture to the extent they have.

    This place is getting far too extreme for a centrist dad.

    Trump is a convicted felon, an adjudicated rapist and stole state secrets, and you are all convinced Harris was the worst candidate. What's wrong with you all?

    I'm certain that one day almost every one of these Trump supporters will deny ever having supported him.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,131
    edited November 2024

    Every successful Elon Musk company he did not found.

    I am not sure why that is a criticism or a bad thing? Its a bit like saying well I personally didn't know how to do a task, so I hired somebody who is way more knowledgeable in this area who does.

    Scaling companies is really hard. Scaling companies and creating innovate market leading products is even harder.

    When he bought Tesla is was a tiny company buying Lotus Elise's and doing a battery replacement transplant....today's Tesla are nothing of the sort (although Musk over-hypes driver assist as self driving).
  • Nothing wrong with that. My ex Royal Navy uncle calls rugby Union football all the time.
    Nearly all forms of football involve the use of hands by all players. Football in Britain frequently did in the early 19th century and before, whatever local rules were.

    Association football is very much the exception and it was far from guaranteed that the global game we now know would be as it is; it might easily never have existed given that when the rules were first drafted there was a significant split on whether carrying or holding the ball could be allowed (other than by the goalkeeper, within restrictions) and indeed at some meetings, but not the critical final one, those wanting handling held a majority. The name of Ebenezer Cobb Morley, whose brainchild the FA was, who served as founding Secretary and drove through the banning of handling the ball, is a name that should be far more widely known. Not only did he, more than anyone, create football as we now know it, but by creating a game so easily played anywhere, he created the sporting sun whose gravity would dictate the orbits of all other sports.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,497
    HYUFD said:

    Dignified concession speech from Harris with a clear message that the fight continues

    Anything about listening to the electorate about where they went wrong?
  • You are not being very magnanimous in victory William. Those should be her last defiant words as she faces Trump's firing squad.

    I thought she was a revelation during the campaign. It's just a pity she couldn't change the minds of 5% more voters in the rust belt. They chose instead to vote for a seditious felon.

    I knew PB was a right wing melting pot, but I didn't expect as many previously shy Trumpeters to fall out of the furniture to the extent they have.

    This place is getting far too extreme for a centrist dad.

    Trump is a convicted felon, an adjudicated rapist and stole state secrets, and you are all convinced Harris was the worst candidate. What's wrong with you all?
    In the short term, it's a victory over the liberals. Victory is a sweet drink, whatever the hangover.

    In the longer term, your average right winger has tiny balls. The way to stop all of... this... was for the Republican hierarchy to disown the Donald. They had plenty of opportunities, of which the impeachment trial was only the most obvious. Every time, they failed.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,579
    edited November 2024

    Anything about listening to the electorate about where they went wrong?
    I suspect the Democrats election chances next time much like the Tories here will depend far more on what the economy looks like in 4 or 5 years time than any navel gazing they do in between.

    After all it was US cost of living that won Trump this election, not him saying he got it all wrong in 2020.

    Just as it was mainly the economy that won it for Starmer this year, when he replaced Corbyn in 2021 Boris had a comfortable poll lead still
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560

    You are not being very magnanimous in victory William. Those should be her last defiant words as she faces Trump's firing squad.

    I thought she was a revelation during the campaign. It's just a pity she couldn't change the minds of 5% more voters in the rust belt. They chose instead to vote for a seditious felon.

    I knew PB was a right wing melting pot, but I didn't expect as many previously shy Trumpeters to fall out of the furniture to the extent they have.

    This place is getting far too extreme for a centrist dad.

    Trump is a convicted felon, an adjudicated rapist and stole state secrets, and you are all convinced Harris was the worst candidate. What's wrong with you all?
    Clearly Harris was a terrible candidate because she was up against all that - and lost.
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 8,976
     

    Anything about listening to the electorate about where they went wrong?
    The wrong box on the ballot paper, obvs

  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,798
    edited November 2024
    biggles said:

    I don’t think many on here are actually Trump supporters are they? Not least because, like the country, most on here completely disagree with him on Ukraine.
    No, there are a fair few Trump supporters here, and William is at least consistent as he supported Trump in 2016 too.

    Some of them think that Trump wont shaft Ukraine, others don't care. Well, it looks like we will find out shortly.

    @MexicanPete is right though, and its time for this Centrist Dad to have a bit of a digital detox. Its not as if there are any big elections for a while.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,579

    It really wasn't though. Dignified is you accept the result, you thank everybody who was involved, you wish the new president well, hope the country continues to improve and say we must go away and consider why the American public didn't entrust us this time around.

