r/politics Foreign Dec 13 '17

Black voters just saved America from Roy Moore

https://thinkprogress.org/back-vote-alabama-jones-8da18c1d8d7a/
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176

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17 edited Nov 25 '20

[deleted]

461

u/MimonFishbaum Dec 13 '17

Sure, but 9 years ago we elected the first black president and look where we are now. It's a very nice win, but complacency put us in the position we are in now.

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u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

100%

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u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

[deleted]

12

u/leftshoe18 Minnesota Dec 13 '17

And 100% reason to remember the name

6

u/spirited1 Dec 13 '17

Russia was just enough to put the election in Trump's favour. It was a needlessly close race any way you look at it though.

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u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

mhmm the number might be lower than 95 now that you mention it lol

0

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

Where do we put the percentage for "running a terrible candidate"

41

u/MediMike92 New York Dec 13 '17

Yes, but we are also given a constant stream of things to be mad about every single day. The news just keeps coming at a pace that we've never seen before. That might be enough to keep people from becoming complacent, but only time will tell.

10

u/AerieC Minnesota Dec 13 '17

Yes, but we are also given a constant stream of things to be mad about every single day

Yeah, which is exactly what's been happening on the right for decades. Fox news, Breitbart, Infowars, it's all a constant stream of bullshit that induces rage in the right-wing.

They're being told every day, "better get out and vote or these democrats will kill babies!", "get out and vote or these democrats will let terrorists in to the country!", "get out and vote or these democrats will let illegals in to the country to steal your jobs!", "get out and vote or these democrats will steal your hard earned money and give it to undeserving welfare queens who will spend it on booze and drugs!"

The right is fueled by outrage, and that's why they actually get out and vote. It doesn't matter that their outrage is manufactured, it's effective.

6

u/brova Massachusetts Dec 13 '17

I'm 27, and up until the 2016 election I had previously only voted in the Presidential elections of 2008 and 2012. No more. I will now vote in every single election at every single level of government for the rest of my life. It's a somewhat meaningless gesture, living in Boston, but it's something I plan on making a life long habit of. I'd wager I'm not alone.

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u/LadyMichelle00 Dec 13 '17

Good for you and so glad to hear!

2

u/halfdeadmoon Dec 13 '17

I would expect more desensitization and despair in the long term

2

u/MimonFishbaum Dec 13 '17

It's been that way for more than 10yrs now.

2

u/ryanmlt12 Dec 13 '17

Your us vs. them mentality is disturbing. We are all in this together.

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u/lingh0e Dec 13 '17

Thank you Grace, but I think you're wrong. It's precisely the us vs them mentally that got the pivotal voters out this time. Think about the fact that Roy Moore was flat-out labeled as a pedophile and how the democrats fucking hammered that label hard. It was a page straight from the GOP playbook. The guy was very unqualified to hold the position he was campaigning for for a litany of reasons, but the pedophile angle was the dominant one. We did an amazing job of making his name synonymous with creeping for underage tail. If this is the way things are going to be in order for us to reclaim a solid hold on our government, so be it.

1

u/ryanmlt12 Dec 13 '17 edited Dec 13 '17

You did it again, us (Dems). Its sad that everyone assumes you're liberal on Reddit.

14

u/Ultraballer Dec 13 '17

Who knew the first woman candidate would be so much more controversial than the first black one

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u/delorean225 Dec 13 '17

I mean, black men got the vote before women did...

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u/sometimeserin Dec 13 '17 edited Dec 13 '17

constitutionally yes but in practice not really

2

u/LadyMichelle00 Dec 13 '17

Can you clarify please?

3

u/Magyman Dec 13 '17

I'd assume stuff like literacy tests.

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u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

Literacy tests, black votes didn’t count as full votes, harassment at voting centers, etc. IIRC, one of the main reasons the KKK gained traction was because of blacks receiving rights. The law (begrudgingly, it was more of a political power move) stated that black men could vote legally, but much of society saw it as unacceptable that lesser humans be treated equally.

0

u/CptnLarsMcGillicutty Dec 13 '17

the differences between black people and white people are much smaller than the differences between men and women.

2

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

Physiologically? Yeah. Socially and culturally? Two different planets.

When it comes down to it, humans really aren’t that different. Culture and social geography really sets people apart.

2

u/badkarmabum Dec 13 '17

I disagree. I have far more in common with black men than white women. Mainstream feminism has historically silenced black women while they were often leaders in black movements. The race wage gap is far larger than the gender gap. And black men have far more incentive to greatly alter the status quo.

