Best Way To Defeat the Right?

Okay, it's the "Center's" fault for not being swayed by the logic/principles/charisma of the left ... and then so what? Blaming the Center, if you're not a member of the Center does what, exactly? It doesn't do anything unless that blame somehow changes whether they're swayed or not.

The reason why the onus is put onto 'the left' is that's the cohort most of us are part of, which means that we're trying to figure out how to change behaviour so that we're less likely to lose. Blaming someone who doesn't care about your opinion is cathartic, but that's about it.
 
Okay, it's the "Center's" fault for not being swayed by the logic/principles/charisma of the left ... and then so what? Blaming the Center, if you're not a member of the Center does what, exactly? It doesn't do anything unless that blame somehow changes whether they're swayed or not.

The reason why the onus is put onto 'the left' is that's the cohort most of us are part of, which means that we're trying to figure out how to change behaviour so that we're less likely to lose. Blaming someone who doesn't care about your opinion is cathartic, but that's about it.

In politics people who agree with you are pointless. Changing people's minds to agree or at least support you over the other person vastly more important.

And depending where they live they're even more important than that.

A progressive who lives in London or NYC (or a Conservative in rural area) electorally they don't matter unless you have a proportional system.
 
I wasn't objecting to a political figurehead needing to be charismatic. Or the need for a leader in general.

BD outlined, with some specificity, the requirements for a candidate for the progressive left. I replied with a similar level of detail on the suggestion. There's nothing wrong with suggesting something, but I feel like BD didn't take to criticism in this case too kindly.

Regardless, I likely don't have an answer that'll make him happy. That doesn't mean I can't criticise his ideas. It's like discussing a video game, to some extent. Players don't need to be developers to critique the game. We don't need to have solutions ourselves to know that something's inadequate.

The thread might be "how to defeat the right", but I'm still not seeing many suggestions from centrists that don't involve fobbing off the problem leftwards :p

Haven't you realised its always the lefts fault yet?
Its the lefts fault when a leftwinger like Corbyn loses. Apparently its also the lefts fault when a centrist loses. The answer is to move the centre right.
Possibly the wrong question.
 
Haven't you realised its always the lefts fault yet?
Its the lefts fault when a leftwinger like Corbyn loses. Apparently its also the lefts fault when a centrist loses. The answer is to move the centre right.
Possibly the wrong question.

Depends on the situation. If the left spits out hard core unionist types who proceed to get wiped at the election it's on them.

If they fail to appeal to the center that's also in them.

Most of the time it's on the leader, policies don't really matter to much. Put up a putz it doesn't matter if it's a leftie (Corbyn) or a centrist (Hilary).
 
Depends on the situation. If the left spits out hard core unionist types who proceed to get wiped at the election it's on them.

If they fail to appeal to the center that's also in them.

Most of the time it's on the leader, policies don't really matter to much. Put up a putz it doesn't matter if it's a leftie (Corbyn) or a centrist (Hilary).

I thought you wanted Labour to return to more traditional supporting working class voters and get rid of woke lefties but now its the unions you don't like?
 
I thought you wanted Labour to return to more traditional supporting working class voters and get rid of woke lefties but now its the unions you don't like?

Over here the unions used to monopolize the selection process and it kept on spitting out 0 charisma hardcore trade unionists with 0 clue. Inevitably they got crushed in the elections. They changed that process a few years ago but through to 2011 or 14 iirc that was the process.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2014_New_Zealand_general_election

27% and 47%.

34% vs 45%
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_New_Zealand_general_election

Polling was so bad in 2017 Jacinda took over six weeks out from an election and won. People didn't vote labour they voted for her and again in 2020. Her numbers are pretty much always better than her parties.

Of course the hard core Greenies etc dump all over her (she's a neo lib, made housing crisis worse etc).

The electorate got sick of the unionists in the 80's and voted to smash them.
 
