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Edited by Mrph1 on Nov 30th 2023 at 11:03:59 AM
If memory serves, evidence indicates that the correct answer on 2018 is "both". Trump - unusual for a president in a midterm election - campaigned heavily in 2018 and encouraged his supporters to vote. It did work for him, but Democrats also turned out.
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled." - Richard FeynmanBoth, it seems. Turn out for both parties was much higher than average in 2018, but Democrats had it much much higher. I know one district in California that had been Republican since it was created in the 80's had their Republican turnout increase by like 30% compared to 2014. But the Democrats won because they increased their turnout by like 150%.
Which is why many pundits are predicting that turnout in 2020 will likely be record breaking. Extremely disappointing that it took the election of someone like Trump to get people to wake up and realise voting matters, but better late than never.
Life is unfair...
X6 And that’s the really scary thing, Trump’s numbers are bad, but he’s manage to win with worse. Now once the campaign gets fully going he should hopefully drop even further, on top of that as long as the democratic nominee doesn’t have as bad numbers as Hillary did things shouldn’t be to bad.
Trump had a lot of people who didn’t like him vote for him, that makes his low favourability numbers not as much of a problem for him if he can pull that off again.
“And the Bunny nails it!” ~ Gabrael “If the UN can get through a day without everyone strangling everyone else so can we.” ~ CyranThat's human nature. We do not take any risk seriously until someone gets killed. Sad fact about pretty much every tragedy in history - from an airplane crash over a volcanic disaster and Hurricane Katrina to political disasters like the rise of Nazism - is that there was plenty of forewarning but people didn't act on it.
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled." - Richard FeynmanOne correction, it was both.
So it's both true that he was popular enough amongst the base to cause them to turn out and unpopular amongst the #Resistance to cause them to also turnout.
Which is very bad for Trump and the Republicans because when both Republicans and Democrats turn out then Republicans lose, for the simple fact that more people are Democrats. 2018 being a clear example of that, both Republican and Democratic turnout was high which resulted in Republicans losing the House and making modest gains in a Senate heavily slanted in their favor.
"Einstein would turn over in his grave. Not only does God play dice, the dice are loaded." -Chairman Sheng-Ji YangThe big problem is that the bureaucracy that runs them will attempt to conceal matters, slow them down, and probably continue operations as best they can. It's why I think ICE needs to be dissolved and all members fired.
Author of The Rules of Supervillainy, Cthulhu Armageddon, and United States of Monsters.I remind people that Obama made shutting down Guantanamo Bay's detention facility a top campaign promise and he failed to do so.
Does it end with all members fired because their actions are human rights violations and people all were a part of it.
Edited by CharlesPhipps on Sep 15th 2019 at 2:14:09 AM
Author of The Rules of Supervillainy, Cthulhu Armageddon, and United States of Monsters.![]()
Not quite, the members maybe gone, but the name and thus the stigma lingers still. The name has to change as were you to give them the Ship of Theseus treatment, and at that point I'd think it might be better to just disband them and put a new agency in its place.
Of course I'm of the opinion that they should be disbanded anyway and their actors brought to a Nuremberg-style trial held by the UN.
Edited by MorningStar1337 on Sep 15th 2019 at 2:40:20 AM
California is trying to force some of the camps down now by outlawing private prisons, we’ll see how it works.
Hopefully the camps are shut down fast if a democrat wins, though public promises to do that may run the risk of ICE agents engaging in massacres, so the entire situation has to be handled carefully and not with my desired solution of “deploy national guard reigns and ship all camp staff to The Hague for trial for crimes against humanity”.
Don’t forget about some of the prisoners being used as literal slaves until California got a judge to force the camps to pay the prisoners.
Edited by Silasw on Sep 15th 2019 at 9:41:15 AM
“And the Bunny nails it!” ~ Gabrael “If the UN can get through a day without everyone strangling everyone else so can we.” ~ Cyran

tldr, the aggregate before the election had Trump at net -21% (37.5 favorable to 58.5 unfavorable), compared to Clinton's -12.6% (41.8 favorable, 54.4 unfavorable). The article discussing post-election only refers to a single poll, but says Trump's favorability spiked nine points to 46% while his unfavorability dropped 15 points to 46%, leaving him at net 0%. They note that this is fairly common occurrence for presidents-elect.
Which more or less matches what I was suggesting — there were a lot of people going "well, he's going to be president now, he'll have to get his shit together, right?" and then pretty much immediately turned on him when it became clear that no, he wasn't going to get his shit together after all, and President Trump was going to be just like Campaign Trump.
However, turnout in 2018 was 50%, which is unusually high for a midterm election (2014 was 36%, 2010 and 2006 both 41%, and 2002 was 40%), which suggests that Trump is driving voter engagement. That could be because he's either really popular among his base so they turn out to support him or because he's really unpopular among the Democratic base so the turn out to oppose him, but the fact that the 2018 midterms were a landslide in the Democrats' favor strongly suggests the latter.
Edited by NativeJovian on Sep 15th 2019 at 3:15:07 PM
Really from Jupiter, but not an alien.