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Originally Posted by DuffMan
man, I hate this rhetoric.
Please give 2 or 3 quick examples of what she should have done.
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Rhetoric? It's fact. Clinton was a bad candidate who ran a bad campaign. What should Clinton have done differently, that would have all but guaranteed herself victory?
1) Have a message that resonated with voters. Messaging wins elections, policy doesn't. If you are string on policy, create your message based on how those policies help the demographic you are reaching out to. Make that policy personal for your voters and establish an emotional attachment to that policy. Clinton was a policy wonk, had some good policy behind her, but she never made those policies important to the American people.
2) Take a principled stance on something. This was Clinton's greatest weakness.
Trump painted her as someone with no principles and she did little to counter that narrative. All she had to do was pick one issue based on principles, and draw that line in the sand. Gee, if there was only an issue that she could have made her firewall and made the election about. What could that have been? Something that she strongly believed in and could fight for? I don't know, how about fighting for healthcare for all? That would have been an issue where she would have had some gravitas and appeared to be maintaining a principled stand. Instead she was soft on the issue and fled to the center.
3) At least give the impression you understand the challenges average Americans are suffering through. This is where
Trump mopped the floor with her. Even though
Trump lived in a real gilded tower, and was so detached from the real world, he was still able to use his celebrity to reach out and convince people he understood what they were going for. He won the rust belt because of this. Clinton never did anything to connect with the voters. She never really appeared to understand their plight, nor even know where "average Americans" live (hint: everywhere, and with unique challenges in each location).
4) Appeal to Bernie voters. Clinton could have easily kept the Democratic base energized if she had just embraced an issue or two from Bernie's platform. If she had just shifted from the center and broke to the real left on even a couple of issues she would have kept the base intact. Instead she fled to the center and alienated those very voters that would have carried her to victory. If she had embraced medicare for all, or eliminating the student debt problem in the country, or getting big money out of elections, or committing to fighting climate change, or anything that would have helped the less fortunate in an shape of fashion, that would have won over that block of voters.
5) Know the battleground and defend it. Clinton lost sight of the battleground and refused to get out and defend it. She rarely set foot in the three states that lost the election, and that cost her huge. She barely went anywhere that last month of the campaign, thinking she had it wrapped up.
6) Stay strong, even when you are weak or when you make a mistake. Clinton screwed up and showed her soft underbelly too many times. She didn't defend well, and she was weak on the attack. When she made the deplorables comment, she walked it back. That showed weakness. She should have remained on the attack. She should have owned that statement and showed, in graphic terms, the segment of the population that she was talking about, and make
Trump wear that cross. She didn't. She was weak.
7) Use negatives as positives. When she was getting hammered because of the email scandal, she should have used that to her advantage. She should have owned that issue and made it a campaign issue. That could have been her principled stance. She should have gone out there and said that, yes, she was wrong in using a private email server. Then she should have pointed out all the other politicians that have done, and still are, doing the same. Then should have pointed out that it was going to be her mission to right this wrong and make it illegal for the use of such systems. Make it a transparency issue and say you are doing it for the American people, so there is more openness and trust between the people and their government. She didn't and
Trump beat her to death with this issue.
8) Silence Jim Comey. She should have got out in front of this issue and hammered home that she had been investigated, to death, and the issue had been adjudicated. Convince the people that the issue was dead and cut the legs out from underneath Comey, so he couldn't have the October Surprise that cripples your campaign.
9) Be human and buy a personality. Clinton was as stiff as a Disney animatronic. She had the warmth of hibernating toad. She had opportunity to she was human, but she failed time-and-time again.
10) Expose your opponent for what he is. There was enough dirt out there on
Trump that should have buried him early.
Trump has connections to the mafia, to Russian oligarchs, to child traffickers, to money laundering and fraud, and was bankrupt more times than anyone could realistically be allowed. Clinton used none of this to her advantage and did not crush
Trump like the sewer cockroach that he is. For an experienced politician, she got schooled by the neophyte.
Quote:
Originally Posted by DuffMan
What percentage?
I agree up to a certain point, but it's the people who could and should vote with their brains, that voted with misguided emotion that annoy me.
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What percentage vote emotionally? 100%. It's how we think. Its what drives us. You don't choose to cheer for a particular sports team because you rationalize your decision, you cheer for that team because they appeal to something in you emotionally. Then you try to build a rationalization around fulfilling that emotional need. Politics and political affiliation are no different. Emotions drive us, and political messaging is most effective when it is emotionally driven. Westen, Lakoff, Haidt, Goffman, McCombs, Bernays, etc. all have made hay on explaining how our emotions drive our decision making and actually inhibit our ability to rationalize issues. Everyone votes with their brains, but it the emotion centers of our brains that drive our decision making abilities.