2024 Pre-Election Political Polls | POLL - Trump would have had 7 point lead over Biden

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I'm not saying the numbers are accurate but there is a shift amongst minorities toward the GOP. I tend to categorize the Democratic party as a big tent party with a lot of things in common with a few differences. The GOP is becoming a big tent party of single issue voters.

The religious right has made inroads with religious minorities. Anecdotally, my Ethiopian wife has told me of her people's dissatisfaction with Biden over trans and gay rights.

The misogynistic message works with minority men, especially the lower educated. Black and Hispanic men in particular, especially if they are current or former military or LEOs.

The lower taxes work with the wealthier and affluent minorities. Asians of all stripes fall into this category.

And a decent portion of immigrants that come from socialist countries, whether that be the more prosperous ones from Europe or the less stable ones from South America, tend to like the capitalist message. From their perspective, they left those countries for the opportunities here and have a bias against some of the Democrats messages that involve the national gov't being the primary mover on the majority of issues.

Now, are there concerns valid? Slightly, yes. But they don't care about the potential negative affects of the rest of the GQP's policies, only the actions related to their single issue.
A lot of truth here, but it's important to not look at Latinos as monolithic. Cuban heritage, Puerto Rican heritage, Mexican heritage, and South American heritage have different influences. For example, the way trump treated Puerto Rico enraged many people with Puerto Rican heritage, but other Latinos weren't bothered as much. Many people of Cuban heritage are still very anti-communist, even though they support the party of authoritarian tendencies similar to Castro. Many Latinos who went through the difficult process to immigrate legally support efforts to crack down on undocumented immigrants. If you want their votes, you have to reach people where they are.
 
are you afraid there will be violence?
No, he will be busy making accommodations for all the people he bought on the run-up to the election.

And before someone not in the know gets bent out of shape over my post, know that it's a play on a board joke.
 
Trump is running on deporting illegal immigrants and Harris is not. Many Hispanic voters don’t support illegal immigration.
You conveniently left out the part where Trump is going to send the United States military into U.S. cities in order to forcefully round up tens of millions of illegals and herd them into internment camps before mass evacuation.

But, you’re right. It sounds much more humane the way you phrase it.
 
You conveniently left out the part where Trump is going to send the United States military into U.S. cities in order to forcefully round up tens of millions of illegals and herd them into internment camps before mass evacuation.

But, you’re right. It sounds much more humane the way you phrase it.
For some, the cruelty is the point. Many others haven't considered the consequences of this policy on the economy and the best use of limited government resources.
 
I have a memory of you “defending” HY2012 when some of us (I definitely was one) would call out his Trumplican BS…..you were saying we needed to understand him and reach out and reason with HY2012.

HY2012 is the same Trumplican he was one year ago, two years ago, four years ago as he is today.
I don't think you understood my point then. You don't understand my point now. There's a difference between engaging with ideas and just browbeating people, especially with accusations that you don't really know to be true.

It's sad that I have to explain it to you many times over, given that in your words I'm an idiot savant. But here we are.
 
For some, the cruelty is the point. Many others haven't considered the consequences of this policy on the economy and the best use of limited government resources.
Yeah among the consequences that they haven't considered are that any attempt at a mass round-up of alleged illegals is going to sweep into its reach many US citizens, either because the authorities mess up or due to the fact that many (hundreds of thousands, if not millions) of these "illegals" have children who are American citizens. I wonder, what exactly is Trump's plan for deporting parents of minor US citizens? I'm confident he doesn't know or care, and the likes of Stephen Miller will say that this sort of dilemma is just fine because those kids didn't deserve to be American citizens anyway. (Recall that Trump and his allies have previously proposed ending birthright citizenship.)
 
Here's the good news: whatever he says, and whether he actually believes it or not, there is virtually no chance that Trump will succeed in effecting mass deportations of millions of undocumented immigrants. He may be able to reduce unlawful entries at the border to some extent - whether by going back to putting kids in cages or otherwise - but the idea that the federal authorities are going to be able to round up and deport millions of people in any kind of systematic fashion is laughable. I'm sure they will do it to some people, and it will be cruel and heartbreaking and entirely counterproductive, and Trump will tout it was him fixing the problem. But millions? Nah. Even hundreds of thousands might be pushing it.

In other words: this is all just classic BS Republican campaign rhetoric. Many of them know large-scale deportation is implausible and cost-prohibitive. Just the typical lies they will tell to their voters to score political points, knowing that their voters are so brainwashed that they don't even care whether it's a real policy proposal or not. Just like they're lying to them now about the recent letter from a federal official addressing the number of people who have open immigration cases and have been convicted of crimes. They know many of those people have been here for decades, and that many (probably most) of the "convicted murderers" supposedly roaming the streets are serving US jail sentences, not roaming free. But it doesn't matter. They will lie as much as they need to lie to fearmonger about the problem, which of course they have no intention of "solving," because then they couldn't campaign on it anymore.
 