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The Progressive left needs a less progressive leftist who is charismatic and who can bring the House and Senate along with him/her. Said person cannot be scary to gun owners or religious fundamentalists. They cannot be anti capitalism.

What you're describing isn't a "less progressive" leftist. You're describing someone who basically isn't progressive at all.

Hmmm... I would have thought that a sound progressive platform could be built around: healthcare, racial equality, voting rights, income equality, tax reform, infrastructure, climate change, social programs, and education. Wasting energy and money going after guns, Christians religious right, and corporations in general has been and will continue to be a losing path.

Remember, the goal is to get elected and be in a position of sufficient power to make meaningful change. Any candidate has to run on a platform that can stand in the face of the right's inherent media and money advantage.

The problem you have is the demographics you describe also have opinions on the things you claim a progressive platform (that enjoys popular support) can be built on.

Not to mention that capitalism is frequently criticised as a factor in the problems (you list to be solved) by leftists. I'm not here to turn the thread into a thread about capitalism, I'm just pointing out the correlation made.

You definitely don't want a progressive leftist, and maybe not a leftist at all. That last one's kind of a semantic hole to go down, so let's just stick to not wanting a progressive :D Progressive healthcare alone (or anything approximating it) gets gutted on sight. If the Democrats as existing in the current power structure cannot get through bills as they'd like, what hope does any realistic progressive platform have?

Leftists frequently get told to be realistic. We have done many times in this thread alone. I'm not sure your suggestion is realistic enough to be feasible. Though I'm sure that doesn't stop individuals, or even small groups, from trying, nor would I want folks to. But as a platform? I'd be interested in seeing how you see that coming to be.

Tell me then what is the Progressive leftist platform you want?

I have no idea. My answer will likely be more tailored to the UK.

In any case, that isn't what we were discussing. I was trying to explore what you think the progressive left needs (post provided again for context below). Hence the questions I asked.

And that is what I provided: a platform for maybe actually winning. Defeating the right is about winning. I think that the left hasn't won and won't win until they actually come up with a platform they can articulate. I don't see it here nor in the real world of politics. The right wingers are pretty clear about where they want the nation to go: lower taxes, less government, more religion, more money as speech, more guns, more for the rich, more power to the few. Even if they do not adhere to some of those in actuality, they clearly have a vision that people understand. The progressive left has failed to present any such vision beyond more government spending. The left cannot and will not win until they can tell people their vision for how things should be. I have been astonished that even here none of the leftists are willing to describe what their desired future looks like or how to get there. Your "I have no idea." encapsulates that failure perfectly. You pooh-poohed my suggested platform as not progressive and yet cannot articulate one yourself.

It is true that many people do vote against people and things; it is also true that they will work harder to vote for things that they want. The Progressive left offers nothing for them to vote for. Everything I listed in my "progressive platform" is apparently too centrist. You surprised me by retreating into "My answer will likely be more tailored to the UK." given that you have been pretty vocal about US politics, but whatever. Go ahead and tell us how the British Progressives should platform themselves in elections. :)

Nah, you said what the left "needed" was a particular type of individual. You then segued into talking about a platform without recognising my criticism of your theoretical individual that the leftists apparently need.

I mean, we're apparently playing hardball with motivations and whatnot now, hah. No idea how that happened. You getting a bit prickly that I'm not letting you move the goalposts? I didn't have an answer for your new goalpost - after you answered my questions with one of your own - because at the mo I'm replying late at night and on my mobile at the moment. Haven't been on a huge deal over New Year, for obvious and clichéd reasons :p Good assumptions though!

Leftists have no trouble defining a platform. There's a lot of problems in selling that platform. Optics, and so on. I find it distasteful, but hey, it's real. You could argue it's a part of the same problem but I find it useful to distinguish "having good ideas" and "convincing people on them" because they're problems with different solutions.

