Author Topic: 2024  (Read 171148 times)

Body-by-Guinness

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Proliferating Poll-lution in IA
« Reply #1950 on: November 09, 2024, 02:04:45 AM »
Speaking of missing by that much, here’s some wholly inadequate reflection on that pre-election Iowa poll that spun a lot of folks up as it seemed to presage a Harris landslide. There’s a Maddows clip herein displaying an unconcealed on-air onanistic glee that is retrospective comedy gold:

https://legalinsurrection.com/2024/11/pollster-behind-massively-botched-iowa-poll-showing-kamala-leading-deflects-blame/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=pollster-behind-massively-botched-iowa-poll-showing-kamala-leading-deflects-blame

Body-by-Guinness

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More Post-Election Polling Misdirection
« Reply #1951 on: November 09, 2024, 05:55:57 AM »
More poll equivocation, this time explaining (select) polls were close enough to the margin that even though they were all wrong in the same way they were in aggregate, right. Almost.

My favorite bit of misdirection is, that as the Electoral College is an all or nothing affair, if those blue wall state votes were instead awarded proportionally the results were as close as predicted. Sure thing, bud, and if the electoral votes in CA, NY, IL, etc. were awarded proportionally too, would your polling still prove close?

I suspect within all this equivocation lives the groundwork for the next set of election year polling prevarication; perhaps untangling it now will make the next application of smoke and mirrors easier to see past:

Were the polls wrong about Trump again?
The Hill News / by Jared Gans / Nov 9, 2024 at 6:27 AM

Donald Trump outperformed expectations for his third straight presidential election, which will surely raise more questions about pollsters’ ability to gauge where elections stand.

Trump pulled off a sweep of the main battleground states over Vice President Harris in the election Tuesday, and appears set to win the popular vote even as polls showed a neck-and-neck race throughout much of the campaign. He also made considerable inroads in comfortably blue states, losing some of them by smaller margins that Republicans have previously.

The results are another drop in the bucket for how the Trump era has rocked faith in the polling industry.

Still, pollsters maintained that the outcome the election produced was within what the polls suggested was possible.

“The margin gets amplified because it’s an all-or-nothing Electoral College. If we had a proportional Electoral College, then it would probably reflect it,” said David Paleologos, the director of the Suffolk University Political Research Center.

“It would be closer, but because it’s an all-or-nothing Electoral College, a half point win in a big state with a lot of electoral votes is going to give the illusion of a much bigger margin,” he continued, a reference to Trump’s 312-226 win in the electoral vote.

Compared to the past two elections, the final polling averages in the key states weren’t too far off.

Polling seemed to be closest to accurate in the three “blue wall” states of Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin, states that if Harris had won would have given her the presidency. The final averages from Decision Desk HQ/The Hill had Trump ahead by a few tenths of a point in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin and Harris about the same amount ahead in Michigan.

Votes are still being tabulated, but Trump’s margins in these states were actually quite close. He is currently ahead in Pennsylvania by 2, Michigan by 1.5 and Wisconsin by 1.

While Georgia and North Carolina were called for Trump first among the battlegrounds, Trump ended up winning them narrowly. He leads in Georgia by about 2 points; DDHQ/The Hill had him ahead by 1.7 in the final average, and FiveThirtyEight had him leading by about 1.

Trump’s over-performance in North Carolina and Nevada was a bit more — but only slightly. He currently leads both by just over 3 points, just over the roughly 1.5-point margin from DDHQ in each, but still within a normal margin of error.

Arizona appears to be the biggest difference, with a 6-point Trump lead compared to the DDHQ average of 2.5 and FiveThirtyEight average of 2.1.

Jim Lee, the president and CEO of Susquehanna Polling & Research, said pollsters weren’t “perfect” but did a “pretty good job” capturing that the race was close with a slight edge to Trump. He pointed to RealClearPolitics showing Trump ahead in the average for five of the seven states.

Going into this cycle, pollsters were well aware of the challenge facing them after the last two elections. Trump’s political career had been marked by outperforming polling and even more so public expectations.

In 2016, it carried him to an upset win for the presidency over Hillary Clinton. In 2020, when the polling error was even larger than four years prior, he fell short of reelection but made the race much more of a nail-bitter than most observers expected.

Pollsters adjusted their methods, as they often do from cycle to cycle, to avoid their past misses. They began to weigh more widely on educational background, which has become increasingly an indicator of how people vote, and worked to better reach certain voters they were struggling to fully take into account in polls.