Agreed, and fuck 'em. If that comes to pass, let them eat cake. Elections have consequences.
On the surface, it would seem deporting 10 to 20 million people would have 2 major economic impacts. Number one - by eliminating that many people demand goes down and GDP shrinks, even into recession.
On the other side, without enough workers, prices increase, so we could have inflation and shrinking GDP at the same time
Now, one will offset the other to some degree, but this would have huge negative impacts on the economy
 
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Here's the good news: whatever he says, and whether he actually believes it or not, there is virtually no chance that Trump will succeed in effecting mass deportations of millions of undocumented immigrants. He may be able to reduce unlawful entries at the border to some extent - whether by going back to putting kids in cages or otherwise - but the idea that the federal authorities are going to be able to round up and deport millions of people in any kind of systematic fashion is laughable. I'm sure they will do it to some people, and it will be cruel and heartbreaking and entirely counterproductive, and Trump will tout it was him fixing the problem. But millions? Nah. Even hundreds of thousands might be pushing it.

In other words: this is all just classic BS Republican campaign rhetoric. Many of them know large-scale deportation is implausible and cost-prohibitive. Just the typical lies they will tell to their voters to score political points, knowing that their voters are so brainwashed that they don't even care whether it's a real policy proposal or not. Just like they're lying to them now about the recent letter from a federal official addressing the number of people who have open immigration cases and have been convicted of crimes. They know many of those people have been here for decades, and that many (probably most) of the "convicted murderers" supposedly roaming the streets are serving US jail sentences, not roaming free. But it doesn't matter. They will lie as much as they need to lie to fearmonger about the problem, which of course they have no intention of "solving," because then they couldn't campaign on it anymore.
Back in 1942, while we were fighting wars on two fronts, they managed to round up 120K people and put them in detention camps. Removing a million would be child's play with military involvement and indiscriminate detention policies greenlighted by the Supreme Court. Here are some issues to ponder:

1. There are no good remedies for citizens who are unlawfully detained. Kash Patel can wink wink tell his stormtroopers to round up anyone who looks Hispanic and take them to a sorting facility. Anyone who can prove their are a citizen can be released upon proof. So the citizens can be rounded up and then released. But what are the remedies? There are none, not any more.

It used to be that if federal agents violated your constitutional rights, you could sue them in what is known as a Bivins action. The Supreme Court has been narrowing Bivins to the point where it is barely a thing at all, and at the first opportunity presented, they will overrule it. So the detailed Latinos can't sue the officers. If they sue the department, the department will say, "it's just bad apple agents." They might win in court eventually. but it will take a long time and by then the detention/internment/concentration camps will be full. And at most, the government will have to pay damages, which Trump doesn't care about in the slightest.

2. It also used to be that a judge could issue a nationwide order to stop this type of shit. But the right-wingers have been abusing nationwide injunctions to the point where the Supreme Court is basically staying all of them. So there could be some judges in California who would put a stop to this, but their injunctions would only be valid in their districts. There is no way an injunction against this thing would be upheld in the Fifth Circuit, which is Texas, LA and Mississippi. You can round up a lot of people in those areas. I also think the newly radicalized 8th would not consider an injunction, and that's AR, MO, IA and I don't remember where MN or KS/NE are.

3. Trump will declare a national emergency and use the military, for logistical support if nothing else. The Supreme Court let him declare a national emergency to build the wall with funds allocated to the Defense Department. Nothing has changed on the national emergency front. I see no reason why the Supreme Court would change its tune now. And if there are any problems, the Republican Congress will pass a law to allow the military to be involved in deportation actions. There is no constitutional prohibition on the use of the military. It's just a statute.

4. If the courts try to stop it, Kash Patel will largely ignore them. He'll make token gestures at ending the "worst abuses" of the program while maintaining the programs. Will the threat of contempt stop his department? No, it will not. First, Trump can pardon everyone involved. Second, the right-wingers have already shown a willingness to lie and deceive courts. John Gore lied his ass off in the case challenging Trump's census bureau hijinks. He did so knowing that he could be subject to any number of sanctions. He was caught. Nothing happened to him, and again, Trump can pardon.

Well, surely if an attorney were to disgrace himself that way, there would be consequences, right? John Gore is now a partner at Jones Day. He was, to my knowledge, not a partner before he started working for Trump. He was actually rewarded by the right-wing legal machine for doing what he did.

5. If Trump is serious about rounding up millions of people, he could do it and it wouldn't be all that challenging. And while I actually doubt that Trump cares enough to follow through, his underlings absolutely do care and will take it on themselves. Kash Patel and Stephen Miller, for sure. The AG will be a MAGA loyalist and he too will probably be a true believer.

I'm not saying it's guaranteed to happen, but your optimism that it can't is misplaced, imo.
 
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