I took issue not with your alleged platform, but this theoretical individual you were originally talking about. This individual by your provided criteria would not be progressive, so they're not what any aspect of progressive leftism needs. Pure and simple. I didn't say the policy topics you touched on were centrist, but you did ignore me on the reality that the gun advocates and the like will object on things like progressive healthcare. It's not as simple as "don't fight US politics on guns". Which was your idea, for the record. The two-party system is so entrenched that people will vote for or against something purely based on who put it forward. We're heading the same way here in the UK. The failures in the voting system combined with a lack of accountability of our elected representatives undermines the whole system. It's a systemic problem.

Like, you're a smart guy. I don't understand why you're retreating to "the left is bad because the left can't win". Was Clinton bad because she couldn't win against a rubbish businessman? If so, why does she still have any political clout? It's never just about winning. It's about recognising why defeats happen, and learning from them. This often involves an uneven playing field, because a lot of leftist goals go against key capitalist and related US systems (healthcare, prison rights, etc).

On that topic, "yes it's unfair deal with it" is something I see a lot, too. It's crap advice. It's advice from people who don't care about the left actually winning. So why should we listen further? Convince me.
I am perhaps asking hard questions, but I'm not looking to up the game to to 'hardball. :) For clarity I quoted our conversation and highlighted some of your key points.

The individual I pointed at for a progressive candidate had these qualities: Charismatic, not scary to gun owners and religious, would have coattails to carry House and Senate. You said such an individual could not be Progressive. The "not being scary" part is all about not using rhetoric like "take their guns" or "tax their churches" as campaign talk. Why couldn't such a person be Progressive? Coattails is all about having down ticket strength; that usually comes from voter enthusiasm for the person. The most important part of this person is their charisma. I hope you are not saying that Progressives cannot be charismatic, or that they must be angry and aggressive. ;)

After finding such a person the Progressive left needs a platform. You say the left has no problem defining a platform. OK fine. How come no one but the left knows what it is? Is Bernie Sanders the flag bearer of the Progressives and should I assume his platform represents the Left? Yes, selling a platform can be challenging, but the first step is to tell people what your selling. That is IMO where the Progressives' fail. The far right/GOP will always object to anything that is not to the right of center. The goal, as I see it, is to get into a position of power and to do that you have to sell the platform to the center. You do that by not being scary. There are not enough Progressives in the US to win at a national level on their own. There are plenty of left of center people who might vote Progressive if they knew what that meant. The 2018 midterms showed that.

I certainly am not in the camp of "the left is bad because the left can't win". I would love to see a leftist win. I am critical of the Left because they do not know how to win and don't seem to want to learn. It is like they want to be an important part of the process and wave the progressive flag for all to see, but they don't actually want to win because that would mean they would have to deliver. The House Progressive caucus likes being important and influencing votes and in that they are like the GOP Freedom caucus. It is a step to be built on.

Clinton lost because she was a bad candidate with too much baggage and an entitlement attitude. She had charisma among many women, but too many men disliked her. I held my nose and voted for her.

This thread is about how to defeat the right. Shining a light on the evils of the right is step one, but it is not a winning step. That is Biden's win. He kept Trump from winning but is hamstrung because his win was weak and focused on not letting the bad guy win again. To win with enough power to do stuff, you have to sell the populace on good things that you will do. We have yet to see anyone who can do that from the Dems or Progressives in our current terrible political environment. :)
 
I'll reply later, BD!
Blaming the Center, if you're not a member of the Center does what, exactly? It doesn't do anything unless that blame somehow changes whether they're swayed or not.
And yet, this applies to blaming leftists too, of which a lot of participants definitely aren't, sorry. You (generic) can have left-leaning positions, sure. But you can also have right-leaning ones, be they economic or cultural.