But they said in advance of Election Day that only waiting for the results would allow them to know if the changes they made were successful. At the same time, they emphasized that with the close race that the polls found, a small error could cause a more comfortable win for one candidate.

Lee said he was surprised to see Trump take all seven battlegrounds but believes pollsters did well correcting for the past issues. But even as analysts said either candidate could slightly outperform and pull off a sweep, Trump was the one who did so.

“Trump, being Trump, over-performed all the polling,” Lee said. “If you look at his actual Election Day margins in all the seven battlegrounds, it was bigger than the average lead he had in those states. So Trump did it again.”

Pollster Nate Silver called the results a “perfect demonstration of correlated polling error.” He said in a newsletter on Thursday that Trump’s sweep of the seven swing states was the most common simulation in his model, happening 20 percent of the time, because polling errors tend to be correlated and Trump was leading, albeit slightly, in five of the states.

A Harris sweep was the next-most common scenario in the simulations.

“When polls miss low on Trump in one key state, they probably also will in most or all of the others,” Silver wrote.

On the nationwide level, the polling average had closed to Trump and Harris being essentially tied by Election Day. Trump is currently winning the popular vote by about 2 points.

Still, polling saw some notable misses that if more accurate could have more directly pointed to Trump’s win.

The final Des Moines Register poll of Iowa from revered pollster J. Ann Selzer right before the election showed Harris ahead by 3 points. The poll was seen as a likely outlier at the time — but even so, its miss is notable: Trump ended up winning the state by 13 points.

Selzer said after the election that she’s reviewing the data to find out where the poll went wrong.

Pollsters said they were surprised by the major improvement Trump had among many key demographics, like Latino and young voters.

Some polls had shown Harris with double-digit leads among Latinos, but she only won the group by 8 points, according to exit polls. Some polls showed Harris with the traditional Democratic dominance among young voters, but she only won among 18-to-29-year-olds by barely 10 points.

John Cluverius, the assistant director of the Center for Public Opinion at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, said pollsters still have work to do to improve their methods, especially facing the constraints of the rising costs of conducting polls and the difficulty of getting people to participate.

He said pollsters particularly had trouble reaching young voters for polls.

“I think that is always a struggle for pollsters in being able to get a large enough sample in a narrow enough time and so there may be changes that opinion polls are just going to continue to struggle to make,” Cluverius said. “I just think that it's too early to tell if there is a lesson that could be applied to future elections.”

Democratic pollster Celinda Lake pointed to an ongoing difficulty to determine what turnout is going to be in polls.

In general, pollsters can ask which candidate a voter prefers and if they plan to vote and determine how likely they are to vote based on their background and voting history, but they can’t guarantee if someone will vote.

“What we saw was a surge in turnout of Trump voters beyond what we had expected and less of a turnout on our side than we had expected,” Lake said.

Cluverius said as pollsters continue to analyze their methodologies, they need to be transparent and talk to people directly if they have questions.

“The more we are humble about the fact that we are pretty good but not perfect at measuring the attitudes of the public, and we are certainly better than every other method that’s been tested, that I think is the space we have to operate in,” he said.

Caroline Vakil contributed.

https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/4981697-trump-polls-outperforms-harris/

objectivist1

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Re: 2024
« Reply #1952 on: November 09, 2024, 06:56:51 AM »
Everyone in D.C. who was wrong about this election is working overtime to save their jobs and the Democrat consultants and lobbyists  are at the top of that list. They are ripping each other apart, which is fine with me. All the internecine fighting just leaves less time for them to interfere with Trump's agenda. I must say that I'm enjoying watching it. The establishment media, meanwhile, appears to have learned nothing, as they continue to vilify the voters and insult every minority group who voted for Trump. No introspection whatsoever. Not exactly a good way to regain the trust of viewers. Their credibility, as shown by the election results, is now a pile of smoking rubble, and they're too arrogant to look in the mirror.
"You have enemies?  Good.  That means that you have stood up for something, sometime in your life." - Winston Churchill.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: 2024
« Reply #1953 on: November 10, 2024, 05:02:57 AM »
YAY!

ccp

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Muslims helped Trump more than Jews
« Reply #1954 on: November 10, 2024, 06:20:46 AM »
Looks  like Many Muslims stayed home but some did actually vote for Trump

Jews, Trump maybe peeled off up 5 to 10 % .  Helpful but I knew most Jews will cling to their party and their self-perceived righteousness:

ttps://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/trump-clinched-a-higher-percentage-of-muslim-voters-compared-to-jewish-voters-in-recent-election/ar-AA1tKYcX?ocid=BingNewsSerp
« Last Edit: November 10, 2024, 06:38:40 AM by ccp »

Crafty_Dog

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Re: 2024
« Reply #1955 on: November 10, 2024, 08:12:49 AM »
That last one is not going through for me.

