Posted on Tuesday, December 10, 2024
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by Aaron Flanigan
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30 Comments
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While many factors likely contributed to the Democrats’ decisive defeat this November, the most significant reason may be far more straightforward: the Democrat Party machine and the far-left progressive movement are too extreme, too divisive, and simply too weird for the American electorate.
According to post-election polling, the reason that voters overwhelmingly rejected the Harris-Walz agenda was not due to one specific policy issue but rather because they strongly opposed the Democrat Party’s toxic brand of cultural leftism.
A November 15 polling analysis conducted by Blueprint found that swing voters broke for Trump over Harris by a margin of 52 percent to 38 percent. Notably, nearly half of these Trump voters made their decision in the campaign’s final weeks—including 15 percent in the last week and an additional 12 percent on Election Day itself.
“In the eyes of swing voters who chose Trump,” the analysis states, “Democrats were misaligned on their top policy priorities.” These Trump voters, the study found, largely perceived Democrats as “too focused on identity politics” (67 percent) and “not doing enough to address crime” (68 percent). Moreover, 75 percent of swing voters who pulled the lever for Trump agreed that Democrats are “too focused on fighting Trump rather than bringing the country together.”
Perhaps most shockingly, less than a quarter of swing voters (22 percent) who backed Trump agreed that Harris prioritized the needs of “Americans like me,” compared to the whopping 80 percent of Americans who agreed that Trump cares about “Americans like me” over the demands of party activists.
“Vice President Harris couldn’t escape what voters think the Democratic Party represents—believing that the party holds extreme positions on the broad swath of issues and would enforce them through policy,” the Blueprint analysis found—citing Harris’s far-left positions like taxpayer funding for transgender surgeries for illegal aliens, electric vehicle mandates, the decriminalization of border crossings, and the defund the police movement.
Among swing voters who cast their ballots for Trump, an overwhelming majority believed that Democrats “support immigrants more than American citizens” and are too soft on the border crisis. They also said Democrats “don’t know how to manage the economy,” “aren’t willing to stand up for working people,” are dividing the country “instead of uniting it,” “have extreme ideas about race and gender,” “want to promote critical race theory,” “only care about a small group of elites,” and “don’t share the values that make America special.”
In other words, the American electorate not only saw through Kamala Harris’s faux attempts to rebrand herself as a “moderate” and denounce her extensive list of previously-held radical policy propositions, but they also loudly said “no” to the Democrat Party brand.
Though the Harris campaign and the Democrat Party establishment went to great lengths to obscure their well-documented record of radicalism this election cycle, Blueprint’s post-election polling analysis confirms beyond any reasonable doubt that voters did not buy the rebrand.
In recent months and years, Democrats have solidified their identity as the party that persecutes Americans of faith, criminalizes political dissent, and is aggressively working to undermine key American institutions like the Supreme Court, the Electoral College, the security of U.S. elections, and the nuclear family.
Meanwhile, some of the mainstream left’s top legislative priorities over the last four years have included defending the right to provide dangerous and unproven cross-sex hormones and gender surgeries to minors, forcing everyone to abide by the edicts of far-left gender ideology, targeting law enforcement officers while springing violent criminals from jail, imprisoning pro-life activists, celebrating extreme late-term abortion, treating Americans of faith as “extremists,” and putting criminal illegal aliens above the interests of law-abiding American citizens.
Following Kamala Harris’s late summer entrance into the presidential race, one of her campaign’s top talking points was that Republicans (and more specifically Vice President-elect J.D. Vance) were simply too “weird,” and in some cases too “creepy,” to hold elected office.
But as the election results—and post-election polling—clearly show, this smear campaign was in the end nothing more than an instance of bizarre projection that has now backfired in spectacular fashion.
Thus, as the Democrat Party and left-wing political pundit class continue to conduct their postmortem in the weeks prior to Donald Trump’s inauguration in January, it has become increasingly evident that the simplest—and most accurate—reason they lost at the ballot box will also be the most difficult for them to accept.
Ultimately, the Democrats’ problem is not merely one of policy—but one of branding and perception. To the American voter, Democrats are too radical, too out-of-touch, and yes, too weird to be trusted to wield political power. And until they can finally come to terms with that fundamental political reality, they will likely find themselves confined to a future of embarrassment, irrelevance, and defeat.
Aaron Flanigan is the pen name of a writer in Washington, D.C.
Read the full article here