Maybe that's the actual tension here. People who perceive themselves as leftist see themselves as criticising the in-group. Probably not helped by many on the left using "liberal" or "centrist" as an unflattering term, to be fair. But that happens the other way too (it's 2021 and people are still using "communist" unironically, lol). Or perhaps it's the gap between left-leaning types and progressive leftists. The centre isn't a point, it's a part of the axis. You can sit left in it and still be in the centre.

I like a bunch of your arguments, El. You know that. The same goes for BD. But I wouldn't call either of you (a) leftist. I don't mean this insultingly either. I'm certainly no authority. It's just my take on your positions, generally. I'm trying to explain what I think the tension is; the dissonance.
 
"Beating the Right" = / = being a 'leftist', though.

I don't need to meet a purity test in order to want to defeat various rightwing proposals or ideals, or try to meet people's definition of 'No True Leftist'. And, of course, I'll only support left-wing proposals that are (imo) of net-benefit (excepting when realpolitik requires that some proposals get good-packaged-with-bad). But then we get back to 'blaming the Center'. Like, so what? It's 'their fault' for not subscribing to the leftist worldview, but then so what? What do you do with that information? What do you do to stop the Center from accidentally or intentionally oppressing people or supporting oppressive power structures? What do you do to prevent the Center from supporting institutions that lead to sub-optimal or inefficient outcomes?

As I mentioned up thread, the Left has a series of structural difficulties that require actual solutions to. Increasing the list of grievances against the Right doesn't actually do anything unless it snowballs into an increased ability to actually win. There are some in this thread that seem to have interpreted "winning the Center" as "coddling the Center" or "kowtowing to the Center's rightwing inclinations". This is just the wrong take, unless it's part of a larger strategy of actually winning. Winning the Center is literally that, getting a plurality of people who'll either support a good cause or at least stay out of the way.
 
"take their guns" or "tax their churches" as campaign talk. Why couldn't such a person be Progressive?

Because somebody that deliberately goes around disarming people then suppressing their worship is the opposite in deed even if they are not in word. See who to beat in the OP.
 
I have no idea. My answer will likely be more tailored to the UK.
So you are a national socialist? Where does that place you on the axis?
 
So you are a national socialist? Where does that place you on the axis?

No the UK has different problems than USA or my country.

Here tye rights pro immigration for example and housing us the big social issue.

I'm guessing guns aren't a huge issue in UK.
 
No the UK has different problems than USA or my country.

Here tye rights pro immigration for example and housing us the big social issue.

I'm guessing guns aren't a huge issue in UK.
Yeah, i get that, left and right are fairly relative to time and place, but i was asking @Gorbles the question, in context to...

.....The centre isn't a point, it's a part of the axis. You can sit left in it and still be in the centre.

I like a bunch of your arguments, El. You know that. The same goes for BD. But I wouldn't call either of you (a) leftist. I don't mean this insultingly either. I'm certainly no authority. It's just my take on your positions, generally. I'm trying to explain what I think the tension is; the dissonance.

So, specifically, it seems he considers himself a leftist, but not @El_Machinae or @Birdjaguar....despite, as you say, "different problems"....yet....his answer to what a progressive left platform should be/is tailored to the UK, so i was wondering what british twist of socialism he considers "leftist"?
 
I wouldn't consider myself a 'leftist', insofar as the term isn't very well defined or have a Venn Diagram that completely makes sense. You could predict my beliefs knowing that I lean left, in the Canadian sense.
 
I am socially progressive, favor government spending, and think capitalism can be improved.
 
I am perhaps asking hard questions, but I'm not looking to up the game to to 'hardball. :) For clarity I quoted our conversation and highlighted some of your key points.