1

u/Ultraballer Dec 13 '17

You have to understand that there is 0 evidence that will support this claim right? We are incapable of testing nature vs buried arguments, and so it’s silly to make such bold claims with no evidence

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u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17 edited Jan 18 '18

[deleted]

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u/Thallis Dec 13 '17

Her voting record was one of the most liberal in Congress. She was left of Obama on most issues.

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u/LadyMichelle00 Dec 13 '17

Exactly. How Hillary rage is so deep is beyond me.

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u/Ultraballer Dec 13 '17

Obama is probably the most beautiful speaking president I have been alive to see. He’s clear, concise, always looks authoritative and in control of the situation. He was presidential.

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u/HorizonMan Dec 13 '17

That may be partially true, but there are a lot of people on both sides who really didn't like Hillary and that's also part of why they didn't turn out. They didn't think Trump could possibly win and didn't want to vote for Hillary. Though her being a woman was a sadly a factor for some, for those who could have made the difference, it was about her being her.

2

u/LadyMichelle00 Dec 13 '17

But what has ever actually panned out as some specific examples of why Hillary is so hated?

1

u/Ultraballer Dec 13 '17

As someone who voted for her, she has some pretty big flaws. The biggest one I hear, she has huge lobbying ties. She takes in millions a year, and has for decades along with her husband from various corporations across America. For example her annual income is somewhere around 30 mill, where as Bernie is sitting at just under 500k, mostly because she takes corporate money. She is probably going to start more wars in the Middle East, she is willing to put more troops on the ground, and try to increase military presence. Just a couple, and nothing like what trumps pulling off, but generally a sub par candidate

0

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

Can’t speak for everyone, but Hillary and Bill Clinton both have a pretty bad reputation with the black community due to previous policies and statements. The votes cast her way weren’t so much because she was a good candidate, but a lesser, known evil.

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u/DatPiff916 Dec 13 '17

Who knew

Putin knew.

2

u/Dear_Occupant Tennessee Dec 13 '17

Pretty much anyone familiar with the suffrage movement. Women's rights have always come in second place to those of men, regardless of their color.

-2

u/tyler-86 Dec 13 '17

Well, women and men have some fundamental differences. Race is cosmetic, aside from a few health risks and the way society treats you.

Although I did think we'd have a Jewish president before we had a black one.

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u/LadyMichelle00 Dec 13 '17

Fundamental differences? Like what? (Besides obvious physical differences)

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u/tyler-86 Dec 13 '17

I'd rather not dive too deep down this rabbit hole but there are more physiological differences between a man and a woman than between two men of different races. That's all. It doesn't make a woman any less capable or qualified, but it probably (stupidly) makes some people more reticent to vote for a woman than a black man.

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u/LadyMichelle00 Dec 15 '17

Fair enough. Thanks for the explanation. Appreciate it.

1

u/Ultraballer Dec 13 '17

Oh no you don’t want to go down that rabbit hole. Every single person will spew different nonsense, as if they have PhD’s in behavioural psychology, only to decide we have 0 actual ability to isolate gender as a variable, no nature vs nurture argument over Reddit is going to prove useful

4

u/tkdyo Dec 13 '17

I would argue the party leaders had a lot more to do with where we are than the voters themselves. It's hard to get masses of people to go out and vote when theres no message behind it other than "at least we aren't Republicans". Hopefully this year has been a wake up call for both the base AND the establishment.

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u/MimonFishbaum Dec 13 '17

In other words, complacency.

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u/tkdyo Dec 13 '17

Eh, I tend to think actively trying to keep the same leaders in power is a bit different from complacency. Plus the original post sounded like you were only blaming the voters and giving the establishment a pass. If that wasn't you're intent, my bad.

1

u/publicram Dec 13 '17

That was because black voter came out and voted too..

1

u/MimonFishbaum Dec 13 '17

Weird how that works.

1

u/publicram Dec 13 '17

Sure but did they just vote for him because he was black... So much of or voting is done simply because he's a democrat because he's a republican. Voting is difficult on one side we have a idiot running for office on the other side we have a crook... I chose the lesser of two evils and voted third party.

1

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

No lie, I voted for Obama because he was black. Growing up, it’s hard not to idolize drug dealers or athletes or rappers. They’re a vast majority of the successful blacks you see. Of course, there’s doctors, lawyers, and other black professionals, but they often distance themselves from most of the community where drug dealers, athletes, and rappers usually fully embrace it. They’re more relatable.