Crafty_Dog

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ccp

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Re: 2024
« Reply #1957 on: November 11, 2024, 07:15:44 AM »
More than Brock !

Clinton never had over 50% !


ccp

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demographic breakdown
« Reply #1958 on: November 12, 2024, 06:30:04 AM »
I am still trying to figure out who each group voted

Trump made inroads on Blacks by small amount mostly young male blacks.

He did make good inroads with Hispanics.

Women I think he did better than in '20.

over 65 group split even

Jews - I am not sure - one exit poll showed about 2 /3 voted for Harris and another one - I think the one O'Reilly mentioned on recent broadcast that 78% voted Democrat - giving him the stated conclusion Jews vote more on ideology then concern for Israel (no surprise to me at all).  I still believe you would need to chain the Jews to a high horse powered tractor plus using crowbars to pry them off the Democrat Party ticket.

I cannot find more recent better numbers then this and most are from 5 or more days ago.

I just don't know how accurate these numbers are.

But if Trump can deliver the next Rep nominee should if careful do even better.


Crafty_Dog

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The Jewish Vote
« Reply #1959 on: November 12, 2024, 08:18:22 AM »


Trump Won Jewish Neighborhoods Across America
The real facts about how Jews voted in 2024.
November 12, 2024 by Daniel Greenfield

[Want even more content from FPM? Sign up for FPM+ to unlock exclusive series, virtual town-halls with our authors, and more—now for just $3.99/month. Click here to sign up.]

Trump won the largest Jewish county in the country, the only entirely Jewish town and village, and some of the densest, fastest growing and most Jewish neighborhoods in America.

Borough Park, Brooklyn is the densest Jewish neighborhood in the country. Its two square miles contain nearly 100,000 Jewish people in 23,000 households. 83% are married and only 2% are divorced. 96% are members of synagogues. This was where large crowds protested pandemic lockdowns, tearing down playground fences and burning masks.

Trump won over 90% of the vote in most Borough Park districts. On 14th Avenue and Rabbi Weissmandl Way, Trump won 96% of the vote in one very Jewish district.

In Chicago’s West Rogers Park, a Muslim terrorist shot a Jewish man who was walking to the synagogue on the Sabbath, and then did battle with police while shouting, “Allahu Akbar”.

Trump won the more Orthodox areas of West Rogers Park, which Chicago Magazine described as, “a world of synagogues, kosher bakeries, and Hebrew bookstores” by over 70%.

A pro-terrorist mob descended on the Pico-Robertson community in Los Angeles, and assaulted Jewish community members outside the Adas Torah synagogue while the police did nothing.

Trump won the Pico Robertson community. He also won the adjoining communities of Beverly Hills and the Orthodox Jewish community in the Fairfax area near the Holocaust museum, and which had suffered a BLM pogrom that vandalized synagogues and businesses in 2020. Down in the valley, he also won Valley Village as well as some Jewish areas in Encino and Tarzana.

In Surfside, the most ‘Jewish community’ of the Miami area, where Jews make up a third of the population, Trump won 61% of the vote. In Aventura, Miami, a melting pot of Jews from Latin America, the former USSR and the Middle East, where the majority of the population is Jewish, Trump won 59% of the vote.

These snapshots of some of the densest Jewish communities in the country, in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and Florida, show how Jews actually voted on Election Day.

Despite the push polls from liberal Jewish organizations and dubious exit polls, actual precinct data from the largest Jewish neighborhoods in the country shows Jews voted for Trump.

Precinct data, unlike polls, don’t represent some statistical cross-section of the population and can’t be biased, they show how actual Jewish communities voted in a truly objective way.

Closer breakdowns in New York and New Jersey show in depth the impact of the Trump vote in the most Jewish neighborhoods and areas in cities and states.

In Brooklyn, in Crown Heights, the home of the Lubavitch chassidic movement which Trump visited before the election, the area shines bright red amid a seat of blue from the surrounding hipster and black communities. Trump won 74% of the vote in Crown Heights South.

A red beach on the map of Brooklyn represents the chassidic communities of South Williamsburg where Trump won an average of 90% of the vote. Midwood, home to tens of thousands of more Orthodox (but not Chassidic) Jews is another bright stretch of red with Trump winning 90% or more of the votes in many precincts.

In the Syrian Jewish enclaves of Gravesend, Trump won between 85% to 91% of the vote.