The individual I pointed at for a progressive candidate had these qualities: Charismatic, not scary to gun owners and religious, would have coattails to carry House and Senate. You said such an individual could not be Progressive. The "not being scary" part is all about not using rhetoric like "take their guns" or "tax their churches" as campaign talk. Why couldn't such a person be Progressive? Coattails is all about having down ticket strength; that usually comes from voter enthusiasm for the person. The most important part of this person is their charisma. I hope you are not saying that Progressives cannot be charismatic, or that they must be angry and aggressive. ;)

After finding such a person the Progressive left needs a platform. You say the left has no problem defining a platform. OK fine. How come no one but the left knows what it is? Is Bernie Sanders the flag bearer of the Progressives and should I assume his platform represents the Left? Yes, selling a platform can be challenging, but the first step is to tell people what your selling. That is IMO where the Progressives' fail. The far right/GOP will always object to anything that is not to the right of center. The goal, as I see it, is to get into a position of power and to do that you have to sell the platform to the center. You do that by not being scary. There are not enough Progressives in the US to win at a national level on their own. There are plenty of left of center people who might vote Progressive if they knew what that meant. The 2018 midterms showed that.

I certainly am not in the camp of "the left is bad because the left can't win". I would love to see a leftist win. I am critical of the Left because they do not know how to win and don't seem to want to learn. It is like they want to be an important part of the process and wave the progressive flag for all to see, but they don't actually want to win because that would mean they would have to deliver. The House Progressive caucus likes being important and influencing votes and in that they are like the GOP Freedom caucus. It is a step to be built on.

Clinton lost because she was a bad candidate with too much baggage and an entitlement attitude. She had charisma among many women, but too many men disliked her. I held my nose and voted for her.

This thread is about how to defeat the right. Shining a light on the evils of the right is step one, but it is not a winning step. That is Biden's win. He kept Trump from winning but is hamstrung because his win was weak and focused on not letting the bad guy win again. To win with enough power to do stuff, you have to sell the populace on good things that you will do. We have yet to see anyone who can do that from the Dems or Progressives in our current terrible political environment. :)
Correction: I said an individual that was required to be anti-capitalist would not be progressive. At the very least, I'd argue it's very hard to find one that doesn't also strongly critique capitalism. You could get them to stop talking about it, perhaps, but that's an argument to their morals, which would then also have a bearing on the progressives they'd be able to get on board for voter share.

My other point was that - especially in the US - it's very difficult for any progressive to be seen as not "scary" to gun owners and religious types. Because when you say religious, you must (for this problem specifically) mean conservative Christians. Specifically economic conservatives who also happen to be Christians, or at the very least invested in the (relevant) Church and associated structures. Progressives, of pretty much any set of beliefs, are synonymous by name with "socialists" (a lot of the time). Enough of the time for the specifics to not matter. The Red Scare never really went away. If you want to solve a problem, try and think on how to solve that problem. If someone as moderate as Bernie Sanders can be successfully demonised to the extent that the party doesn't want to endorse him as a viable candidate (I don't buy into the conspiracy stuff, but I do believe, simply, that the party much prefers other options, as they showed when they went with Clinton), you're going to struggle to find any named leftist, nevermind a progressive leftist, that can't be demonised in a similar fashion (on the national stage).

This is where the separation between national and state-level politics comes into play (as I understand it). Leftists can make gains in areas where support for them is higher than elsewhere. We've seen it happen. But this doesn't translate nationally. So when you say "this is what the left needs", I figure you have to be talking nationally, and I simply don't think that will work. Candidates don't exist in a vacuum.

So I don't get where you're coming from with "the left doesn't know how to win". The "left" absolutely knows how to win. They prove this at the state level (and below) across the US on a regular basis. They deliver on their promises, often facing literal sabotage from the right, at the same time. But regardless, the national ticket is a whole different ball game. You'd need buy-in from a majority of the Democratic Party, and as evidence has shown, there are way too many right-leaning and conservative types to make that kind of popular support happen. It's a different problem to here in the UK, where someone like Corbyn can become Leader of the Opposition and have a material impact. In the Democratic Party, that wouldn't happen in the first place (and the right-wing side of Labour are working to ensure that over here, too. It was never about Corbyn in particular - it's the politics themselves they don't want).