It was refreshing to see someone own who he was as a black man and be president. Working in schools in the inner city at the time, it’s refreshing to see kids say they want to be president instead of thinking they have to put their physical well-being on the line as an athlete as a way to make it out of the ghetto.

I regret nothing.

1

u/publicram Dec 13 '17

That's great... But I am a minority, I lived a block away from the trap as a kid. My cousin used to make me fight the other kids for money in front of my gmas house. I was about 8 . I don't want to hear this bs. To me vote for the best person that will make America better, whatever vision that you see vote for the person that does that. Forget skin color.

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u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17 edited Dec 13 '17

And if you saw McCain or Clinton as a better candidate, that’s great. Obama was the best president we’ve had in my lifetime. And saying someone would’ve been better is subjective and theoretical. Still regret nothing.

Also, America did get “better” under Obama. Remember the recession Bush put us in? Or the hard push against LGBT rights? Maybe the DEA shutting down medical marijuana dispensaries will jog your memory. America was straight trash when Obama was elected. Not going to sit here like Obama is some god, but to say he was a bad president may be a personal bias.

1

u/publicram Dec 13 '17

Im not arguing that Obama was better than Bush blah blah blah trump suck blah blah. Im saying vote for the person that you think is right for the ideas you pursue, not because of skin color.

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u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

My views aligned with his, just can’t deny that him being black played a decent part in my pick. It also played a decent part in our foreign interactions and people don’t acknowledge that. We’re viewed as xenophobic, gun toting, pride filled people to a lot of countries. We gained respect from a lot of countries just from electing Obama. Can’t remember what country, but they said America wasn’t even ready for a black president. It showed an advancement as a country. We took like 8 steps back with Trump, but...yeah.

trump sucks

Definitely would cop you a beer though lol

0

u/MimonFishbaum Dec 13 '17

You could look at it that way or look at it like nominating a candidate who could mobilize a base.

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u/publicram Dec 13 '17

I just don't see where we went wrong as Americans.. was America always like this, I grew up in a small Texas town and we had pride in what we did. I understand people have different values and see things differently but I think to myself how did if Moore molested children.( I haven't done the research to make an opinion) how did he become so powerful, how was he not stopped prior to this. Regardless of views how does this happen. What has happened to my America

1

u/Wdc331 Dec 13 '17

BINGO. We cannot get complacent. We cannot let people forget what a giant shit stain on our country the GOP has become. I never in a million years thought I and the rest of the developed world would be paying such rapt attention to a special senate election in Alabama. We need to keep this momentum going.

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u/MagnesiumStearate Dec 13 '17

It was definitely complacency on the parts of the liberal that Trump won. However on the flip side, Trump also won because he was able to rally certain disenfranchised "conservative" groups to go out and vote for him, when most of them have not voted in decades.

The truth is not one side can be complacent. Voting to keep a pedophile/an abortion supporter out of office is still a demonstration of democracy and it is on everyone of us to take our parts to share the narrative we want to see.

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u/telmnstr Dec 13 '17

The black president didn't address the issues of the declining middle class.

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u/oopsiedaisymeohmy Dec 13 '17

the line of progress ain't straight, friend!

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u/galwegian Dec 13 '17

i blame the aging boomers. shaking their walking sticks at Fox News. They are still causing trouble the old fuckers. good news? they will all be gone soon.

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u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

*half black President.

0

u/DwarfTheMike Dec 13 '17

Yeah but he also didn’t stop the wars overseas and even expanded them. Sure, he was black, but he wasn’t much different. He catered to the bankers and wall street. He was deported in chief. He created a lot of what we are dealing with by catering to Wall Street and their business interests.

I’m not at all a trump supporter, I just don’t like blind faith in Obama. I did vote for him, but I was very disappointed in him, and we should all be for him breaking his promises. We can’t forget that. Th democratic part isn’t going to make things better. We need a much greater shakeup.

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u/MimonFishbaum Dec 13 '17

I didn't apply any blind faith here. Just the complacency in mobilizing certain demographics of the Democratic party. They got lazy and focused too much on a base that will never vote for them.

0

u/DwarfTheMike Dec 13 '17

Yeah I wasn’t necessarily accusing you of that. That last part was more to show where I was coming from.

They did they lazy. The party got greedy with Wall Street money, and the voters stopped paying attention to what was important. Obama was great at making people feel good.

