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Democratic 2020 Presidential Primary Thread


snafu

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1 hour ago, Tiberius said:

Joe Biden even if he is dead the day before the election can beat him. The Democratic base will turn out. Our base is bigger than your base 

Somewhere in this forum there was a post by B-Man quoting the percentage of democrats attending Trump rallies. If I remember correctly, 27% of the people attending are registered democrats. How do you like them apples?

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11 minutes ago, 3rdnlng said:

Somewhere in this forum there was a post by B-Man quoting the percentage of democrats attending Trump rallies. If I remember correctly, 27% of the people attending are registered democrats. How do you like them apples?

Lol, oh B-Man posted it?! 

 

That's funny!!! 

 

 

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18 minutes ago, row_33 said:

I like Joe Biden, i think he'd do a great job as the Dem nominee, maybe make a solid President if he won

 

Joe Biden has the backbone of a jellyfish. He is always wrong on the issues, especially foreign policy issues. For example, he advised Obama to not go after Osama Bin Laden when he did. His reason was that it could harm him politically if the mission failed.

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4 minutes ago, 3rdnlng said:

Joe Biden has the backbone of a jellyfish. He is always wrong on the issues, especially foreign policy issues. For example, he advised Obama to not go after Osama Bin Laden when he did. His reason was that it could harm him politically if the mission failed.

 

he's the only legit option for the Dems

 

if Trump croaks than I want to see the best Dem win

 

 

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3 minutes ago, 3rdnlng said:

Then it will be Pence who will continue Trump's policies.

 

before i show up here i make sure to visit Breitbart to ensure "nothing happened" of major consequence

 

you never know in this day and age...

 

you could be so far behind something major after last visiting 10 minutes ago.

 

 

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ELIZABETH WARREN’S HEALTH CARE 

HARA-KIRI

 

Medicare for All would enroll everyone in the same government plan, whatever their preferences. 

 

Let’s be clear about what this would mean. According to the most recent government statistics, more than 218 million Americans now participate in private health-care plans, of which 179 million are employment-based. As critics of Medicare for All have pointed out, many of these plans are the result of tough negotiations in which employees have compromised on wages and working conditions in return for more-generous health-insurance benefits. These workers would be asked to surrender their hard-won gains in return for a promise that they will prefer what they get from the government instead. 

 

In the early 1960s, when I was young and 70% of Americans told pollsters they trusted the federal government, this promise might have garnered wide acceptance. Today, with trust below 20%, it will be a much harder sell. 

 

Don’t take my word for it. As recently as March 2018, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation, support for Medicare for All stood at 59% and opposition at just 38%. Now, after more than a year of intensifying discussion, support has fallen 8 points, to 51%, while opposition has risen by 9 points, to 47%. 

 

Here’s a big reason why. As recently as January, 67% of those who favored Medicare for All believed that it wouldn’t jeopardize their family’s current health insurance. Although Kaiser hasn’t updated this figure, many of the plan’s early backers must have discovered that their prior belief was contrary to fact.

 

Excerpt) Read more at wsj.com ...

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1 hour ago, B-Man said:

 

ELIZABETH WARREN’S HEALTH CARE 

HARA-KIRI

 

Medicare for All would enroll everyone in the same government plan, whatever their preferences. 

 

Let’s be clear about what this would mean. According to the most recent government statistics, more than 218 million Americans now participate in private health-care plans, of which 179 million are employment-based. As critics of Medicare for All have pointed out, many of these plans are the result of tough negotiations in which employees have compromised on wages and working conditions in return for more-generous health-insurance benefits. These workers would be asked to surrender their hard-won gains in return for a promise that they will prefer what they get from the government instead. 

 

In the early 1960s, when I was young and 70% of Americans told pollsters they trusted the federal government, this promise might have garnered wide acceptance. Today, with trust below 20%, it will be a much harder sell. 