    Now I am sure Trump would have been a mega asshat, but that doesn't mean you should go to his level.
    Yes but she was conceding to Trump, there are limits!
  • There’s a strand of thought on here that considers Trump will be good for Ukraine, due to ‘reasons’.
    I'm not a Trumpist, but.I do have to admit that I personally think his approach to Ukraine may be less physically dangerous, for all of us.
    On the other hand, he's a definite danger to democracy for all of us, too.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,131
    edited November 2024
    HYUFD said:

    Yes but she was conceding to Trump, there are limits!
    Irrelevant if it was Trump or not. I would have expected Sunak (not expect, he would have done) to concede the same to Corbyn as Starmer.

    There are 4 years to criticise Trump and going to be masses of opportunities.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,308
    edited November 2024

    In the longer term, your average right winger has tiny balls. The way to stop all of... this... was for the Republican hierarchy to disown the Donald. They had plenty of opportunities, of which the impeachment trial was only the most obvious. Every time, they failed.

    Exactly. The GOP is full of cowards. We know what they really think of Trump, as many of the most senior people in the party are on the record telling us so, but they are afraid to stand up to Trump and his cult.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,579

    Irrelevant if it was Trump or not. I would have expected Sunak (not expect, he would have done) to concede the same to Corbyn as Starmer.
    Not even Corbyn tried to overturn an election result
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,735
    Nigelb said:

    All that's nonsense.

    Having spent two months arguing his election would be disastrous for the US, and having bring called everything from prostitute, to imbecile, to "crap", to fascist by him, why would she "wish him well" ?

    Don't gaslight us with that crap..

    What she did say:
    .. I know many people feel like we are entering a dark time, but for the benefit of us all, I hope that is not the case...

    She conceded, and recognised the importance of such concession in a democracy. Pretending that his administration is likely to be anything other than baleful would be normalising him in advance.
    Utter bollocks. She chose not to take the moral high ground, and more importantly chose not to recognise that a majority preferred him and her party needs to engage with them.

    As stated above, in the past I wouldn’t have cared who was in power in the U.S. but I more interested this time because Ukraine might now be screwed.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,579

    I'm not a Trumpist, but.I do have to admit that I personally think his approach to Ukraine may be less physically dangerous, for all of us.
    On the other hand, he's a definite danger to democracy for all of us, too.
    Only in the sense he might try and hand half Ukraine on a plate to Putin and you don't try and feed a wolf to calm it
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,131
    edited November 2024
    HYUFD said:

    Not even Corbyn tried to overturn an election result
    He certainly had some interesting words about winning.....

    And its not really about Trump, its about the country. Its very polarised, its very divided, two nutters have tried to kill Trump. You want your politicians to stand up and say lets be calm, lets take stock.
  • I'm not a Trumpist, but.I do have to admit that I personally think his approach to Ukraine may be less physically dangerous, for all of us.
    On the other hand, he's a definite danger to democracy for all of us, too.
    Trump is to Putin as Chamberlain is to Hitler. Peace in our time!
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,049
    Nigelb said:

    A tarriff generated world recession/depression might well do that to us.
    It's not as though there aren't precedents.

    What worries me is that tariffs have a particular appeal for someone like Trump, of course.

    The Political Economy of Tariff Exemption Grants
    https://jfqa.org/2024/07/30/the-political-economy-of-tariff-exemption-grants/
    We investigate whether firm-level political connections affect the allocation of exemptions from tariffs imposed on $550 billion of Chinese goods imported to the United States annually beginning in 2018. Evidence points to politicians not only rewarding supporters, but also punishing opponents: past campaign contributions to the party controlling (in opposition to) the executive branch increase (decrease) approval likelihood. Our findings point to quid pro quo arrangements between politicians and firms, as opposed to the “information” channel linking political access to regulatory outcomes....
    Oh, I think the US is likely to see Crony Capitalism, where being a friend of the administration leads to exemptions from tariffs and the like.

    It's rare that produces positive outcomes.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,950
    biggles said:

    I don’t think many on here are actually Trump supporters are they? Not least because, like the country, most on here completely disagree with him on Ukraine.
    For the contradiction, see Sandpit.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,579
    edited November 2024
    glw said:

    Exactly. The GOP is full of cowards. We know what they really think of Trump, as many of the most senior people in the party are on the record telling us so, but they are afraid to stand up to Trump and his cult.
    This may be peak GOP though, for Trump can never be on the ballot again.

    Yet Trump for all his faults is after this result (even bigger an EC win than his 2016 win and he also won the popular vote) the party's biggest vote winner since Reagan, as the Tories found once they got rid of their big charismatic vote winner Boris it has been all downhill from there.

