rodoheel
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What you call defeatism, I call pragmatism. But I'm not talking about treating whole states as lost causes, I'm talking about not wasting resources in trying to adapt a national platform that will never appeal in certain places, at least under current national political conditions, to those places. Dems can and should still run vigorous campaigns in, say, the more left-leaning (or gettable) districts in those places. But until the Overton Window - or, if you don't like that term, the national political discourse - is shifted back left, it simply is not a good investment to be trying to compete in the most difficult-to-reach (literally and politically) parts of the electoral map. I simply don't think any organizing effort you can devise is going to take root, much less bear any fruit, in rural areas of deep-red states, unless and until it's a more favorable political environment for that message.I think this still reflects a kind of strategic defeatism. You’re evaluating states like MT and the Dakotas based on whether they currently support the full national platform, as if that’s fixed. But politics is about coalition-building over time. You start with what resonates locally (jobs, hospitals, infrastructure) and connect that to a broader material vision.
We’re not going to get Medicare for All or a Green New Deal unless we start building trust with the voters who’ve been told those ideas are coastal elitism. And if we don’t even try, if we treat whole states as lost causes, we’re not just giving up on elections. We’re giving up on reshaping the national political terrain, which is necessary work for any real future.
This, I agree with.At some point, you have to plant seeds even in bad soil.
I'm not talking about a utopian third party fantasy either. I'm talking about the fact that virtually every federal office holder in the history of our country has belonged to one of the major parties. If you can't wrestle with that idea, and recognize that the "forgotten foundation" you describe was not forgotten for a century and yet here we are -- if you can't do that then what are you doing?You say this has all “failed repeatedly over 150 years,” but that flattens the actual history and the present. What Osborn is doing isn’t some utopian third-party fantasy. It’s a coalition strategy grounded in organizing, credibility, and post-party appeal in places where the national Democratic brand is toxic. You can’t tell that story through the same lens you’d use for a Green Party vanity run.
Yes, we’ve had two parties for most of American history. But the composition, posture, and function of those parties has changed dramatically. One reason Republicans dominate rural areas now is that they’re willing to run everywhere, meet voters on cultural ground, and treat local infrastructure seriously. Democrats have all but abandoned that terrain and then wonder why the map keeps shrinking.
You ask, “Why will it work this time when it hasn’t before?” My answer: because we’re already seeing signs that it is working. Osborn outperformed the national ticket in Nebraska. Mamdani just beat Cuomo’s machine in NYC by organizing around material needs. What both share is not a “new” idea, it’s the forgotten foundation of electoral politics: build trust, meet people where they are, and root yourself in local struggle.
You say the party won’t fund candidates like Osborn forever. Maybe not. But that’s not a reason to give up on the model. It’s a reason to rethink what the party is for. If it won’t adapt to new strategies in states where it’s collapsed, then it’s the failed experiment, not the candidate trying something new.
False. What’s not said out loud is that there is tremendous anti-Israeli/anti-Zionist sentiment growing in NYC due to Netanyahu’s reprehensible actions in Gaza since 10/7. It has brought other reprehensible past policies and actions of Israel to light as well, *especially* for young voters — college educated, under 45. This is the meat of what truly carried Mamdani in the primary, certainly not “free and fast buses” which NY’ers know is a joke for several reasons, or “affordability” which every candidate from either side parrots with promises they can’t keep.His campaign didn’t win because of identity politics
I think this last part is wrong, or at least ignoring a ton of other things. By far the most important reason that Republicans dominate rural areas is that rural areas are the most conservative in the modern political calculus. They are, by and large, heavily Christian, heavily supportive of individual liberty, heavily pro-gun rights, staunchly opposed to big government of pretty much any form, and somewhere between suspicious of and outright xenophobic towards immigrants. Current Democratic politicians didn't make them that way by being bad at connecting with them. They have been that way for decades, if not longer. The "cultural ground" on which Republicans primarily have appealed to them is generally through conservative Christianity and nativism, all with a veneer of "traditional American/family values." Not by taking "local infrastructure" seriously.Yes, we’ve had two parties for most of American history. But the composition, posture, and function of those parties has changed dramatically. One reason Republicans dominate rural areas now is that they’re willing to run everywhere, meet voters on cultural ground, and treat local infrastructure seriously. Democrats have all but abandoned that terrain and then wonder why the map keeps shrinking.
