I think you overestimate the size of Harris base (which I would say are far left progressives). I don't think them not showing up to vote was the big problem. We'll have to wait for the total popular vote totals to settle to gain more insight into this.
You're doing the standard US conservative thing where you label anyone left of Ronald Reagan "far left" -- it's used as a branding strategy moreso than a legitimate critique of the opposing side's policies, mostly meant as a means of scaring moderate liberals. They've done this since the 80s where they repeat "far left radical" ad nauseum, to where it eventually becomes automatically associated with any sort of Liberal politician. True far left progressives weren't thrilled with Harris, and are the group often most disillusioned with the Democratic party.
That said, there really is no true leftist movement in the US that holds any degree political power at any level. The Overton window in this country is just so far skewed to the Right, that what would otherwise be considered center to center-left (at absolute best) politicians are labeled as "rAdICaL lEfT LiBruHs" ad nauseum by our corporate owned media structure here. The truth is, Liberals would rather try to reign in and negotiate in good-faith with fascists than Leftists, because at the end of the day, fascists seek to maintain the capitalistic power structure.
While you, and progressives like you, are opposed to what you consider 'diet Republican' policies, the alternative is MAGA Republican policies. I would use the term centrist policies rather than diet Republican, and I think they make a lot of sense. I think you would win elections by implementing them and you will lose elections by doubling down on what doesn't work.
Missouri voters approve $15 minimum wage, paid sick leave
Florida $15 minimum ballot initiative passes
Voters in Kansas decide to keep abortion legal in the state, rejecting an amendment
I'd like to know how you arrive at this conclusion, considering, even in red states, when offered progressive policies through ballot initiatives, progressive policies win almost every time. When not framed within the context of any particular party, progressive policies poll extremely well. As linked above, deep red Missouri, despite voting overwhelming for Trump, also managed to pass a ballot initiative for a $15 dollar minimum wage -- Florida passed one a years ago, and Ohio has one on the ballot for 2025. Florida also would've passed a ballot initiative for marijuana legalization if they wouldn't have shot themselves in the foot prior, making any future ballot initiative require a 60% threshold to pass -- it got 57% favorability.
I asked you a question in another thread, on this same topic, that you never gave me an answer on: Besides Bill Clinton, what other Democrat has won an election pandering to the center/center-right?
Obama in 2008/2012 ran a Left-leaning Populist campaign and won in overwhelming fashion both times.
Biden ran on a $15 dollar minimum wage, a public option, and $2,000 stimulus checks, and won the most votes for a US president ever in this country's history.
Clinton pandered to the center/right-wingers and lost.
Kamala was at her most popular when she initially came out of the gate running to her left, but and if you go back and track the polling, she lost steam when she started reigning that in and decided to appeal to moderates/never-trump Republicans and palling around with Liz and Dick Cheney.
I cannot understand how anyone can look at the current state of affairs, where every incumbent government in the western world was overwhelming voted out, besides one country: Mexico. You know what incumbent party won in the recent Mexico 2024 election? Their left-wing populist party, the MORENA, which maintained power. Trudeau in Canada is the next domino to fall, by the way.
Please tell me these centrist policies that everyone is clamoring for?
This election seemed to be a who do you like less question. Harris or Trump? Even I thought Trump's craziness would make most voters hold their nose and vote for the unpalatable Harris, but that was not the case.
Eh. I think the Right is making too many self-serving extrapolations from this election. I don't think the result of this election is some big social commentary or some big referendum on "wokeism" or anything like that. This election, like all the other ones in the last few years, have been referendums on the incumbent parties who inherited the post-COVID economic fallout. The Biden Administration did some good things for unions and was overall one of the most pro-worker administrations we've seen in a long time, but wasn't consequential enough to where people could really
feel the changes in such turbulent economic times. In normal conditions, without inflation/supply chain issues, the Biden Administration most likely wins reelection.
As an aside, I do think it is absolutely chicken shit of the Teamsters president (
Biden releasing nearly $36B to aid pensions of union workers) to have their pensions saved single-handedly by the Democrat party, then go to the RNC and try to pull some both sides bullshit. What incentive does the Democrat party have to ever look out for unions in a material way again, when you have stuff like that going on. Union workers are some of the most perplexing people -- They enjoy the perks of being a union worker that the Democrats have almost exclusively sought to protect, but then they overwhelmingly vote for Republicans who seek to erode any semblance of worker's rights and collective bargaining we have in this country.
Upset about Gaza? Nobody talks about how Trump instigated the tensions that led up to October 7th attack by recognizing Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and moving the US capital there, at the behest of Sheldon Adelson, who donated $100 million to a Republican SuperPac.