 

Don’t take my word for it. As recently as March 2018, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation, support for Medicare for All stood at 59% and opposition at just 38%. Now, after more than a year of intensifying discussion, support has fallen 8 points, to 51%, while opposition has risen by 9 points, to 47%. 

 

Here’s a big reason why. As recently as January, 67% of those who favored Medicare for All believed that it wouldn’t jeopardize their family’s current health insurance. Although Kaiser hasn’t updated this figure, many of the plan’s early backers must have discovered that their prior belief was contrary to fact.

 

Excerpt) Read more at wsj.com ...

 

This is behind a paywall.  So I did a little digging on the Kaiser poll and here is what I found:


That seems to be the case across parties. Overall, 71 percent of Democrats, 51 percent of independents, and 28 percent of Republicans favor “Medicare for All,” according to Kaiser. But support is down across all three, while opposition is up. It’s a little tricky to read the trends, because Kaiser’s polling results have a pretty high margin of error when broken down by party (6 percent in the latest survey).

Pure partisanship has probably kicked in a bit as well; as the primary campaign has worn on, Republicans and Republican-leaning independents may have come to associate the idea with Democratic candidates, leading them to reject it.

 

I find it funny that Americans are still favoring according to this and they want to say people don't want it.  I will admit 51% is certainly within the margin for error but you shouldn't pretend this is a wildly unpopular idea.  Repubs love the idea of trickle down economics, universal health care would erase one of the largest costs to employers and they could pass the savings down to their employees right? 

 

This line sticks out to me from you article:

 

employees have compromised on wages and working conditions in return for more-generous health-insurance benefits

 

Imagine not having to compromise on working conditions to get health care!  That is an argument against.  It amazes me what people will buy to go against their own self interests.

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6 minutes ago, section122 said:

 

employees have compromised on wages and working conditions in return for more-generous health-insurance benefits

 

 

 

i thought major unions in the US took pay cuts to preserve their health plans

 

and then all the Dems gleefully announce that all plans will be destroyed when they win

 

not sure how this brings back the labor vote to the Dems

 

 

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16 minutes ago, row_33 said:

 

i thought major unions in the US took pay cuts to preserve their health plans

 

and then all the Dems gleefully announce that all plans will be destroyed when they win

 

not sure how this brings back the labor vote to the Dems

 

 

That is my point.  Imagine not having to make concessions on your wage or your working conditions (the bigger wow to me) to get health care coverage that almost every other developed nation offers to their citizens.  Taking it back to trickle down economic theory (remember this is why we do corporate tax cuts) the less employers have to pay for insuring their employees the more they can pay them in salary correct?

 

The total cost of health care, including premiums and out-of-pocket costs for employees and dependents, is estimated to average $14,800 per employee in 2019, up from $14,099 this year. Large employers will cover roughly 70 percent of those costs, leaving $4,400 on average for employees to pick up in premium contributions and out-of-pocket expenses.

 

So here is some fun with math:

 

Employers could give each employee a $10,000 a year raise and still come out $400 ahead on each employee.

 

Average wage in the US is $47,060 - $4400 equals $42660 pre tax income

NYS tax (single person) on $42660 is $1881.  Federal tax (at 8.11%) is approx $3461, social security tax is approx $2645 (gasp a socialist tax!) medicare tax (socialist!) approx 618.

Take home wage is approx $34054 and you are responsible for co-pays, prescriptions, etc...

 

If you received a $5000 raise since your employer no longer had to foot insurance costs they would come out $5400 on each employee on average

I'll spare you the math but bring home on is approx $40,973 (8.89% federal tax) if your federal tax was raised to say 20% your bring home is approx $35,188 and your medical costs are minimal to nonexistent.

 

Here is the tax calculator I used if you are so inclined

 

When you avoid the talking points and look at the hard data it is easy to see how this should be in place.  I raised everyone's taxes by 11.89% and they still came out ahead.  Think about that, I more than doubled the federal tax rate and both employees and companies still come out ahead. 