This is not at all what I meant, and I'll take the blame for not explaining well. I'm not suggesting we should sit around and wait for the Overton Window to shift left, I'm saying the focus should be on shifting it left at the national level, not the local level. I simply do not think that trying to reach individual rural voters in red states is the way to try to shift the Overton Window. I understand that we disagree about that. But if you look back, again, at Obama 2008, I don't think you can credibly argue that the reason for Dems' blue wave election was built on groundwork organizing people in rural communities across the country.You say we need to wait until the Overton Window shifts left, as if that just happens on its own. But it doesn’t. It shifts because people organize, challenge power, and expand what’s considered possible. That work doesn’t start after a crisis; it starts now, so that when the crisis hits, we’re not stuck with a Buttigieg reading cue cards while the right runs full populist.
1. I agree 100% with this: "What I do know is this: no mass democratic movement in American life waited around for the electorate to become morally pure." This too: "But during the eras when those parties actually functioned, they were rooted in local institutions: unions, churches, fraternal groups, political clubs."It’s true that virtually every federal officeholder in U.S. history has belonged to one of the two major parties. But during the eras when those parties actually functioned, they were rooted in local institutions: unions, churches, fraternal groups, political clubs. The Democratic Party wasn’t just a label on a ballot. It was a vessel for organizing. That’s what gave it strength. That’s what allowed it to win elections in places like Montana, Arkansas, even Nebraska.
History doesn’t vindicate the party label on its own. What mattered was the structure underneath: the relationships, the trust, the embeddedness. That’s what made the brand viable. Now that those foundations have collapsed, clinging to the old label without rebuilding what sustained it is a fantasy. If the current approach is failing in massive swaths of the country, why not try something else?
You dismiss Osborn’s loss as meaningless. Compared to what? Democrats didn’t even field a candidate in Nebraska. Osborn outperformed Kamala Harris by a wide margin, forced the GOP to spend money they usually don’t, and laid the groundwork for a stronger run. That’s not a guaranteed path to victory, but it’s the start of something. Writing it off as failure is analysis by scoreboard, not strategy.
Mamdani’s win in New York is dismissed just as easily. But the point isn’t the geography, it’s the method. He beat a donor-backed juggernaut not with machine politics or national media, but through organizing. His campaign didn’t win because of identity politics or elite branding. It won because he built a coalition around material issues. That approach (meeting people where they are, knocking doors, listening) isn’t abstraction. It’s politics at its most basic level. If that sounds vague to you, it’s only because we’ve become so detached from real political practice that the fundamentals sound foreign.
As for places that are racist, theocratic, reactionary, yes, they exist. We’ve just arrived at the same unresolved debate we’ve had before. I believe people aren’t static. Beliefs evolve through struggle, contact, and shared interest. That’s not naïve; that’s literally how politics has always worked. The civil rights movement didn’t win by waiting for polling to catch up. Neither did the labor movement. They moved first, grounded in organizing, and pulled parts of the country with them.
You say I think I have it all figured out. I don’t. But I’m asking a basic question: if the current strategy is failing across half the country, why are we so afraid to experiment? Why is anything outside the party line treated as delusion?
What I do know is this: no mass democratic movement in American life waited around for the electorate to become morally pure. They organized in spite of racism, often directly against it, and won gains by building common material ground and forcing contradiction into the open.
What you seem to be demanding from me (a clean, fully mapped strategy that solves racism in rural America before politics can proceed) isn’t a standard anyone has ever met. Not SNCC, not the CIO, not the Populists, not the SCLC. And certainly not the Democratic Party today.