0

u/TreeRol American Expat Dec 13 '17

Theoretically, 2000 would have been a reminder to never sit out another election. Then 2010. Then 2016.

Seems we need to learn this lesson again every 5 to 10 years. 2022 is going to be ugly.

0

u/Tazer79 Dec 13 '17

Smug, dishonest politics put us where we are now with Trump.

0

u/MimonFishbaum Dec 13 '17

Six and one...

381

u/chrisms150 New Jersey Dec 13 '17

A democrat was just elected to a seat that has been held by republicans for 25 years. I don't think the attention span is that short.

Against a republican when the republican president has a historic disapproval rating.

Against a republican with a child molestation scandal brewing.

Against a republican who said the 1850s were the last time America was great.

Against a republican who wants to toss out every amendment after 10 (bringing back slavery?)

Against a republican who was tossed from his judicial office twice - because of violating the constitution.

My point is - there was SO much fodder against Moore. And we BARELY squeaked a win out. Yes, it's a great win, I'm thrilled. But Do. Not. Get. Complacent. Do not assume that things are 'changing'

We still have shit attention spans. We still have an uphill battle. Do not sit down. Keep fighting.

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u/WillGallis I voted Dec 13 '17

The sad part is that out of all those things you mentioned, the only reason Moore lost was because of the child sexual assault, when he should have been rejected by voters before those allegations came up.

If it was any other candidate with the same political views, they would have won.

9

u/kilgore2345 Dec 13 '17

Roy Moore was not even liked by the Alabama GOP. But, his one and only saving grace (in the eyes of most of the Alabama GOP) is he is anti-abortion. I heard it said that this election came down to whether you're "pro-child molestation" or "pro-baby killing."

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u/noydbshield Dec 13 '17

Sign me up for baby killing. Overpopulation is a worldwide problem. Plus it's probably kinder to kill someone as a baby than to let them grow up to be molested as a teenager and then see their abuser lauded as a great man.

0

u/kilgore2345 Dec 13 '17

Yikes. It’s not everyday I see someone come out for infanticide. I’ll give you props for at least having a reason (overpopulation).

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u/noydbshield Dec 13 '17

Well that's the most socially acceptable reason. You shouldn't discount good old misanthropy.

2

u/blahblah98 California Dec 13 '17

Moore's spokeswoman to pregnant CNN host: Democrat would support killing your unborn baby

(00:28) Judge Roy Moore stands for protection (for) ... the rights of babies like your eight month baby that you're carrying now. Doug Jones says you can take the life of that baby..."

Despicable.

1

u/cats_and_vibrators Dec 13 '17

I heard that a lot too and it boggles my mind. One of those things is a thought and the other is an action and a crime.

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u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17 edited Mar 21 '18

[deleted]

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u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

Both of my parents are educated with degrees and votes conservative, buddy.

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u/SUMitchell Dec 13 '17

Thats because they are stuck in the past.

1

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

Hahahaha! They are actually pretty moderate, they just hate tax increases. What's stuck in the past about that?

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u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17 edited Mar 21 '18

[deleted]

1

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

When in comes to local elections republicans aren't pushing for an increase in property taxes to pay for chit projects, city bonds, etc. Many of of those initiatives states that funds can be used for other projects. Dems push for those things. And yes my parents are home owners.

1

u/SUMitchell Dec 13 '17

So they are willing to forgo civil rights and basic decency and morals because of that one issue? That's reasonable.

1

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

Over dramatic much? You know full and well that minorities have the right don't vote. Don't kid yourself here.

1

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

education =/= american liberalism

look at how many college-educated white alabamans voted moore

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u/Jonko18 Dec 13 '17

How many? And how many voted Moore versus Jones?

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u/Neokarasu Dec 13 '17

https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2017/politics/alabama-exit-polls/?utm_term=.2bb67b7ea6c9

Moore won among white college graduate women

Exit poll results showed Moore faring worse among white voters than Republicans in previous Alabama elections, but he maintained a lead among both white men and women and those with and without college degrees.

In Alabama, Moore held a small edge among white women with college degrees and a roughly 25-point lead among white men with college degrees.

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u/Jonko18 Dec 13 '17

Hey, thanks for providing a link!

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u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

do your own research lol

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u/Jonko18 Dec 13 '17

I'm not the one making the claims here, you are.

1

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

they aren't claims, they're facts. google is right there, use it yourself instead of asking someone else to do it for you

1

u/Jonko18 Dec 13 '17

Don't worry, someone else already did your work for you.