    We also can't be sure what the legacy of Trump's tariffs will be longer term for the economy and his party
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,939
    Rocky road ahead for S. Korea-US alliance as Trump returns to White House

    https://m.koreatimes.co.kr/pages/article.asp?newsIdx=385743
    ..the NCG may seem beneficial to South Korea but not to the U.S. from a 'Trumpian' conception of alliances," he added.

    Harry Kazianis, senior director of National Security Affairs at the Center for the National Interest, echoed that view.

    "Trump might just see it (NCG) as a talking shop that does nothing and kill it off," he said.

    The NCG was established under the Washington Declaration signed by Yoon and Biden during the South Korean president's U.S. visit in April 2023. The joint initiative was aimed at enhancing U.S. extended deterrence commitments to South Korea in response to North Korea's nuclear threats.

    If Trump weakens the NCG or the U.S. nuclear umbrella, it may intensify calls in South Korea to develop its own nuclear weapons. This is an approach Trump could potentially support.

    In South Korea, there is a growing push for self-nuclear armament, driven by increasing skepticism over the effectiveness of U.S. assurances in deterring North Korea's nuclear threats.

    "I would not be shocked if Trump greenlighted South Korea building nuclear weapons — he might even encourage such a move out in the open for a lot of reasons," Kazianis said. "He could be of the mindset that it's unfair for North Korea to have these weapons and not South Korea."..
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,387
    .

    The Democrats may have lost the popular vote in a Presidential election for only the second time since the end of the Cold War. Against Trump.

    The defeat is notable historically not principally because of its scale, but because of who the defeat was against.
    The Tories had their worst defeat here since 1761. Saying the Dems had their tied worst result since the end of the Cold War does not remotely compare. {Given the US didn’t exist in 1761, no US electoral record can match the Tories’ failure!}

    The defeat was against Trump, who beat the Dems in 2016 and wasn’t very far behind them in 2020. He is an awful person, but he’s clearly a popular candidate with the US electorate.
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560

    .

    The Tories had their worst defeat here since 1761. Saying the Dems had their tied worst result since the end of the Cold War does not remotely compare. {Given the US didn’t exist in 1761, no US electoral record can match the Tories’ failure!}

    The defeat was against Trump, who beat the Dems in 2016 and wasn’t very far behind them in 2020. He is an awful person, but he’s clearly a popular candidate with the US electorate.
    That last phrase alone is a massive indictment of the entire Democratic Party.
  • You are not being very magnanimous in victory William. Those should be her last defiant words as she faces Trump's firing squad.

    I thought she was a revelation during the campaign. It's just a pity she couldn't change the minds of 5% more voters in the rust belt. They chose instead to vote for a seditious felon.

    I knew PB was a right wing melting pot, but I didn't expect as many previously shy Trumpeters to fall out of the furniture to the extent they have.

    This place is getting far too extreme for a centrist dad.

    Trump is a convicted felon, an adjudicated rapist and stole state secrets, and you are all convinced Harris was the worst candidate. What's wrong with you all?
    It's perfectly possible to hate Trump as an individual and as a politician but still to say, as a matter of political analysis, he was the more capable candidate. That second point doesn't mean someone would vote for him had they the chance (or did, if they did); just that he ran the better campaign, his being convicted half way through notwithstanding. That doesn't mean you have to like his campaign or agree with it.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    I think she missed a trick in the concession speech. She might have said that if you can take one lesson from this election is that you can bounce back from defeat and win next time. So we lost today, but tomorrow we’re going to win.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022
    Foxy said:

    No, there are a fair few Trump supporters here, and William is at least consistent as he supported Trump in 2016 too.

    Some of them think that Trump wont shaft Ukraine, others don't care. Well, it looks like we will find out shortly.

    @MexicanPete is right though, and its time for this Centrist Dad to have a bit of a digital detox. Its not as if there are any big elections for a while.
    Beyond William I am genuinely struggling to think of pro Trumpers.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,619
    Assuming that the USA is still a democracy in 4 year's time, and that a presidential election will be held, the Dems have a couple of years to get themselves organised with a candidate who can appeal to enough voters in the right places.

    Not another California liberal. Another Joe Biden, but half the age. Someone who does get the voters of Allentown to get out and vote.

    Otherwise it is President Vance.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,225

    Golfers are men with tiny balls.

    FACT.
    But pétanque players have balls of steel.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,387

    Anything about listening to the electorate about where they went wrong?
    In the UK, a party leader losing an election is still a party leader, so it’s important for them to steer the party towards doing that.

