This chart is why I don't want to hear Obama criticism

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:stopitslime:

How the fukk do you want anything done when you're not doing the groundwork? :beli:







The 2015 election tightened the Republican stranglehold on state government

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By Chris Cillizza November 4
The 2015 election is over. (You may not have known it was even happening.) And it proved one thing: Republicans have an absolute stranglehold on governorships and state legislatures all across the country.

Consider:

* With Matt Bevin's win in Kentucky on Tuesday night, Republicans now hold 32 of the nation's governorships — 64 percent of all the governors mansions in the country. (One race, in Louisiana, won't be decided until next month. Democrats believe they have a good chance of winning that race against now-Sen. David Vitter.)

* Democrats' failure to take over the Virginia state Senate means that Republicans still hold total control of 30 of the country's 50 state legislatures (60 percent) and have total or split control of 38 of the 50 (76 percent.)


imrs.php



That dominance — and what it means to the policy and political calculations and prospects for both parties at the national level — is the single most overlooked and underappreciated story line of President Obama's time in office. Since 2009, Republicans have made massive and unprecedented gains at the state level, gains that played a central role in, among other things, handing control of the U.S. House back to the GOP in the 2010 election.

This chart via GOP lobbyist Bruce Mehlman tells that story in stark terms (although it doesn't include updated results after Tuesday's vote):

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It's hard to overstate how important those GOP gains — and the consolidation of them we've seen in the last few years — are to the relative fates of the two parties. While the story at the national level suggests a Republican Party that is growing increasingly white, old and out of step with the country on social issues, the narrative at the local level is very different. Republicans are prospering at the state level in ways that suggest that the party's messaging is far from broken.

There are other, more pragmatic effects of the GOP dominance in governor's races and state legislatures, too. Aside from giving the party a major leg up in the decennial redrawing of congressional lines, which has led to a Republican House majority not only today but likely through at least 2020, the GOP's dominance gives the party fertile ground to incubate policy that makes its way to the national level and to cultivate the future stars of the national party from the ground up.

While the demographic and electoral challenges that Republicans must confront at the national level are very real, the idea, pushed in some circles, that those struggles are leading indicators of a dying party is absolutely wrong. In fact, at the state and local level the Republican Party is considerably more robust than its Democratic counterpart.

Focus on the presidential race exclusively if you will. But remember that the long-term health of a party is about much more than simply the man or woman at the top of the ticket.
 

Tate

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Ignores that Obama is an extremely disliked figure throughout much of America. He's the primary reason those states flipped red.

Now much of that hatred is racial, but all of it isn't.
 

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Ignores that Obama is an extremely disliked figure throughout much of America. He's the primary reason those states flipped red.

Now much of that hatred is racial, but all of it isn't.
How Sway?

Fact is, people still vote for shyt locally...and those voters stonewall any sort of "progress" on the table.
 

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:beli: what are you trying say. The ACA got passed during that period, didn't it....

Just that he controlled his own destiny in his 1st term which counters the OP.

The ACA was a great and noble cause but its policy and execution were terrible. Its gonna get overhauled within this decade, IMO.

Barry has done well for the most part. I'd rate him well above average as far as Presidencies go though he's far from perfect and most definitely backtracked on a lot of his campaign promises. I guess thats to be expected though at that high level of power.
 
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