The swing right was necessary post-Reagan. Now that's almost all the party is, long after it was necessary. Appealing to even moderate Republicans no longer works and gains little support; these people believed Obama, ACA over single payer Obama, was basically Che Guevara.
These suburban whites who saw that Bill Clinton was kind of reasonable don't really exist today. Hillary Clinton's loss should definitively put this version of the party to bed. It does not swing votes in the right places.
The fact that union voters found common ground with Trump should be alarming on its own. Workers have nowhere to turn, when they should be a solid Dem voting bloc.
Clinton's strategy w/ weak GOPers
did work. She won college-educated white women. She flipped light GOP lean suburbs. That part of the campaign was
not the issue.
The problem was elsewhere- systemic turnout issues w/ the Dems both institutionally and with the campaign, Independents breaking for Trump (Comey) and Trump turning out the rural racist vote in
droves.
It's not the "working class" that Dems have a problem with, it's the "White Working Class". And there's a very,very simple answer to why they're having issues- it's race. And they can't do a goddamn thing about that. There's no hope of Euro-style class unity when the white guy won't stand with the others.
Yes actually yes fuck them for not standing up to bullshit cultural wedge issues and making the case for the most minimal possible support of queer people. I can't believe this is a debate.
And BTW it wasn't 2008. Clinton didnt support equal marriage until 2013. The radical communist Obama found it in is heart to support equal marriage I'm 2012. Such brave leaders...
If you want to go join a protest party uninterested in actually governing while masturbating in its self-righteousness, Corbyn is right fucking there.
You can get power. Or you can be "pure." You don't get both. And only one of those things actually lets you help make a difference in people's lives.
If it is all a metronome, then I hope that means Democrats get a very comparable result that republicans got in 2010. That'd be enough to take back the house gerrymander or not, though maybe not the senate.
Problem with metronome theory is that it doesn't historically happen at the same intensity as it has 2006 onward, though it has always been something that happens to some extent.
Senate will be rough in '18 but that Gerrymander backfire will happen to the House if the Dems get a wave. And if '20 continues that way, they should have an eclipse at that point.