But it’s not just religious Jews.

Trump won over 70% of the vote in the Brighton Beach enclave founded by Russian Jews. Queens, home to a large population of older working class Jewish retirees and Russian immigrants (along with working class Irish and Italians of another era) is almost all red.

Trump won some Kew Garden Hills, Queens precincts by over 80%. The New York Times wrote that Kew Garden Hills “supports one of the biggest Orthodox Jewish communities in New York City.”

Moving outside the city and further upstate, in the chassidic town of Palm Tree, NY, Trump won 98% of the vote, by 7489-122 and in the village of New Square, which is also all chassidic, Trump won 3,456 votes to 12 votes for Kamala.

In the larger Rockland County, NY, which has the largest Jewish population of any county in the country at 31%, Trump won a majority of the vote.

While Bruce Springsteen came out of Monmouth County, NJ and campaigned for Kamala, the area is home to the third largest concentration of Jews in the state, it’s also one of the most populated and fastest growing Jewish communities, and Trump won it.

Monmouth County includes the Syrian Jewish area of Deal where Trump held a fundraiser.

Trump won Ocean County and Passaic County, NJ even more decisively 67% to 31%. In Ocean County’s Lakewood township, where Jews make up 2 out of 3 residents, Trump won 99% of the vote. In Bergen County’s somewhat more liberal Teaneck Modern Orthodox Jewish precincts, Trump won 71% of the vote.

While Democrats and the media will go on peddling their own push poll and surveys which will claim that the vast majority of Jews are Democrats (and some will go on believing them), the hard data from election precincts shows very clearly how Jewish neighborhoods voted.

Trump won Jewish neighborhoods across America. These communities are diverse, representing Middle Eastern, Latin American, Russian and Orthodox Jews. Many of these communities do not show up in polls and surveys which capture only a very conventional liberal demographic of third generation Eastern European and German descended Reform Jews.

Democrats, liberal Jewish groups and the media ignore some of the largest and fastest growing Jewish communities in America because they don’t fit the liberal suburban ‘Temple’ template.

The Trump campaign did not make that same mistake and won them.

Pro-Trump Jewish communities can be ignored in polls and surveys, but they can’t be ignored on Election Day. And the most Jewish neighborhoods in America voted for Trump.

Crafty_Dog

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Happy Brit
« Reply #1960 on: November 12, 2024, 06:47:44 PM »



Body-by-Guinness

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Scotched Selzer
« Reply #1963 on: November 17, 2024, 10:15:24 AM »
Face it: polling, particularly the polling used by the MSM, and especially the polling they then release ostensibly as a story that actually serves to energize, depress, or both this base or that, ha been weaponized. Perhaps it deserves a thread of its own, though it’ll likely only come into play every couple years:

Disgraced Pollster Ann Selzer Retires After Iowa Poll Miss

MATT MARGOLIS
NOV 17, 2024
ann selzer alt.png
Famed pollster Ann Selzer is retiring from her role at the Des Moines Register’s iconic Iowa Poll following her major miss in the 2024 election. The poll's reputation for being accurate was left in shambles following the release of a poll showing Kamala Harris up three points in the state.

"Kamala Harris now leads Donald Trump in Iowa—a startling reversal for Democrats and Republicans who have all but written off the state’s presidential contest as a certain Trump victory," the Des Moines Register reported mere days after the election. "A new Des Moines Register/Mediacom Iowa Poll shows Vice President Harris leading former President Trump 47% to 44% among likely voters just days before a high-stakes election that appears deadlocked in key battleground states."

The poll fueled speculation about a potential upset in the 2024 presidential election; not only did it contradict other polls from different pollsters showing Trump comfortably ahead, it contradicted Selzer's previous polls showing Trump up double digits.

The poll’s findings gave Democrats a late burst of optimism and led them to the belief that Kamala Harris was going to win the election in a landslide.

Trump won Iowa by thirteen points, and swept all of the battleground states.

"Literally the first comment I saw on Twitter after her Harris +3 poll was someone saying it was time for her to retire," Mark Mitchell, the head pollster at Rasmussen Reports told me in response to the news. "The only question now, is did she just buy a lake house?"

Rasmussen Reports was among the most accurate pollsters of the 2024 election.

According to Kristin Roberts, the chief content officer for Gannett Media, the parent company of the Des Moines Register, told CNN that the Iowa Poll will “evolve as we find new ways to accurately capture public sentiment and the pulse of Iowans on state and national issues.”

