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Post by mhbruin on Jul 5, 2020 9:06:32 GMT -8
I haven't seen one. Have you?
Meanwhile I keep seeing former Trump voters who will vote for Biden.
I did read this:
"This is a huge improvement from four years ago as it pertains to the level of seriousness the party is showing in carrying Wisconsin," said Democratic U.S. Rep. Ron Kind, whose western Wisconsin district comprises several counties that Trump flipped red in 2016.
So the Clinton campaign didn't take Wisconsin seriously? More 2016 campaign malpractice.
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Post by blindness on Jul 5, 2020 10:21:43 GMT -8
Trump is very clearly not broadening his voter base this time. The question is will they be able to shrink the potential Biden voters by any means possible.
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Post by grant73 on Jul 5, 2020 14:33:04 GMT -8
According to news recaps I was following closely after that debacle, Hillary did NOT visit Wisconsin once in the General campaign. I included that in my BZOF recap back a year or so about those three flipped states that did the dirty. Along with how she visited Michigan twice but was fronted with Hip Hop both times. (Just Great for corraling those blue-collar Dems . NOT.
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Post by mhbruin on Jul 6, 2020 8:22:58 GMT -8
More on campaign mistakes by Hillary: "In June 2016, Hillary Clinton's campaign and an allied super PAC made a costly strategic error when they failed to include Pennsylvania, Michigan or Wisconsin in their initial $137 million ad reservations. The Clinton campaign eventually took to the Pennsylvania airwaves, but it ended up spending more in its "reach" states of Arizona and Georgia — playing for an Electoral College blowout — than in Michigan and Wisconsin, two states that narrowly helped tip the election to Trump. "The Clinton campaign's early calculations were based more on history — a GOP nominee hadn't won Michigan, Pennsylvania or Wisconsin since 1988 — than on current trends at the time. It wasted millions of dollars in Colorado and Virginia — highly diverse, professional states that had voted Republican more recently but had been moving toward Democrats swiftly and ended up voting for Clinton comfortably. But it failed to take into account that populist candidates and movements had been gaining steam in blue-collar, deindustrializing former bastions of the left — and that Trump could break through in the Upper Midwest. Source
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