    But this is the US. Harris is not the party leader. She’s not going to be the candidate again. She’s instantly demoted. Leadership of the party is much more nebulous in the US, but it’s the new Governors and Senators that need to be answering your question.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,579
    edited November 2024

    Assuming that the USA is still a democracy in 4 year's time, and that a presidential election will be held, the Dems have a couple of years to get themselves organised with a candidate who can appeal to enough voters in the right places.

    Not another California liberal. Another Joe Biden, but half the age. Someone who does get the voters of Allentown to get out and vote.

    Otherwise it is President Vance.

    I suspect who wins in 2028 will depend far more on the state of the economy then than who the Democrat candidate is.

    After all Obama was a Chicago liberal but won a landslide in 2008 as the economy was so poor.
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173
    biggles said:

    On one level no, it’s not my country and not my business. But on an another level, as someone who thinks the world needs a non-Trumpite USA in 4 years, the Democrats need to be bigger and better than Trump was.
    Why? Yank voters clearly don't care about decorum. They've only just taken a good look at the pussy grabber in chief and said "yeah, we really like this."

    The beaten Democrats don't need some kind of heir to Obama orator with inspirational ideas for bringing the nation together and healing divisions, etc, etc. They need a complete ignoramus armed with a bible, an assault rifle and a potty mouth. The quest begins now.
  • I'm not a Trumpist, but.I do have to admit that I personally think his approach to Ukraine may be less physically dangerous, for all of us.
    On the other hand, he's a definite danger to democracy for all of us, too.
    We don’t know what his approach will be, he may not even know until whatever his functioning synapses tell him when he re-enters the White House.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,619
    HYUFD said:

    This may be peak GOP though, for Trump can never be on the ballot again.

    Yet Trump for all his faults is after this result (even bigger an EC win than his 2016 win and he also won the popular vote) the party's biggest vote winner since Reagan, as the Tories found once they got rid of their big charismatic vote winner Boris it has been all downhill from there.

    We also can't be sure what the legacy of Trump's tariffs will be longer term for the economy and his party
    I agree that there is now a challenge for the GOP - where do they go from here? Has Trump parasitised the party to such an extent that they have nothing left to offer after him?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,950

    It's perfectly possible to hate Trump as an individual and as a politician but still to say, as a matter of political analysis, he was the more capable candidate. That second point doesn't mean someone would vote for him had they the chance (or did, if they did); just that he ran the better campaign, his being convicted half way through notwithstanding. That doesn't mean you have to like his campaign or agree with it.
    Absurdly his personal campaign was shocking too. Kamala equipped herself very well

    I suspect the reality is the promise of cheap gasoline was more important than clarity of mind, a rape adjudication, felony convictions, sedition and the theft of state secrets.
  • HYUFD said:

    Only in the sense he might try and hand half Ukraine on a plate to Putin and you don't try and feed a wolf to calm it
    "And understand, you don't negotiate with a tiger! You admire a tiger until he turns on you and you feel its true f*cking nature!"
  • tysontyson Posts: 6,121

    Imagine if Trump was standing there saying I don't have to be loyal to the president or the parliament, only god and country, and I will continue to fight, fight, fight.....and i will fight...and fight...and fight...you must fight...every 3rd word.
    Seriously?? You fucking right wingers....4 Years ago Trump organised a riot on Capital Hill....and undermined democracy...but jog on comrade..please do have a go at Kamala at her attempt at her concession speech...
  • Beyond William I am genuinely struggling to think of pro Trumpers.
    Yep. @leon sometimes want a Trump win for the laughs seeing bleedin' heart liberals crying onto their Springstein LPs but other than that...
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814

    Trump is to Putin as Chamberlain is to Hitler. Peace in our time!
    Zelensky’s interview slating Biden last week has cut through to a lot of people, not just me. Ukrainian Vlogger Denys Davidov for example, while saying he’d have voted for Kamala, he seems surprisingly positive about what might be possible under Trump. Shipman has an unattributed source saying trump is likely to pass one more big military aid package for Ukraine. Etc…
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 8,976

    Absurdly his personal campaign was shocking too. Kamala equipped herself very well

    I suspect the reality is the promise of cheap gasoline was more important than clarity of mind, a rape adjudication, felony convictions, sedition and the theft of state secrets.
    acquitted, I think, though I haven't studied her outfits closely so you may be right

  • FossFoss Posts: 1,350
    John Nott - Secretary of State for Defence during the Falklands - has died. Before my time, but he had an interesting history.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,579
    pigeon said:

    Why? Yank voters clearly don't care about decorum. They've only just taken a good look at the pussy grabber in chief and said "yeah, we really like this."