I feel it's pretty uncontroverisal to say "the two-party system is broken". A lot of folks across the political spectrum would likely agree with that statement. The problem lies in addressing the faults. When you talk about "the left" not wanting to learn, I have literally no idea what you're on about. Are you on about the small amount of relatively progressive names in the Democratic Party (like AoC, and so on)? Or are you on about all leftists throughout the US in terms of enacting changes to the political system (be it local, state-wide or federal)?

"Beating the Right" = / = being a 'leftist', though.
It doesn't mean being a leftist, no. But I was talking about this:
The reason why the onus is put onto 'the left' is that's the cohort most of us are part of.
Because of your complaints about me putting stuff to the centre.
I don't need to meet a purity test in order to want to defeat various rightwing proposals or ideals, or try to meet people's definition of 'No True Leftist'. And, of course, I'll only support left-wing proposals that are (imo) of net-benefit (excepting when realpolitik requires that some proposals get good-packaged-with-bad). But then we get back to 'blaming the Center'. Like, so what? It's 'their fault' for not subscribing to the leftist worldview, but then so what? What do you do with that information? What do you do to stop the Center from accidentally or intentionally oppressing people or supporting oppressive power structures? What do you do to prevent the Center from supporting institutions that lead to sub-optimal or inefficient outcomes?

As I mentioned up thread, the Left has a series of structural difficulties that require actual solutions to. Increasing the list of grievances against the Right doesn't actually do anything unless it snowballs into an increased ability to actually win. There are some in this thread that seem to have interpreted "winning the Center" as "coddling the Center" or "kowtowing to the Center's rightwing inclinations". This is just the wrong take, unless it's part of a larger strategy of actually winning. Winning the Center is literally that, getting a plurality of people who'll either support a good cause or at least stay out of the way.
I never said you had to pass any purity test, though given that you don't actually describe yourself as a leftist I have no idea what relevance referencing the No True Scotsman fallacy does here. You were the one asking what good blaming the centre does. Very little, because they're prone to blaming people politically-left of them for their losses. There ye go, an answer ;) So I asked what good does blaming the "left" does? I'm still waiting for that one.

If anything, all this proves is that "the left" is a grouping that defies any collective definition (which is why I often have it in quotes). But the point still stands. If someone with a majorly-different set of political archetypes defined by some kind of social label (like centrist, leftist, progressive, you name it) is being lectured at by someone outside of their in-group . . . what good does that do? I'm asking you the same question you're asking me. Not that I think lecturing any centrist does any good, of course, but with regards to defeating "the right", obviously the other (however poorly-defined) archetypes are ultimately grouped together in some fashion. These archetypes are still required, otherwise you get moronic takes like Farm Boy insisting that taxing churches is somehow suppressing peoples' faith. I get it, I understand where it's coming from, and it's still moronic. And part of it relies on painting people as being "unprogressive" because they don't agree with his conservative principles. I'd say it's astounding irony, but it's pretty par for the course for some of the takes we see around here.

As a part of the larger strategy, winning "the left" is also a part of actually winning. Centrists frequently win elections on the claim that the left needs to support them to defeat "the right". And then nothing happens, nothing changes, and the next election the "left" are once again told they have to vote for the moderate candidate. Guess what! People are getting sick of that kind of demand, because by the evidence it isn't apparently a winning strategy. The "left" has a problem, or a set of problems? Sure. So does liberalism. So does centrism. Hillary Clinton was not a leftist figurehead (progressive or otherwise). You might have thought that given her loss in 2016 we'd perhaps reconsider what was necessary to move the needle against right-wing candidates, but here in we in 2022, in a thread in CFC OT, with pressure being put on "the left" in a thread about anyone defeating "the right". If you genuinely want to help defeat "the right", a good first step would be to stop framing everything as being to do with the actions of a group that you aren't in. And you're not. Both by your own description, by what you choose to support. There are no "net positives". Someone will always lose out from a proposal. Right-wingers in particular, wouldn't you think? It's remarkably easy to frame something as not being a net positive. So you're not a leftist by both the qualifications you impose on proposals from "the left" that you would support (without actually giving any examples, so it's hard to work out your personal measure of net positivity to boot - hence why I'm going on mine, which is rather utilitarian), nor are you by dint of talking about the inherent difficulty of defining said group.