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“Our mission is to provide trusted news and content to our readers and the public,” Roberts said in a statement. “We did not deliver on that promise when we shared results of the last Des Moines Register Iowa Poll, which did not accurately capture the outcome of the presidential election.”

Since its founding in 1943, the Iowa Poll has offered insight into how voters in the state intend to cast their ballots. Selzer began working on the poll in 1987 as a staffer for the Register before founding her own firm, Selzer & Co. of West Des Moines, which has conducted the poll on a contract basis since 1997.

Prior to the 2024 survey, the Iowa Poll under her stewardship had been considered by many to be the methodological gold standard. In the six other presidential elections Selzer has overseen, the poll has only missed the winner once (finding Democrat John Kerry up 5 points ahead of the 2004 election, when Republican George W. Bush ultimately won the state by less than a point), and its largest previous error on the margin came in 2008, when the final poll before the election found Barack Obama ahead by 17 points, significantly larger than his eventual 10-point win. As of June 2024, election forecaster Nate Silver gave Selzer an A+ rating.

Selzer claims that her decision to retire was made well before the terrible poll in an op-ed in the Des Moines Register.

Public opinion polling has been my life’s work. I collected my first research data as a freshman in college, if you don’t count a neighborhood poll I did at age 5. I’ve always been fascinated with what a person could learn from a scientific sample of a meaningful universe.

Beyond election polls, my favorite projects were helping clients learn something they did not know to help them evaluate options for their companies, institutions or causes. That work may well continue, but I knew a few years ago that the election polling part of my career was headed to a close.

Over a year ago I advised the Register I would not renew when my 2024 contract expired with the latest election poll as I transition to other ventures and opportunities. [emphasis added]

I'd say the same thing if I were her, too.

At the time the poll came out, I noted that “the mother of all suppression polls appears to have just dropped.”

https://www.mattmargolis.com/p/disgraced-pollster-ann-selzer-retires

DougMacG

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Re: 2024
« Reply #1964 on: November 17, 2024, 11:18:58 AM »
Talk about misinformation, disinformation, this is REALLY bad.

https://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/news/politics/iowa-poll/2024/11/02/iowa-poll-kamala-harris-leads-donald-trump-2024-presidential-race/75354033007/

Trump won Iowa by 13.2%.
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2024-elections/iowa-president-results

That's twice the margin Obama won his landslide by in 2008.

Who could have seen THAT coming?

  - Anyone but 'the best pollster in the world'.

There ought to be an election interference investigation. Who paid for that result?

ccp

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Re: 2024
« Reply #1965 on: November 17, 2024, 12:35:23 PM »
"There ought to be an election interference investigation. Who paid for that result?"

good point.  maybe her other endeavors is figuring out how to spend the bribe  :wink:


ccp

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Re: 2024
« Reply #1967 on: November 18, 2024, 07:34:14 AM »
From my post 11/17th:

"There ought to be an election interference investigation. Who paid for that result?"

good point.  maybe her other endeavors is figuring out how to spend the bribe  :wink:

Great minds either think alike or great minds are reading the forum:


https://pjmedia.com/matt-margolis/2024/11/18/ann-selzers-retirement-prompts-trump-call-for-investigation-into-bogus-poll-n4934396

Body-by-Guinness

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74,677,434 Say the Emperor is Nekid
« Reply #1968 on: November 19, 2024, 09:25:11 PM »
Another apt analysis of why the election unfolded as it did:

What Happened at the Polls Last Week?

The Beacon / by William J. Watkins / Nov 19, 2024 at 1:52 PM

This was not 2016 when Donald Trump lost the popular vote but prevailed in the electoral college with 306 votes to Hilary Clinton’s 232. Last week, Trump garnered 74,677,434 votes to Harris’ 71,147,994 votes and won the Electoral College with 312 electoral votes to Harris’ 226. No previous Republican presidential candidate has ever won this many popular votes. All this in the face of a relentless media campaign painting Trump as a fascist, an insurrectionist, and a danger to American democracy. So, what are we to make of the results?

The Public’s Reaction to ‘Lawfare’

Trump has been the target of various federal and state legal actions since he left the White House. New York Attorney General Letitia James successfully obtained a civil verdict against Trump for allegedly inflating the value of properties to get more favorable loan terms with banks. No loan went into default, and no bank found itself holding the bag. No bank went to law enforcement complaining of fraud. This was a zero-loss case that no white-collar prosecutor would have bothered pursuing in the ordinary course. But Trump must pay $355 million plus interest. The case is on appeal.

