President Biden is planning to make more surgical trips to minority communities in 2024 to reinforce the paid advertising his campaign is broadcasting directly to Black and Hispanic voters, according to people familiar with the matter.
He's not getting it through a Republican House, but he could use it to get a Democratic House. Getting the party lined up behind it would be a massive step in the right direction.
Disingenuous ruling from politifact. Whether or not they deem his answer "definitive and concise" and pretend that he has a better plan, it was a mask off moment.
This is the man who's repeatedly argued for CUTS to Medicare and Medicaid and he hasn't changed since then.
Good. He intends to reach out to people who are jumping ship, and is using varied messaging instead of just "not Trump." He's trying to win votes instead of expecting them to fall in his lap by virtue of being second worst.
I can't fault him for this. It's exactly what I've been saying Democrats should be doing if they want to win.
remember, corporations make bank off the status quo. The kind of reforms progressives want... it hurts their pocket books. Biden is an "acceptable" candidate- not a complete douche, he comes off as sympathetic. but fundamentally still in their pockets. swaddled in their pocket-squares.
They still think his low poll numbers are a “messaging problem” and not a, you know, DO SOMETHING problem.
I mean, the messaging has been pretty dogshit so far, too. I welcome positive change from the "Fuck you, you're going to vote for us" we've been getting so far.
To be fair, he's definitely still not trump... Basically all of the value of that statement is still valid. Maybe even more so now.
I didn't vote for that, I voted libertarian, but objectively speaking, if it was worth a vote four years ago, it's worth the same vote now. If you aren't willing to vote Dem on just that, you shouldn't have last time either :)
How do you "broadcast directly to Black and Hispanic voters" exactly? I'm reasonably certain there's no non-racist answer to that question, and it's rhetorical in nature... I'm just saying... That's not how you support minorities... Pardoning 11 whole ass people doesn't sound all that supportive either.
The fuck does he plan on telling these directly targeted minorities? That he's gonna do something for them? He's an incumbent, he's had four years to do something, are people really gonna give a shit that he woke up from his nap because it's election time?
I hope he carries the vote, but God damn is the bar low right now...
Law enforcement has removed the individual liberty of thousands over something that is perfectly legal in like half the country right now...
The judiciary branch can, and will, argue that their actions were, at the time, criminal activity. They can't really roll that back without some really fucky precedents happening on the process.
It's one of the very few instances when the executive "checks and balances" are truly warranted, and these types of pardons should be absolutely rampant right now, even without a federal descheduling. It's one of the few times we it's simply the right thing to do vs the political dog whistle its generally used as.
It should not be symbolic... But I will concede that it should be a gubernatorial matter :)
The only group they really lose was young latino and black men, and there is good reason for that. Black and Hispanic women were constant shares.
Affirmative action went in its funding in 50% to white women. It is difficult to curt a group when programs initiated to help them ends up benefiting mostly you. And this happens again and again with other institutions.
Why it matters: Team Biden knows that they need to drive up the president's numbers with Black and Hispanic voters – and convince them to turn out on election day.
Driving the news: The emerging strategy was on display Wednesday, when Biden traveled to Milwaukee to highlight his administration's investment in Black-owned businesses.
On Friday, the White House announced that Biden would grant clemency to 11 people who were serving "disproportionately long sentences," for nonviolent drug offenses, including those with long crack cocaine convictions, a key priority for the Congressional Black Caucus and civil rights groups.
By the numbers: To reassemble his winning coalition from 2020, Biden needs to dramatically improve his standing with Black, Hispanic and young voters.
Several recent surveys put Biden's level of Black support in the low 60% range, a shocking development for a demographic that supported Biden with 92% of the vote in the last election.
His approval rating among Hispanics is even lower, at 33% in a recent Pew survey. Former President Trump leads Biden by five percentage points in the demographic, according to a new CNBC survey. In 2016, Biden won 59% of the Latino vote, according to exit poll data.
Zoom out: From the outset of Biden's presidency, top officials have viewed local and specialized media as a tool to circumvent national new organizations and speak directly to voters.
Zoom in: Earlier this month, the Biden campaign released a new ad, previewed by The Root, highlighting the administration's efforts to help Black farmers.
Not too sure on that, may be 2018 or comparing to Clinton numbers? Quote that has 59% and mentions hispanics below.
Biden received the support of 92% of Black voters, nearly the same as Clinton received in 2016 and Democratic candidates for the U.S. House received in 2018.
While Biden took a 59% majority of the Hispanic vote, Trump (with 38%) gained significantly over the level of support Republican candidates for the House received in 2018 (25%). To be sure, Hispanic voters are not a monolith; there is substantial diversity within the Hispanic electorate.