I’m not pretending to have all the answers. I’m arguing that there are answers to be found in motion, by doing the hard work of organizing. You mistake my refusal to declare entire swaths of the country unreachable as a lack of realism, when, in fact, it’s the only historically grounded realism on the table.
I'm not saying that the strategy is to sit around and wait and do nothing. I'm simply saying that nothing we do is going to matter much unless and until things fall apart. While I don't see how it could hurt l I really don't see "local trust" as nearly as important as you do in the modern political world. Certainly I don't think "local trust" has really anything to do with why right-wing politics has been so successful at the national level in the last 15 years or so.I think this is where we really differ. You see organizing and candidate strategy as marginal, something to do around the edges while we wait for a GOP collapse. But the reality is, collapse doesn’t guarantee anything. After the 2008 financial crisis, Democrats won big, and then promptly lost the map by 2010. No infrastructure. No movement-building. Just technocrats and consultants assuming the country had “swung left.”
If we don’t do the work now (build local trust, run aligned candidates, try new coalition models like Osborn’s) there won’t be a map to swing back to. You say 2008 and 1932 happened because things fell apart. I’d argue they happened because leaders were ready with something new when they did. Waiting isn’t a strategy.
Yeah, this gets to my point in the longer post. There's a time horizon mismatch. It has to be about reflecting and reshaping. We're complements, not enemies.That’s the core disagreement here. You think politics is about reflecting the current map. I think it’s about reshaping it. And the only way to do that is through presence, organizing, and building trust, especially in places we’ve written off for too long.
I honestly, sincerely, just do not believe this is true. Republicans have not made people "feel seen" by showing up at blue jeans at the county fair. They have done their cultural messaging mostly through cable news and social media, and usually through dog-whistles of various stripes. By telling people that they're not to blame for their problems, and that other people are - the deep state or immigrants or Muslims or gay people or trans people or whoever. That messaging is powerful and effective, but not because it is delivered at county fairs and rotary clubs.And yes, Republicans do take local infrastructure seriously. I’m talking about roads and bridges but political infrastructure. They run everywhere. They speak the cultural language. They show up at county fairs and Rotary clubs. They make people feel seen. Democrats used to do that too, when the party was rooted in local institutions like unions, churches, and civic groups. Now they’ve ceded that ground, and you’re pointing to the result as if it were inevitable.
Again, I have never once talked about "abandoning" anything. I simply think you are over-indexing on the importance and viability of boots-on-the-ground organizing as the primary driver of change, especially in 2025.Your framework still assumes that national Overton shifts can happen without local organizing. That’s just not how politics works. National sentiment doesn’t shift in a vacuum. It shifts because people organize, win fights, and show what’s possible, often in unlikely places.
You mention Obama 2008, but you’re skipping over the massive local infrastructure that campaign built. The 50-state strategy put staff and volunteers in red and rural counties all over the country. Not to flip them blue overnight, but to show up, to engage, to organize. That work mattered, not just for Obama, but for downballot races, turnout, and credibility with voters who were used to being ignored. That was a national shift built on local organizing.
The idea that we can move national consciousness without touching local terrain is just fantasy. You don’t build trust, power, or new political possibilities by abandoning half the country and hoping the media climate changes. The right certainly isn’t doing that.
As usual, there is truth both ways. It's true that MAGA formed a community for people who otherwise felt displaced. There are a lot of stories of people who found community, which is why they started following Trump around like he was the Grateful Dead. This was back in 2016. Those community ties were what drove the turnout operation in 2024.Again, I have never once talked about "abandoning" anything. I simply think you are over-indexing on the importance and viability of boots-on-the-ground organizing as the primary driver of change, especially in 2025.
Yeah, why would anyone consider Mamdani winning a primary in NYC a fluke relative to the national scene? Far more prudent to reframe it as a template!You’re doing what so many others have done when faced with a challenge to their assumptions: reframing a political strategy as a cultural fluke so you don’t have to reckon with what actually happened.