You can absolutely support left-leaning proposals without being a leftist. There's no qualification there. The problem is saying "I'm on the left, and this is what I think the left needs to do to improve", and then going on about how "the left" is hard to define (you're right, it is) when critiqued on the specifics of being a leftist. It's tiring. It, ironically, gets us nowhere when it comes to defeating "the right", in any context. The problem should be what we all need to do. From a societal perspective, and from a legislative perspective. The legislative perspective absolutely introduces problems with regards to the consensus required, and thus, the voters necessary. For sure. But we're not even there yet. We're still at "the left is doing things wrong, and I as a person who isn't a leftist thinks they should do X". How do you even know? How are you, personally, quantifying "the left", @El_Machinae. It's hard-to-define, sure. So what does it mean when you use it yourself?
 
Nice post!
 
Correction: I said an individual that was required to be anti-capitalist would not be progressive. At the very least, I'd argue it's very hard to find one that doesn't also strongly critique capitalism. You could get them to stop talking about it, perhaps, but that's an argument to their morals, which would then also have a bearing on the progressives they'd be able to get on board for voter share.

My other point was that - especially in the US - it's very difficult for any progressive to be seen as not "scary" to gun owners and religious types. Because when you say religious, you must (for this problem specifically) mean conservative Christians. Specifically economic conservatives who also happen to be Christians, or at the very least invested in the (relevant) Church and associated structures. Progressives, of pretty much any set of beliefs, are synonymous by name with "socialists" (a lot of the time). Enough of the time for the specifics to not matter. The Red Scare never really went away. If you want to solve a problem, try and think on how to solve that problem. If someone as moderate as Bernie Sanders can be successfully demonised to the extent that the party doesn't want to endorse him as a viable candidate (I don't buy into the conspiracy stuff, but I do believe, simply, that the party much prefers other options, as they showed when they went with Clinton), you're going to struggle to find any named leftist, nevermind a progressive leftist, that can't be demonised in a similar fashion (on the national stage).

This is where the separation between national and state-level politics comes into play (as I understand it). Leftists can make gains in areas where support for them is higher than elsewhere. We've seen it happen. But this doesn't translate nationally. So when you say "this is what the left needs", I figure you have to be talking nationally, and I simply don't think that will work. Candidates don't exist in a vacuum.

So I don't get where you're coming from with "the left doesn't know how to win". The "left" absolutely knows how to win. They prove this at the state level (and below) across the US on a regular basis. They deliver on their promises, often facing literal sabotage from the right, at the same time. But regardless, the national ticket is a whole different ball game. You'd need buy-in from a majority of the Democratic Party, and as evidence has shown, there are way too many right-leaning and conservative types to make that kind of popular support happen. It's a different problem to here in the UK, where someone like Corbyn can become Leader of the Opposition and have a material impact. In the Democratic Party, that wouldn't happen in the first place (and the right-wing side of Labour are working to ensure that over here, too. It was never about Corbyn in particular - it's the politics themselves they don't want).

I feel it's pretty uncontroverisal to say "the two-party system is broken". A lot of folks across the political spectrum would likely agree with that statement. The problem lies in addressing the faults. When you talk about "the left" not wanting to learn, I have literally no idea what you're on about. Are you on about the small amount of relatively progressive names in the Democratic Party (like AoC, and so on)? Or are you on about all leftists throughout the US in terms of enacting changes to the political system (be it local, state-wide or federal)?