1

u/Jonko18 Dec 13 '17

If we ignore race, Jones got 54% of the college educated vote, while Moore got 52% of the non-college educated vote. This does imply that having a college education makes one more likely to vote Democrat. Also reinforcing that idea is while Moore did get the majority of college educated whites, it was a much all smaller margin than he had over non-college educated whites. Again, showing having a college education makes one more likely to vote Democrat.

All your statistic shows is that being white makes one more likely to vote Republican. Which is obvious in Alabama anyway.

0

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17 edited Dec 13 '17

54% is not a strong number...and I said education does not equate to liberalism. I never said anything about education not leaning towards liberalism

you got way too wrapped up in this lol

2

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

idk man, for Alabama it's pretty remarkable. It is sad that the bar is so low - a pedophile barely lost a senate race - but that 1.5% margin of victory means something. It shows the cracks in the GOP machine, they are tearing themselves apart - I hope this is some foreshadowing for fall 2018.

2

u/Tumble85 Dec 13 '17

You think that Alabama voters would reject a candidate for expressing anti-abortion, anti-gay, anti-Muslim rhetoric? Why on earth do you think they'd do that?

1

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17 edited Dec 13 '17

There are a lot of crazies in the Senate (ie Ted fucking Cruz), but let's be honest the child sexual assault was the last straw. I mean there are bridges you do not cross and Moore did that and it came back to haunt him.

And let's be honest, there won't have been a media firestorm nor the world watching what Alabama was going to do until those allegations came out. Back in July, everyone knew it was a shoe in for whoever the Republicans would nominate and then November happened.

What probably didn't help Moore was that Republicans already in the Senate could only get the Tax Bill done, out of everything that was promised to happen this year. And the one thing they have done is still not even done yet. So if there were any leaning Republicans seeing that, why would you vote for Moore? You gave his party the majority in Washington and couldn't even come through with it.

7

u/Just_Treading_Water Dec 13 '17

Yes to all of the things you said, and yet, Moore still got 650,000 votes compared to Jones' 671,000.

Yes, it was a victory for common sense, and non-pedophiles everywhere, but 650,000 people would still rather vote for a regressive anti-human rights child predator than a Democrat.

That breaks my head.

6

u/onwisconsin1 Wisconsin Dec 13 '17

Yeah, but also this was Alabama. We should ALWAYS have a candidate opposing the Republican, but we can’t expect to win those. The fact that this can happen in Alabama is heartening for the rest of the country. There are tons of states that are republican controller and shouldn’t be: Wisconsin, Ohio, Michigan, the middle states, we have to win there. The strategy moving forward needs to push always at all levels of government. Especially leading into 2020. We have to win big to break gerrymandering and set up a fair electoral system.

5

u/tomdarch Dec 13 '17

Barely squeaked out a win in a state that was roughly +30% for Trump a year ago. If this 15%ish shift can be maintained for the next 11 months (and as more comes out about Trump, and the Republicans keep pushing shit like their garbage tax scam and anti-net-neutrality, and the Bannon/Trump folks keep talking, that's likely) then November 2018 will go well for Democrats.

Sane Republicans will be demoralized. Normal Republican donors will be hesitant. Democrats will be energized and engaged.

9

u/newbergman Dec 13 '17

^ This

The Democrat won by a very narrow margin against the devil. Literally, the WORST republicans could offer.

Honestly most every Republican I know see this as a HUGE victory. They pretty much know now they will win every election they put a decent candidate for.

6

u/mcslibbin Dec 13 '17

Honestly most every Republican I know see this as a HUGE victory

they love declaring victory for no reason

6

u/inked_tink Dec 13 '17

This! 100%!!!!

3

u/otiswrath Dec 13 '17

Thank you. The fact that in the end it was about 1% difference in the vote is insane. It wasn't that Republicans voted for Jones. They just stayed home because the didn't want to vote for a child molester.

3

u/SlimTim222 Dec 13 '17

You are absolutely correct. As much as I'd love for this to be the start of a trend, I feel like its more of an isolated event. Moore had too much baggage that could not be ignored by even the most loyal Republicans.

We forget how Republicans who are born and raised in the South are immediately indoctrinated into thinking our country should operate on borderline theocratic standards. It will take A LOT for this brainwashed demographic to vote for future Democrats who are pro-choice and are open to other religions in America. A common theme I saw during this AL election was this demographic believing the absurd strawman that Doug Jones was a fanatical pro-abortion advocate who endorsed aborting babies right up until birth. This is a lie that their right-wing echo chambers planted into their heads.

