Democrats Will Regain Power If They Can Avoid Screwing Up
Trump Calls Schumer an Incompetent ‘Fool’ Just When He Needs Him Most · The Fiscal Times

As the shock of November’s defeat and the reality of being in opposition finally sink in, Democrats are moving beyond denial and starting to think about how to win in 2018 and 2020. This month’s DNC Chair election is providing an opportunity to discuss what went wrong and how to do better. Although I am not a Democrat, I thought my friends on the left could benefit from an outsider’s viewpoint. And, please don’t worry, I won’t tell you to start acting like Republicans.

Clinton received 2.9 million more popular votes than Trump but lost the electoral college because her voters were concentrated in a few coastal states. Further, she would have won an electoral college majority had she been able to overcome an aggregate Trump margin of just 78,000 popular votes in three states. Trump’s razor thin victories in Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania could have been reversed if more Democratic-leaning voters had turned out, if fewer voters had selected a third party candidate or if fewer voters chose no Presidential candidate, voting only in down ballot races.

Related: Will Democrats Stand Up to Trump? Here’s Their First Test

This last phenomenon – large number of voters declining to choose a Presidential candidate - was so unusual that it triggered demands for a recount. In Michigan, for example, 75,000 ballots did not include a Presidential preference, compared to a margin of just 11,000 votes separating the two major candidates. As far as we can tell, these blank votes weren’t caused by errors or fraud: they were the result of voters who disliked both candidates so much that they couldn’t bring themselves to vote for the lesser of two evils.

This is testimony to Clinton’s unattractiveness as a candidate. Hundreds of thousands of voters across the country repelled by Trump and unwilling to vote third party still could not convince themselves to vote for Clinton, despite her depth of experience and centrist platform. These voters, along with others who didn’t show up or voted for Jill Stein, could not accept Clinton’s cozy relationship with corporate interests, the whiff of corruption surrounding her family’s Foundation and her email controversies.

Post-election, Democratic insiders have blamed the Russians and FBI Director James Comey for Clinton’s defeat. And I find that hard to argue: news arising from leaked DNC email messages could have easily cost Clinton 78,000 votes in three states, as could the last-minute reopening (and reclosing) of the FBI investigation.

But blaming external forces is not a solution for winning: all candidates risk running up against such headwinds, including Trump who managed to overcome a hot mic off-air recording that NBC should not have leaked. Between the 1930s and the 1980s, the Soviets intervened in US politics by supporting the Communist Party USA and beaming propaganda to us over short wave radio, so Putin’s actions in 2016 are nothing new – rather just a higher tech version of the same old thing. Comey had been painted into a corner: he had sworn during Congressional testimony to promptly notify Committee members if new evidence turned up, and the cache of Clinton emails found on Anthony Weiner’s computer counted as such evidence.