Breakfast Links/Open Thread, 11/5/17
If you read only one story today about the Democratic Party civil war, make it this essay by Andrew O’Hehir of Salon. He is firmly in the Jason330 School of finding the Democrats lost, hopeless and likely to blow the ’18 midterms, but I agree with him that this split is not about Hillary and Bernie, and that both sides in the fight hold unrealistic ideas about the party’s future path.
In recent polling a majority of white people said whites are discriminated against. A black writer talked to several white people to try to determine why. Summation of his findings: White people are strange and confusing. I can’t disagree.
The Caddyshack view, that golf courses and cemeteries are the biggest wastes of prime real estate, never stops being true. The owners of the former Three Little Bakers course in Pike Creek have launched a new assault on the deed restrictions that keep the land open. Lex Wilson of the News Journal has the details.
I try to ignore the daily crop of Trump hypocrisy stories because they’re so numerous and ultimately not important. But this one stands out: Trump is hiring 70 foreign workers because hey, watch this drive.
There’s more out there. Add anything you find interesting, but seriously, read that O’Hehir piece.
Alby is right about that Salon article by O’Hehir. There can’t be Democratic Party unity, because for all intents and purposes, there is no Democratic Party.
So it was nothing by itself. Rather all of the above. Lingchi. And so here the party is, with 2018 looming and most of its factions continue to play “my way or the highway.” Gone are the grand coalitions (even if in name only). Now it’s tear it down and start all over as if that is a realistic option.
2018 is here and the only apparent leader of the party is not even a registered Democrat. When it’s time to pull the lever next year, all you have is the anti-Trump meme. Honestly, it’s pretty depressing and I’m not even a Democrat.
I’ve been thinking that for the first time in my life, I’ll just stay home, but then I realize I have to vote for Carper to avoid any more losses in the Senate. But, then I think, what’s the point?
The energy around Bernie is around his platform, not Bernie. Elizabeth Warren attracts the same enthusiasm, but for some reason her public approval rating is not nearly so high as his.
The only way forward that doesn’t involve going back to ground zero is convincing the old guard that they must embrace the more progressive path. Sadly, they just don’t have it in them. They loves them the sweet life that corporate cash brings. A lot of Republicans make the cash first, then go into politics. Democrats tend rather to go into politics to make the cash.
Wbo do you guys consider the best examples of “old guard” Democrats, besides the Clintons?
Carper.
And Ed Freel. Freel is the guy who decided who the D’s would prioritize through the coordinated campaign. If you were progressive, you weren’t prioritized.
In fact, what bothers me most about the Carper takeover of the Delaware Democratic Party isn’t so much that it meant the Third Way domination of the Party, but rather that candidates who did not fit that mold were routinely dismissed by the self-described adults.
In addition, Carper and Freel created John Carney and Sean Barney, neither of whom would ever have had political careers were it not for Carper and Freel foisting them upon us.