It's almost as if proudly standing for your total lack of convicted principles and material ideology doesn't motivate people.
Clinton was the human incarnation of that "Why are you booing me, I'm right" meme.
Speaking of Democrats having a penchant for trying bad ideas repeatedly, John Kerry is floating the idea of a 2020 run.
Wheels are just turning here but....
It could be a real shit show where there is no good answer for Dems.
What if many Dems independently decide to run, and it looks like what the Republicans did, and we end up with a clusterfuck with some possibly dusty memes thrown in for good measure. If Kerry, why not Gore? Why not Hilary again? Hell why not Bernie again. If people convince themselves another 4 years of Trump is a ticket to hell in a hand basket for America, that can be motivation enough.
Well, on the other hand, having a fierce competition like that may be exactly what the party needs and is actually healthy. It probably helps that we've already seen what can happen in such a crowded field, so, there may be attempts to narrow it down faster, though I hope the winnowing happens naturally.
And if Dems go the other route, and really seriously manage the field to produce the best possible candidate to win against Trump...isn't that the kind of collusion and groupthink that led them to Hilary and froze out Bernie, and alienated a lot of Dems?
They're going to have to do some management at some point, but the DNC seems to be trying to get out of it's own way to not repeat the same mistakes of 2016
Dems need a real leader that can pull everyone back together, inspire Dems again and has enough of a backbone not to cave under Trump's particular kind of pressure.
It's not so much a lack of real leaders, theres definetly those among the Democrats who could fill that role, it's that theres really no single overriding leader. Theres no 'Hillary Clinton' so to speak, Bill Clinton has been sidelined due to #MeToo, Hillary is sidelined for reasons I don't need to explain. Sure, Obama is still around, but he can't run again.
Biden has a good deal of 'Hillary Clinton' power, so to speak, but nobody fears the Joe Biden campaign juggernaut. It's a side effect of the Democrats bench getting hollowed out during Obama and there wasn't a whole lot of bench to come up in 2016, instead, the bench started getting rebuilt more in recent years with up-and-coming leaders.
Dems need a real leader that can pull everyone back together, inspire Dems again and has enough of a backbone not to cave under Trump's particular kind of pressure.
I don't see it happening... there's too much of an ideological split between the centrist and progressive voters.
First, neoliberalism is irreconcilable. For all the old guard calls themselves pragmatic, centrist, etc and tries to distance themselves from being perceived as driven by ideology, that is an ideology they will take to their graves. And so long as that's the case, they will not win over progressive voters, except out of critical desperation to avoid the worst possible evils.
Second, the centrist old guard needs to drop its habit of treating politics as a game with win conditions separated from actual political goals. You can't have one of the most recognized names in the group saying "We need to adopt the right's stances on immigration in order to win elections" as the right is setting up camps and threatening mass slaughter. That will only work for someone who does not actually care about anything but the tribal aspect of seeing that chair labeled D. For the progressive wing, and anyone who actually cares about their platforms, if nothing you care about is being earnestly represented in the end, then you didn't win the election.
This is not a rift that can be simply tolerated for the sake of pragmatic alliance, as with the religious right/libertarian/alt-right alliance. There's not enough alignment of desired outcomes, and often direct contradiction. Whichever path the Democratic party chooses, they're going to struggle.
That is something that the primaries may help resolve. Still, the problem is going to come from multiple progressive candidates vying for the same votes, others vying for the same section, etc, leading to thinly sliced pie. With maybe the most authentic or most 'actually cares about their platforms' (which Trump certainly appeared to be to a section of Republicans, so, you're probably onto something here) candidate getting a significant chunk.