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office rendered Trump a convicted felon based on a N.Y. recordkeeping law because of the characterization of hush money payments to Stormy Daniels. The Daniels payment was old news, and Bragg spent an enormous sum of money to prosecute Trump for political purposes. The Federal Election Commission (FEC) looked into the payments to Daniels but voted 4-1 to close the investigation. The case was also pursued by the Southern District of New York, but federal prosecutors declined to file charges. Bragg simply wanted to make good on a campaign promise to “get Trump” and did so. The verdict is on appeal.

Special Counsel Jack Smith is prosecuting Trump federally for taking classified documents with him in 2020 when he left the White House. As I have noted in previous posts, Trump brought much of this on himself. Rather than instructing his lawyers to go through all the boxes and turn over all classified documents, Trump (using his valet) relocated some of the boxes. This was not done for nefarious purposes but to give the middle finger to authorities. The public has rejected this document’s prosecution, and Biden should pardon Trump and end the case before Trump takes office.

On the state level, Georgia’s Fani Willis and on the federal level, Jack Smith, have charges related to the 2020 election and Trump’s efforts to challenge the results. As mentioned above, the public has deliberated on these matters and returned Trump to the White House. These prosecutions should be ended (even Willis’ home state voted to return Trump to the White House).

The bottom line on these legal matters is that the people’s verdict is in. Trump’s popularity is no doubt due to citizen revulsion at efforts to use the legal system to harm a political enemy. It is one thing to pursue a political opponent in the media and quite another to resort to the courts. Syracuse’s Gregory L. Germain sums up the matter as follows: “The Democratic Party and its politically motivated government prosecutors also need to reconsider their actions. If the election shows anything, it shows that the public does not like politically motivated prosecutions and impeachments. The argument that Trump was a convicted felon backfired, as the public saw him as a victim of biased and politically motivated prosecutions brought in Democratic strongholds.”

January 6th is not the American Guy Fawkes Day

November 5th is Guy Fawkes Day in Great Britain when the country remembers the Gunpowder Plot of 1605. Fawkes and various Catholic co-conspirators tried to blow up Parliament and kill James I. They were discovered, imprisoned, and put to death. Since the events of January 6, 2021, there has been significant public debate on how it should be viewed and remembered. Some commentators have likened it to historical acts of insurrection. Donald Trump is supposed to be the American Guy Fawkes. No doubt, January 6th was an ugly event, as all riots are. But it was a riot, not an insurrection. It was a one-off event and not evidence of some right-wing conspiracy to destroy the American government. Democrats need to put January 6th in the review mirror and focus on other matters (maybe on why they could not defeat a candidate like Trump, who is replete with faults).

A Shift in the Democratic Party’s Base

Some analysts attribute the Democratic Party’s recent performance to shifts in its coalition towards its more radical periphery. My friend Nick Capaldi, a professor emeritus at Loyola University New Orleans, hits the nail on the head in an email sent to me earlier in the week:

The Democrat Party is now run by cultural Marxists. The latter follow the views of [Antonio] Gramsci. Gramsci argued that the working class will never foment the revolution. Instead, Marxists should engage in a long march through the institutions, the most important of which is the UNIVERSITY (higher education). When forced to choose between the vanguard and the proletariat, the left (following Gramsci) chose the vanguard.

Among this segment, there are only oppressed and oppressors (and anyone who is Caucasian falls into the latter category, whether they are a corporate executive or a janitor). As a coalition of minorities, Democrats have embraced illiberal policies and illiberal cultural values and the habitual demonization of America’s Founding Fathers. In the process, they have traded the working class for the products of American universities run by the likes of Claudine Gay, who had to resign as Harvard’s president over her inability to say that demands for the genocide of Jews (oppressors according to this theory) violated Harvard’s conduct policy.

Hence, exit polls showed that college graduates favored Harris over Trump, 55 to 42 percent, whereas voters without a college degree voted 56 to 42 percent in favor of Trump. Democrats have lost the working class and depend on the brainwashed class. This poses long-term trouble for the Democrats because college admissions are expected to decline significantly in the coming years as more young people enter the workforce without college diplomas. Democrats have marched through the institutions, but more and more citizens are rejecting those radical institutions.