Was Gaza a factor in Mamdani’s win? Absolutely. But sentiment alone doesn’t win elections. That energy had to be channeled through door knocking, canvassing, coalition-building, and organizing across communities. That’s what Mamdani did. That’s why he won. You’re treating this like he just rode a wave of opinion. He didn’t. He built something.
Dismissing fare-free buses and affordability as meaningless just shows how narrow your lens is. Maybe those policies sound unserious to your peer group, but they clearly resonate with working-class renters and immigrants in Queens. His coalition wasn’t just the “under 45 college-educated progressive transplants” you describe, it included people who struggle with real costs in daily life and responded to a campaign that met them there.
Your definition of “identity politics” is just as hollow. You seem to think that opposing big donors is about vibes. But Mamdani’s opponent was backed by millions in outside money. Mamdani won without it. That’s not a pose. That’s a material rejection of how politics normally works in this country.
The reason I keep pointing to Mamdani is not because I think Queens is just like Nebraska. It’s because the method (organizing, not branding; coalition, not triangulation) has power. You say this can’t work anywhere else but offer no reason why. Just insist I’m “deeply lost.”
This is true. I'm not sure, though, that it's ever really about policy. I think it's a more lizard brain resentment. Remember GOP vocabulary. "Chicago" means "black people." They will deny it blah blah blah, but the code is obvious. They don't care about the policy. They care that money is being spent on people they don't like. "Big cities" are just code for that, as they have been in the South for two centuries.I know what I am about to say is not well thought out. But it is somehow a piece?
One of the problems rural Murica has is they think the cities spend all the tax money. And as much as they spend , in general urban/ blue counties actually subsidize every rural county in a given State and at the National level. Heavily . Without being condescending it would be nice for those folks to know that
Respectfully, I have spent a ton of time in all of those states and politically they absolutely are lost causes. You aren't getting ANYONE without an R beside their name and absolute fealty to Donald Trump from any of those.I think this still reflects a kind of strategic defeatism. You’re evaluating states like MT and the Dakotas based on whether they currently support the full national platform, as if that’s fixed. But politics is about coalition-building over time. You start with what resonates locally (jobs, hospitals, infrastructure) and connect that to a broader material vision.
We’re not going to get Medicare for All or a Green New Deal unless we start building trust with the voters who’ve been told those ideas are coastal elitism. And if we don’t even try, if we treat whole states as lost causes, we’re not just giving up on elections. We’re giving up on reshaping the national political terrain, which is necessary work for any real future.
Ground doesn't vote. People do. And the people who inhabit those states now have absolutely nothing in common with the people who inhabited those states even 30 years ago. The massive migration of folks fleeing urban areas for political and cultural reasons has hardened those states into impenetrable MAGA forts. You cant build common ground with people who dont want common ground. The people who live in the Dakotas, Montana, Wyoming, etc don't care to be aligned in any way with people from either coast.You know I appreciate your perspective. But I’ve got to say, treating them as hopeless feels deeply ahistorical. These were once strongholds of left populism. Montana sent radicals to the Senate. The Dakotas birthed cooperative movements and farm-labor parties. That didn’t vanish on its own. It was stamped out, and it can be organized back in. Not overnight, and not everywhere all at once. But if we write these places off entirely, we’re ceding ground that was once ours and what could be again.
Affordability would be great if it actually meant anything in real terms and actionable policies. Nobody dismisses that. Mamdani wields the term without acknowledging that Albany actually controls the levers that can make it possible, not the mayor’s office.Dismissing fare-free buses and affordability as meaningless just shows how narrow your lens is. Maybe those policies sound unserious to your peer group, but they clearly resonate with working-class renters and immigrants in Queens. His coalition wasn’t just the “under 45 college-educated progressive transplants” you describe, it included people who struggle with real costs in daily life and responded to a campaign that met them there.