It doesn't mean being a leftist, no. But I was talking about this:

Because of your complaints about me putting stuff to the centre.

I never said you had to pass any purity test, though given that you don't actually describe yourself as a leftist I have no idea what relevance referencing the No True Scotsman fallacy does here. You were the one asking what good blaming the centre does. Very little, because they're prone to blaming people politically-left of them for their losses. There ye go, an answer ;) So I asked what good does blaming the "left" does? I'm still waiting for that one.

If anything, all this proves is that "the left" is a grouping that defies any collective definition (which is why I often have it in quotes). But the point still stands. If someone with a majorly-different set of political archetypes defined by some kind of social label (like centrist, leftist, progressive, you name it) is being lectured at by someone outside of their in-group . . . what good does that do? I'm asking you the same question you're asking me. Not that I think lecturing any centrist does any good, of course, but with regards to defeating "the right", obviously the other (however poorly-defined) archetypes are ultimately grouped together in some fashion. These archetypes are still required, otherwise you get moronic takes like Farm Boy insisting that taxing churches is somehow suppressing peoples' faith. I get it, I understand where it's coming from, and it's still moronic. And part of it relies on painting people as being "unprogressive" because they don't agree with his conservative principles. I'd say it's astounding irony, but it's pretty par for the course for some of the takes we see around here.

As a part of the larger strategy, winning "the left" is also a part of actually winning. Centrists frequently win elections on the claim that the left needs to support them to defeat "the right". And then nothing happens, nothing changes, and the next election the "left" are once again told they have to vote for the moderate candidate. Guess what! People are getting sick of that kind of demand, because by the evidence it isn't apparently a winning strategy. The "left" has a problem, or a set of problems? Sure. So does liberalism. So does centrism. Hillary Clinton was not a leftist figurehead (progressive or otherwise). You might have thought that given her loss in 2016 we'd perhaps reconsider what was necessary to move the needle against right-wing candidates, but here in we in 2022, in a thread in CFC OT, with pressure being put on "the left" in a thread about anyone defeating "the right". If you genuinely want to help defeat "the right", a good first step would be to stop framing everything as being to do with the actions of a group that you aren't in. And you're not. Both by your own description, by what you choose to support. There are no "net positives". Someone will always lose out from a proposal. Right-wingers in particular, wouldn't you think? It's remarkably easy to frame something as not being a net positive. So you're not a leftist by both the qualifications you impose on proposals from "the left" that you would support (without actually giving any examples, so it's hard to work out your personal measure of net positivity to boot - hence why I'm going on mine, which is rather utilitarian), nor are you by dint of talking about the inherent difficulty of defining said group.

You can absolutely support left-leaning proposals without being a leftist. There's no qualification there. The problem is saying "I'm on the left, and this is what I think the left needs to do to improve", and then going on about how "the left" is hard to define (you're right, it is) when critiqued on the specifics of being a leftist. It's tiring. It, ironically, gets us nowhere when it comes to defeating "the right", in any context. The problem should be what we all need to do. From a societal perspective, and from a legislative perspective. The legislative perspective absolutely introduces problems with regards to the consensus required, and thus, the voters necessary. For sure. But we're not even there yet. We're still at "the left is doing things wrong, and I as a person who isn't a leftist thinks they should do X". How do you even know? How are you, personally, quantifying "the left", @El_Machinae. It's hard-to-define, sure. So what does it mean when you use it yourself?

Hilary didn't lose because she was a centrist. She lost because she is a terrible candidate, been around to long and was a Clinton.

There rights gonna attack no matter what don't give them free ammunition.

Democrat voters rejected Bernie and that's with a best case scenario friendly crowd.
 
Hilary didn't lose because she was a centrist. She lost because she is a terrible candidate, been around to long and was a Clinton.
And yet, it was centrists (and right-wingers) in the Democratic Party that decided she was the best candidate. No leftist would've suggested her. The people making those decisions have to own the consequences.
 
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