The Mainstream Media Gets Kicked in the Teeth

The mainstream media, as well as traditional political figures and institutions (like Liz Cheney, the neocons, card-carrying Democrats, Urban Radicals, AOC’s camp), were decisively rejected. Although they hold power in the institutions of government, big business, and academia, their messaging failed. And they made it clear: a vote for Trump was a pact with the Devil and the end of America as we know it. But the majority of Americans did not believe them. They recognize that there is a coalition and it is not neutral. This is not the 1970s when Walter Cronkite’s reports were taken as gospel. The people know that supposedly neutral institutions are really partisan institutions. CNN and The New York Times are not industry leaders in journalism but mouthpieces for propaganda. Universities do not teach the great books but oppose the foundations of Western civilization. Multinational corporations have no loyalty to countries or peoples but are happy to endorse policies (DEI, for example) that please those in government and the media. The overwhelming support for Trump is a recognition that these institutions have failed us. In essence, 74,677,434 Americans said that the emperor had no clothes.

Is Everything Roses?

Absolutely not. Trump’s former Attorney General Bill Barr has noted that “If you believe in [Trump’s] policies, what he’s advertising is his policies, he’s the last person who could actually execute them and achieve them.” Americans tired of inflation, uncontrolled illegal immigration, and an imperialist foreign policy have genuine fears that Trump and the Republicans will not deliver. However, in a Harris administration, there would have been zero chance of good outcomes on such matters. Yes, Trump might get distracted by the irrelevant, but at least there is a chance—especially since it appears he has learned lessons about staffing his administration Whereas in his first administration, he leaned on neocon war hawks John Bolton and Nikki Haley to implement an American First foreign policy, this time around Trump is offering positions to Tulsi Gabbard and Mike Walz There is also much hope with Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy slated to lead a new “Department of Government Efficiency.”

Undoubtedly, Trump will make some decisions with which I vehemently disagree. I am well aware that Donald Trump is not the equivalent of Ron Paul. But he is certainly the lesser of two evils (and not just by a whisker). It will be an interesting four years.

The post What Happened at the Polls Last Week? appeared first on The Beacon.

https://blog.independent.org/2024/11/19/what-happened-at-the-polls-last-week/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=what-happened-at-the-polls-last-week

Crafty_Dog

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Patriot Post
« Reply #1969 on: November 20, 2024, 01:29:10 PM »

https://patriotpost.us/alexander/112180?mailing_id=8816...
Trump Day 1: Demolish the Demos' Rigged Midterm Election Strategy

There is an irrefutable correlation between the states Harris/Walz won and voter ID requirements.
Mark Alexander

"We should be unfaithful to ourselves if we should ever lose sight of the danger to our liberties if anything partial or extraneous should infect the purity of our free, fair, virtuous, and independent elections." —John Adams (1797)

