I don’t want Pete to run because I think he’s paper thin on almost any meaningful issue.
I 100% agree on not wanting to win, but I make the argument that the flimsiness of their political identity is their liability; and this is because I don’t agree with you on your first point, because I do think that we can build up effective analyses that are fairly predictive of elections.
And that difference is critical, because what we’re identifying, that Buttigeig is about as deep as a puddle in their political identity, the traditional political consultant class “wisdom” sees that as a feature, not a bug, because they can recast the candidate for whichever donors they plan on trotting them out to. To them, a lack of political depth to a candidate is a good thing. And I’m citing that specifically as a determining factor in both recent and future elections: People will not show up for people who’s only reason for being in politics is the pursuit of power.
I 100% agree on not wanting to win, but I make the argument that the flimsiness of their political identity is their liability; and this is because I don’t agree with you on your first point, because I do think that we can build up effective analyses that are fairly predictive of elections.
And that difference is critical, because what we’re identifying, that Buttigeig is about as deep as a puddle in their political identity, the traditional political consultant class “wisdom” sees that as a feature, not a bug, because they can recast the candidate for whichever donors they plan on trotting them out to. To them, a lack of political depth to a candidate is a good thing. And I’m citing that specifically as a determining factor in both recent and future elections: People will not show up for people who’s only reason for being in politics is the pursuit of power.