Democrats need to get a grip if they want to win next time
Donald Trump
Donald Trump

(Donald Trump.AP)

This is no time to lose your head, but that isn't stopping a lot of liberals from doing so anyway.

Democrats who spent months horrified that Donald Trump might not honor a clear election result then gave millions of dollars to Jill Stein (!) to pursue pointless recounts in states that were close, but not recount-level close.

Now they are hinting at the idea that the Electoral College should refuse to elect Trump, without quite coming out and saying so out loud.

For some reason, former Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta piped up to say electors ought to get intelligence briefings about Russian election interference — briefings that would only be relevant if the idea was electors might change their votes based on the information they contain.

This is stupid

This reaction is bad, for two reasons. One is that baseless challenges to the election result (including by obliquely lobbying the Electoral College to nullify the result) undermine the very electoral institutions that Democrats were correctly saying we need to honor before they knew they would lose the election.

The other problem is that the obsessive focus on what was so unfair about this year's election — the Electoral College, the FBI, Russia's interference, sexism, and more have all been mentioned — allows Democrats to avoid focusing on how their own errors to contributed to the loss.

Saying you lost because the system was rigged against you is self-flattery, and it doesn't help you learn anything about what to do next time.

A healthier thing would be for Democrats to focus on their own strategic mistakes so they don't repeat them.

hillary clinton
hillary clinton

(Former United States Secretary of State Hillary ClintonAssociated Press)

Next time, nominate better

FBI Director James Comey's interference in the election was inappropriate and quite possibly swayed the outcome. The best way to prevent that from happening again is to do what political parties usually do: nominate a candidate who is not under investigation by the FBI.

Clinton failed to offer a compelling message on how she would help middle-income Americans get ahead through work — a failure that has been common for Republican and Democratic politicians in recent years, but that Trump managed to avoid. The next Democratic nominee will need to figure out how to convince voters he or she can succeed in fixing the job market where Trump fails.

Most importantly, Clinton had major conflict-of-interest issues that positioned her poorly to take advantage of Trump's corruption.

I have been amazed by the way so many liberals fully understand in general the insidious power of money and influence in politics, but will not apply their usual critiques to the Clintons — or even understand why voters do apply them.