Two weeks after the biggest comeback in presidential history, I am still amazed that Donald Trump and JD Vance pulled it off. And they did so with expanding margins among unexpected voter constituencies.
But all the elation and relief aside, on Monday, January 20, 2025, day one of the next Trump administration, Republicans must disable the Democrats' corrupt election strategy ahead of the 2026 midterm elections and the 2028 Vance presidential campaign.
Trump and Congress must singularly focus on defusing this threat.
Demos rigged the election process in 2020, and they believed their three-part strategy would set up a sure win for the Harris/Walz ticket this year.
First, they used their deep state assets to set up Trump for a plethora of lawfare prosecutions.
Second, over the last four years, they have orchestrated a massive effort to suppress conservative speech by collaborating with their Leftmedia publicists and social media platforms in order to keep a chokehold on public opinion.
Third, they have perfected their bulk-mail ballot fraud strategy, promoting the counting of millions of unauthenticated ballots cast by mail and in person in states that do not require voter ID. That strategy accounted for the Biden/Harris 2020 win by a popular vote margin of more than seven million votes, and they assumed it would get Harris and Walz across the finish line again.
It is this third issue that Republicans must address first because there is a direct and irrefutable correlation between the states Harris/Walz won and voter ID requirements.
Demos had good reason to assume their 2020 fraud would work again: Of the votes cast then, 43% (66 million ballots) were by mail — and a majority of those were in states where authentication of the person receiving and casting the ballot was not required. More than 58% of Biden/Harris ballots, almost 47 million votes, were cast by mail.
Got that?
Demos believe their bulk-mail ballot fraud strategy, devoid of voter ID requirements, will enable them to perpetuate permanent majority control of the executive and legislative branches — and, ultimately, state governments nationwide. If left unchecked, this systemic election corruption will become virtually impossible to undo. That is to say, Republicans must use their majority tenure this coming year to stop this strategy. Or else.
Fortunately, the Demos' fraud strategy had a BIG problem: The Harris/Walz ticket was weak and uninspiring.
That ticket was an extension of the abysmal Biden/Harris record of domestic and foreign policy failures. It could not compete with the reality of Trump's record of domestic and foreign policy successes.
And they could not cultivate trust beyond their base that Harris was not Biden 2.0. Kamala Harris has a long and prolific record of lying, as does her sidekick Tim Walz, particularly regarding his stolen valor record.
Thus, the triad of corrupt Demo machinations could not overcome the Biden/Harris/Walz liabilities. Consequently, there were seven million fewer Demo ballots cast in 2024 than were cast in 2020.
The result was that Trump and Vance won the Electoral College 312 to 226, with, as of this writing, 76,792,000 to 74,238,000 votes. Thanks to a good GOP ground game (finally) and early voting, the Trump/Vance ticket got almost 2.6 million more votes this year than Trump/Pence received in 2020 — and won six more Electoral College votes than Biden/Harris in 2020 (312 to 306).
The Trump/Vance victory is a testament, first and foremost, to a groundswell of grassroots American Patriots who supported them. You know, those voters broad-brushed as "bitter, deplorable, racist, misogynist, fascist, garbage"!
That being said, despite all the proclamations to the contrary, the Trump/Vance win was not a "landslide victory" supporting a "clear mandate." This was no Ronald Reagan 1984 landslide reelection, in which he won 49 states and a record 525 electoral votes.
In fact, today, the Trump/Vance popular vote total dropped below the 50% mark.
Here's why defusing the Demos' bulk-mail ballot fraud strategy first thing is so important.
Looking at the maps in the image above, here is what you need to know.
Of all the states Harris won, only two, New Hampshire and Rhode Island, require a photo ID to vote. Several states she won require or make optional a non-photo ID.
But get this: More than 60 million of the 161 million registered voters in the U.S. in 2024 live in states that require NO voter identification/authentication — zero, none — to ensure who is actually casting that ballot. Almost all of those voters are, of course, in Democrat-controlled states.
Look at those maps again — because short of legislative correction, Democrats are poised to retake the House and Senate in 2026, and running a younger and more charismatic ticket in 2028 will make them difficult to beat. That is the hard reality.
Since 2020, some states have strengthened their election integrity requirements, including mandating voter IDs.
Moreover, in July of this year, as a first step toward federal election integrity, the House successfully passed the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act to ensure only U.S. citizens vote in federal elections, with five Democrats voting with Republicans. Apparently, there are five House Democrats who still possess a modicum of integrity.
Of course, the Biden/Harris administration issued a strong condemnation of the SAVE Act because Democrats know that, as aforementioned, the perpetuation of their political party control depends on opposing any and all voter ID requirements.
Biden continues to claim, as he has for years, that requiring a voter ID is an "attempt to repress minority voting." His corrupt attorney general, Merrick Garland, likewise declared this year, "That is why we are challenging efforts by states and jurisdictions to implement discriminatory, burdensome, and unnecessary restrictions on access to the ballot, including those related to mail-in voting, the use of drop boxes, and voter ID requirements."
Democrats label any measure to authenticate who is voting as "racist," "voter intimidation," and "voter suppression" while mislabeling their systemic voter fraud proposals as "voter rights."
However, combined with Biden's bulk voter registration mandate, the Demos' bulk-mail ballot fraud is a slam dunk with qualified candidates.
Trump will have to be careful with overreach, but I believe if he manages the next two years well, Republicans can rally a broader swath of America to the conservative side of the ledger and pave the path for a larger Vance victory in 2028.
Republicans must make demolishing the Demos' ballot fraud strategy a high priority now.

Body-by-Guinness

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Re: Patriot Post
« Reply #1970 on: November 20, 2024, 02:20:31 PM »

https://patriotpost.us/alexander/112180?mailing_id=8816...
Trump Day 1: Demolish the Demos' Rigged Midterm Election Strategy

There is an irrefutable correlation between the states Harris/Walz won and voter ID requirements.
Mark Alexander

"We should be unfaithful to ourselves if we should ever lose sight of the danger to our liberties if anything partial or extraneous should infect the purity of our free, fair, virtuous, and independent elections." —John Adams (1797)

Two weeks after the biggest comeback in presidential history, I am still amazed that Donald Trump and JD Vance pulled it off. And they did so with expanding margins among unexpected voter constituencies….

I’d add another leg to that tripod: Dems spent the past four years raiding federal coffers and using that money to buy influence if not outright bribe people. Whether it’s illegals getting charged debit cards and phones, or NGOs getting their coffers filled, or FEMA moving moneys meant for Americans in emergent need, and while using high sounding titles like the “inflation reduction act” that did everything but bear any association with its name, Dems have been shoveling money where they can, when they can, and expecting to receiving quid pro quo dividends in return.