SnoopRob
Inconceivable Member
- Messages
- 2,859
Good grief, I didn't change any previously agreed upon definition, we both used a common phrase and discovered we were using it with different nuances. There was no previously provided "definitions" section to this discussion and we were both using the word within acceptable understandings of the word. Also, I never accused you of "muddying the waters"; you're again arguing against an opponent that only exists in your mind.You say you had not defined what you meant by “connection” until your last post, as if that frees you from the entire frame this conversation has been operating in. But come on. The discussion around Newsom was clearly centered on the emotional and affective connection candidates have, or fail to have, with voters. It was about how someone like Newsom comes across to disaffected people, not simply how many people show up to vote for him or buy his merch.
If you were not talking about emotional connection, then why enter a conversation where that was the central focus and only now, several posts in, claim you meant something else entirely? That is not clarifying.
Your earlier comments clearly relied on an implied definition: mocking Vance for being inauthentic, calling him a muppet, and saying that “connection implies a two-way relationship.” That wasn’t nothing. You were drawing on a moral and emotional framework, the same one I was engaging in good faith. But now that I’ve pushed you to clarify and defend it, you’ve retreated to a totally different definition: connection as mere voter turnout. That shift allows you to dismiss Vance as disconnected while preserving Trump as a kind of outlier, without grappling with the emotional mechanisms that fuel both of them. It’s not that you haven’t defined connection, it’s that you’re switching definitions when the conversation gets inconvenient.
You also try to reframe my argument as being about what I personally desire from a politician. But this is not just some private preference I made up. Emotional connection, the ability to tell a story, to resonate, to build symbolic trust, has always been central to modern politics. Reagan had it. Trump has it. Obama had it, though in a very different register. The issue with Newsom is that he lacks it. He does not seem like he has lived the things he is talking about. And in today’s environment, how a politician makes people feel is not a minor concern. It becomes a signal for whose side they are actually on.
At any rate, your new definition of connection as “gets people to the polls” is a shallow and reductive way of understanding political appeal. It is not even internally consistent. You say Vance does not connect, yet he won a statewide race in Ohio. He did that while running on populist aesthetics and cultural grievance. You admit that Trump motivates people to act, but then pretend that this is not because of emotional connection. Of course it is. People buy into Trump because they feel, whether rightly or wrongly, that he understands them, that he shares their enemies, that he speaks from the gut. That is not just a turnout operation. That is myth-making.
You can’t have it both ways. The moment you say Democrats shouldn’t try to reach certain voters, you’re offering a strategy. You say we should not try to reach out to right-wing or working-class voters in any way that might challenge the current liberal moral framework. That is a strategy. It is a strategy based on exclusion. It assumes that large parts of the electorate, including former Democrats, are beyond redemption. If you are going to argue for that position, then at least own it. Do not pretend you are simply observing from the sidelines.
You’re trying to strip the whole concept of “connection” of any meaning by shifting between affective, symbolic, and mechanical models of “connection” while accusing me of muddying the waters. Then you turn around and declare that we should not bother with voters who are alienated from the Democratic Party unless they already accept the entire moral framing of professional-class liberalism. This is the same rhetorical move you made last night. You cloud the terms of the debate, redefine the topic, then claim that the other side is just confused.
Truth is, millions of Americans are politically homeless. They are alienated from both parties. Not all of them are unreachable racists. Many are disillusioned, cynical, struggling, and desperate for something real. If Democrats want to win again, especially in the places where they have been bleeding support for years, they need candidates who come across as genuine. Not because we are abandoning our values, but because we are showing people that we actually believe in them. That requires emotional trust, not just a policy menu or a polished speech. Without that, there is no connection at all.
I called Vance a muppet because he's cosplaying as a rural, white working class person when he's clearly no longer that person in any appreciable way. But the reason I say he doesn't connect is because he can't get voters to turn out for him or his message. There are several ways to forge a connection with voters that can get them to turn out. One is to create a "deep, meaningful connection" that assures them you understand them. Another is to present plans that convince them you can provide them the best future. Another is to scapegoat others to blame them for perceived ills. Another is to bash others and use fear/hatred to get them to the polls. And another is to show up at the right time and simply not be "the other guy". I would agree that a "deep, meaningful connection" likely provides the most sure way to ensure they turn out, but it is also the most difficult to achieve and most politicians - even successful ones - don't achieve that.
Reagan, Obama, and Trump did make deep connections to voters. Bill Clinton kinda/maybe/sorta did. HW Bush, Dubya, and Biden did not. But all of them were successful in gaining election as POTUS and achieving some of their proposed platform.
I also never said we "should not bother" to reach out to working class Pub-leaners, just that we shouldn't give them any special outreach. Dems should put forth plans and strategies that will improve life - economic and social - for all Americans, which includes working class folks. (I'd argue that's what Obama did and found some success with.) But Dems will not get anywhere trying to appeal specifically to working class, right-wing voters because Dems would need to sell out too many other important Dem consituencies. As you've said elsewhere on this thread, these voters will respond to a "bad story" over legitimate offers of proper assistance. The Dems should certainly engage in offering valid policies and programs that will benefit these voters, but shouldn't compromise other constituencies to appeal specifically to this voting block because what this voting block has routinely shown is that they prefer bigotry, scapegoating, and special status over programs which could be of assistance to them simply because they do not want to be required to change their expectations regarding their own economic opportunities.
I agree that millions of Americans are roughly "politically homeless" and that Dems should create policies, programs, and voter appeals that seek to benefit and draw in those folks, although I would argue that number does not include the working class right-leaning folks we've been discussing. That group is solidly on the side of the Republican Party, who caters to and enables their bigotries and unrealistic economic dreams. Dem messaging should be done in such a way that doesn't exclude any portion of the electorate at a philosophical level, but also should not privilege a group that has shown it does not agree with the overarching aims of the Democratic Party. The right-leaning working class has shown that unless they are privileged, they will take a comforting lie over an uncomfortable truth. We should show them the respect that Pubs do not by not providing them that comfortable lie.