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Just now, section122 said:

That is my point.  Imagine not having to make concessions on your wage or your working conditions (the bigger wow to me) to get health care coverage that almost every other developed nation offers to their citizens.  Taking it back to trickle down economic theory (remember this is why we do corporate tax cuts) the less employers have to pay for insuring their employees the more they can pay them in salary correct?

 

 

 

 

Your country decided to not implement a national health care plan, and they sure cannot do one now.

 

I have no moral qualms about this, i would hope that some day the US can provide care for the poor who have dire medical conditions that are readily treated (heart/cancer... nothing fancy)

 

But nobody sees this as a useful goal. 

 

 

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So where are you @Deranged Rhino at this point on Biden as the candidate?  I mean I know it'll change again and again in the upcoming months, but just gotta have a temperature check  :flirt:

 

https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/national-polls-and-state-polls-show-pretty-much-the-same-thing/

National Polls And State Polls Show Pretty Much The Same Thing

Don’t ignore South Carolina and Nevada.

A common refrain in coverage of the Democratic primary campaign is that the race looks much different in the early states than it does nationally, with a wider playing field, greater strength for upstart candidates such as Pete Buttigieg, and signs of weakness for the leader in national polls, Joe Biden.

 

The refrain is true if you look only at Iowa or only at New Hampshire, but it’s mostly not true overall. Taken collectively, polls in the four early states — Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina — tell almost the same story as national polls: Biden leads, Elizabeth Warren is in second, Bernie Sanders is in third, and Buttigieg is still a fairly distant fourth.

 

...

 

Put differently, there isn’t much evidence that Biden does worse with voters who see him up close and personal, as often seems to be the implication of coverage that focuses heavily on Iowa and New Hampshire. Instead, he does worse with liberal, college-educated whites, who are plentiful in these states. Intentionally or not, the intense media focus on Iowa and New Hampshire serves to give more influence to liberal, college-educated whites at the expense of African-Americans, Hispanics, moderate Democrats and working-class Democrats, groups that are also key parts of the Democratic coalition.

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23 minutes ago, transplantbillsfan said:

Put differently, there isn’t much evidence that Biden does worse with voters who see him up close and personal, as often seems to be the implication of coverage that focuses heavily on Iowa and New Hampshire.

 

Wait, since Biden has spent most of his time in Iowa, and his numbers there have gone down by a ton, how could that implication be incorrect?  The more Iowans saw of Biden, it seems, the more they were turned off.  I’d leave N.H. out of it because it is obviously Warren/Sanders country. I think it is safe to leave SC out, too, because that’s been seen as solidly for Biden. I honestly don’t think he will be the eventual nominee, and I’m not making any predictions.  I’m just focused on this quoted part of your article you linked. It seems to be the main premise.

 

 

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25 minutes ago, snafu said:

 

Wait, since Biden has spent most of his time in Iowa, and his numbers there have gone down by a ton, how could that implication be incorrect?  The more Iowans saw of Biden, it seems, the more they were turned off.  I’d leave N.H. out of it because it is obviously Warren/Sanders country. I think it is safe to leave SC out, too, because that’s been seen as solidly for Biden. I honestly don’t think he will be the eventual nominee, and I’m not making any predictions.  I’m just focused on this quoted part of your article you linked. It seems to be the main premise.

 

 


I've been seeing predictions that he gets skunked (in IA, NH, NV, and SC) and hopes to do well on Super Tuesday. ?‍♀️

 

Hiding a candidate worked well for Hillary, so they can try it again. Could work.

 

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1 hour ago, transplantbillsfan said:

So where are you @Deranged Rhino at this point on Biden as the candidate?  

 

Same place I've been from the start. Joe has no chance to win the general, and little chance to win the primary. But because the DNC has shown its willingness to rig the results, he might get the primary win -- only to be slaughtered in the general. 

 

The hurt with Joe and the Ukraine hasn't even started yet. Once the impeachment cloud goes public -- Joe's name is going to be dragged into it at every turn. That's going to make him toxic. And he's too dumb, too inept, to counter it politically. 

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