    The beaten Democrats don't need some kind of heir to Obama orator with inspirational ideas for bringing the nation together and healing divisions, etc, etc. They need a complete ignoramus armed with a bible, an assault rifle and a potty mouth. The quest begins now.
    They don't, as it is independent swing voters and suburban voters who still decide elections (Trump has narrowly won Independent and suburban voters). Rural hillbillies will always vote GOP regardless
  • Trump is to Putin as Chamberlain is to Hitler. Peace in our time!
    I would personally have soms concerns, as I've mentioned before hete on PB, that the Putin/Hitler equation could have some ahistorical aspects.

    There are all the familiar arguments we've rehearsed on what or not separates Putin from a figure like Hitler, but I think the more pressing debate may he elsewhere.

    Hitler didn't face a nucleae-armed alliance on the next country along, which returns us to the issues of Nato, and whether a European defence pact could replace it if need be. This is a littie more distinct from the question of Ukraine itself, and the possibllity of nuclear escalation by us intervening more directly there, than is often suggested on PB, because the.inavoidabe fsct remains that Ukraine is not in NATO.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,619
    HYUFD said:

    I suspect who wins in 2028 will depend far more on the state of the economy then than who the Democrat candidate is.

    After all Obama was a Chicago liberal but won a landslide in 2008 as the economy was so poor.
    Obama was a class act. He still is. He inspired people not just to vote for him, but to put a shift in to help him to get elected. I put a shift in during a spare Saturday in the US. And Chicago has more cred than California.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,387
    .

    Beyond William I am genuinely struggling to think of pro Trumpers.
    Our resident racist is the obvious other one.
  • *Unavoidable", that should be, and apologies for other typos.
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 8,976
    Foss said:

    John Nott - Secretary of State for Defence during the Falklands - has died. Before my time, but he had an interesting history.

    walking out of a Robin Day interview was a highlight

  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173
    HYUFD said:

    They don't, as it is independent swing voters and suburban voters who still decide elections (Trump has narrowly won Independent and suburban voters). Rural hillbillies will always vote GOP regardless
    Yep, independent and swing voters who clearly liked what they saw.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,950
    tyson said:

    Seriously?? You fucking right wingers....4 Years ago Trump organised a riot on Capital Hill....and undermined democracy...but jog on comrade..please do have a go at Kamala at her attempt at her concession speech...
    It's been an eye opener. The smugness of the critique on Kamala and the free ride for Trump has been disappointing.
  • Just Arizona and Nevada left to be called. Alaska called for Trump.

    Now 295 EVs against 226 for Harris.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,308

    Absurdly his personal campaign was shocking too. Kamala equipped herself very well

    I suspect the reality is the promise of cheap gasoline was more important than clarity of mind, a rape adjudication, felony convictions, sedition and the theft of state secrets.

    He said he'd halve energy costs and end inflation. How the hell you end inflation in a free market economy is completely beyond me, and even pondering how it might be done in a dictatorship sounds like a recipe for disaster.

    Frankly Trump might as well have promised to make every American a millionaire.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,131
    edited November 2024
    tyson said:

    Seriously?? You fucking right wingers....4 Years ago Trump organised a riot on Capital Hill....and undermined democracy...but jog on comrade..please do have a go at Kamala at her attempt at her concession speech...
    I am by no means a supporter of Trump. I literally have 100s (maybe 1000s) of posts saying how absolutely unsuitable he is for office and why...but fucking left wingers....insert rant.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,131
    edited November 2024
    glw said:

    He said he'd halve energy costs and end inflation. How the hell you end inflation in a free market economy is completely beyond me, and even pondering how it might be done in a dictatorship sounds like a recipe for disaster.

    Frankly Trump might as well have promised to make every American a millionaire.
    It was impossible to keep up with what Trump was promising. Are all tips and overtime still going to be tax free. Or it is that all federal taxes are gone, replaced by tariffs. I guess it depends if it is a Tuesday or a Wednesday....
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,579
    edited November 2024

    Obama was a class act. He still is. He inspired people not just to vote for him, but to put a shift in to help him to get elected. I put a shift in during a spare Saturday in the US. And Chicago has more cred than California.
    McCain was ahead of Obama in some polls before the 2008 crash.

    If you look at recent changes of party in the White House, 2024, 2020, 2016, 2008, 2000, 1992 and 1980 in most of those election years the economy was in recession or not growing strongly and/or inflation and cost of living was high.

    The 2 exceptions were 2016 and 2000 and in both of those the incumbent VP still won the popular vote and in 2000 nearly won Florida and the EC
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