All future Dem candidates need to distinguish they are pro-choice, NOT pro-abortion and that blue states where abortion is legal actually have LESS abortions than red states where sex education lacks and is looked down upon.

There's still a lot of work to be done.

2

u/Brewhaha72 Pennsylvania Dec 13 '17

That makes it all the more frustrating because many who voted for Moore hold the opinion that any R is better than any D, no matter their history. I don't even know how to convince my "conservative" family that Democrats aren't demons.

3

u/MEMENARDO_DANK_VINCI Dec 13 '17

Continue to block walk in Bama and thank black voters for coming out?

1

u/Hopczar420 Oregon Dec 13 '17

And we're likely going to lose in the next non-special election in Alabama. This is only our seat temporarily, we need to temper expectations.

1

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

Yup, special case election. Nothing to see here.

1

u/Ombortron Dec 13 '17

Yeah, the fact that despite all the tremendously shitty baggage Roy Moore has hanging off him, he still barely lost by a pretty small margin is pretty fucked up.

1

u/sinburger Dec 13 '17

And we BARELY squeaked a win out.

But you squeaked it out of a deeply, deeply, red state. There is huge significance in that.

1

u/corkill Georgia Dec 13 '17

Against a republican who was tossed from his judicial office twice - because of violating the constitution.

Yet he was voted back in after being removed the first time. That was not an issue for many Alabama voters. In fact, to his base this legitimized him by putting religion before the Constitution.

7

u/new_account_5009 Dec 13 '17

True, but:

  1. The result was very narrow
  2. The president is incredibly unpopular on a historic scale, and
  3. He was running against a literal child molester.

The result is encouraging if you lean left, but definitely not a reason to get complacent.

8

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

OK, but for that Democrat to be elected, the GOP had to run a pedo. And he still almost got half the vote. The black voters did not swing this election. Some conservatives that found a conscience somewhere in the dark recesses of the attic won this election.

10

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

[deleted]

2

u/tyler-86 Dec 13 '17

I mean, you'd have to compare that to the black vote the last time a Republican won the seat. The difference could just as easily be that more whites voted blue than normal.

1

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

Because black voters were going to vote for Moore in some large numbers in the first place?

4

u/Dear_Occupant Tennessee Dec 13 '17

Turnout is what won this election, and for that, we have the black voters of Alabama to thank. Remember, it's not just percentages you have to look at when you analyze elections, it's mostly about people showing up and being counted.

1

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

Is it turnout? Less total votes were cast in this election for a Democrat than in either 2016 or 2008 election. Although, those were presidential elections as well. If you compare the results to the 2002 election, Jones won about 100k more votes than Susan Parker. Moore won about 200k less than Jeff Sessions. So, maybe 100k more black voters did turn out this time. I would still bet my money on pedo Moore just not inspiring as many Republicans to vote for him or swinging them to a Democrat.

3

u/Cabes86 Massachusetts Dec 13 '17

Not even just the first dem in 25 years. The last time dems were in there they were Dixiecrats that were exactly like Moore. This is the first time someone from the other ideology of the US has served AL in the Senate since the US government had Willard Warner (who had just served as an OH state senator) finish out a former Confederate's term in 1868.

2

u/ISpendAllDayOnReddit Dec 13 '17

That Democrat was running against a terrible candidate. Even lifelong Republicans voted against Moore.

2

u/masedizzle District Of Columbia Dec 13 '17

Did you miss the fact that 600k people still voted for a racist pedophile? Yeah, it's a huge victory, but it was still close and hopefully this is a step in the right direction and not the high watermark.

1

u/MemeHermetic Dec 13 '17

Correct me if I'm wrong but even with what was going on the voter turnout for Alabama was only about 25%, right?

1

u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

20 years not 25

1

u/savvyxxl Dec 13 '17

and from what i heard lastnight the last democrat senator elected from there flipped to republican shortly after

1

u/drketchup Dec 13 '17

By a couple percentage points when his opponent is basically accused of being a pedophile.... let’s not pretend this is some big movement. He still got 48% of the vote as a guy who tried to have sex with 14 years olds.

1

u/mug3n Canada Dec 13 '17

on the flip side, that democrat only beat a pedophile homophobic bible thumping redneck by 1.5%.

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u/[deleted] Dec 13 '17

I mean, dude was a pedo. Its not like it was a fair fight. Just like when a known criminal ran against Trump. Hard to win when everyone knows your a shady SOB.