The parties learned what they always learn
How recent elections just confirm the (differing) beliefs of Democrats and Republicans
“We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.”
― Anaïs Nin
As will happen after an election, particularly one with a somewhat surprising outcome, the parties are trying to learn lessons from this week’s results so they know how to behave in the future. And to a remarkable degree, this election will just reinforce things the parties already believed.
As I’ve written previously, Republicans and Democrats have remarkably different approaches to absorbing election losses. Baked into that is their remarkably different views about the importance of electability.
The quick version is that when Democrats lose a big election, they’re convinced they’ve been doing everything wrong and want to radically remake their party, their nomination systems, and even their approach to politics. When Republicans lose (and acknowledge that loss), they generally regard it as an aberration; with a bit more money allocated a bit better, they could probably have won, and so there’s no need to rethink everything.
Relatedly, Democrats are convinced that they lose when they nominate someone who is too ideologically extreme and makes working class whites uncomfortable, and when they pivot toward the center they tend to win. Republicans are convinced that they lose when they try too hard to please centrists, but win when they stand up for what they believe in. There’s no empirically correct answer here, and the parties have similar win rates, but both these beliefs are defensible given the parties’ histories, and they lead to vastly different behavior.
Let’s look at the past few elections. Hillary Clinton’s loss in 2016 completely threw Democrats. As I chronicle in my book Learning From Loss, that surprise outcome caused them to question many longstanding assumptions they had about politics, and they came up with many narratives to explain just why Clinton had lost. These included: she practiced identity politics, she campaigned in the wrong places, her messaging wasn’t engaging, there was too much racism and sexism in the electorate, and more. The narratives were pretty diverse, but a lot of them led to a common set of beliefs: they had erred in nominating Clinton, she was somehow too unconventional a candidate, and they needed to find a bland relatively moderate white guy if they were ever going to defeat Trump.
The outcome of 2020 confirmed those Democrats’ beliefs. No, we can’t re-run 2020 with Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, or Cory Booker on the ticket, so we can never prove it, but as far as many Democrats were concerned, they needed to moderate (both ideologically and symbolically) to win, and they did and it worked.
Republicans approached their 2020 loss very differently. Many, obviously, chose to accept Donald Trump’s baseless lie that he hadn’t actually lost, and thus there was no pivoting to do. You don’t learn from a loss you don’t acknowledge. Others accepted that the loss had occurred, but either didn’t know how to move their party away from Trump or didn’t think it was important to do so. Importantly, polling right around the time of the Iowa caucuses in 2024 suggested Nikki Haley would beat Joe Biden handily but Trump could lose to him. This did not shake support for Trump as the nominee, who continued to win roughly 70% of the vote in primaries and caucuses after that. The few Republican leaders who were concerned about electability backed Haley, but they had never really been Trump supporters to begin with.
Neither Trump nor his supporters seemed to perceive any need to mollify centrist voters. Despite losing in 2020, he never acknowledged having done anything wrong that year or made any effort to ease concerns about his governing excesses, his criminal indictments, his organization of an insurrection, his casual racism and sexism, or anything else. Indeed, if anything, he doubled down, promising to be even more extreme and to pursue an agenda of retribution against those who had wronged him.
And the results of the 2024 presidential election have confirmed Republicans’ beliefs. As far as they’re concerned, he won because unapologetically he stood up for what he believed in. And that’s the lesson they will absorb as they approach the 2026 and 2028 election cycles.
Democrats are already wrestling with the lessons of 2024, and this will go on for some time to come. Some are focusing on Kamala Harris’ race and sex, suggesting that they need to nominate a white guy to win the White House back. Some maintain that they must win back working class whites through better messaging or policies. Unless I’ve missed it, no prominent Democrats are arguing for doubling down on the party’s message of inclusion or nominating someone more extreme than Harris. Just like Republicans, Democrats learn lessons from their own losses but not from their opponents’ victories.
It's still early and far from clear what Democrats will end up doing over the next few years. (For my sins, I’ll probably end up writing that book.) But what we’ve really seen so far from both sides is a great deal of confirmation bias. Each party perceives the political world as it perceives itself. And, remarkably, each party still has a roughly 50-50 shot of winning national elections.
Authentic vs inauthentic is only part of the picture. The triumph of Trump is a whole lot more complicated. Here's an analysis I wrote for my family group:
Welp, I've been reading various analyzes about why Harris lost the election so badly. Here's my amateur analysis inspired by various other professional analyzes.
Said Wood (Thomas Wood, a political scientist at Ohio State University.”): “The really simple story is that secular dissatisfaction with Biden’s economic stewardship affected most demographic groups in a fairly homogeneous way.”
My analysis of THE PERFECT STORM...
REPUBLICAN-OWNED NEWS OUTLETS
Secular dissatisfaction with Biden's economic stewardship started as embers that were fanned into flames and fed fuel relentlessly by every major news outlet in the country. There were no exceptions. I suspect that this is because they are owned by Republican shareholders who would naturally support a Republican dominated government. In addition, news outlets are competing for audience share to sell lucrative advertising time. Which explains the "if it bleeds it leads" motive. This translates into "if it's negative, it's front page news" because it's going to get 10 times more attention than a positive story. This entire business model for news outlets is incredibly dysfunctional and does not serve the country well.
COMMUNICATION
Biden and his administration get a failing grade for communication skills and strategy. This was especially important given the toxic environment of news outlets and social media. It is widely acknowledged that connecting with voters that he doesn't come face to face with is one of Biden's weaknesses. Had the other candidate suffered a similar inability to connect, the Biden administration would not have looked so bad in comparison. But politics is all about comparisons. Trump, on the other hand, had years of experience in reality TV to hone his communication skills. And, he is a natural born narcissist. Nothing showcased this contrast better than the Trump/Biden debate debacle.
THE INCUMBENT HANDICAP
Kamala Harris, out of deference to Biden, refused to criticize Biden 's policies. This made it very difficult to convince voters that she was a change agent for the future. Instead, she looked more like an incumbent. To dissatisfied voters, this appeared to be "more of the same".
THE GLASS CEILING
In addition to all of the above, there was tremendous resistance to the idea of a woman leading the most powerful country in the world from traditionally chauvinist men which included white as well as African American, Latino, Asian and other non-White groups of men.
SECULAR DISSATISFACTION
What Trump tapped into was voter anger and frustration with economic hardship for which the two biggest drivers were the cost of living and low wages. He then, with lots of help from news outlets, convinced these frustrated and angry voters to direct their vitriol to scapegoats of Trump's choice -- incumbent government and immigrants. One message he was very consistent about in campaign speeches and interviews was that he was going to "fix it". This also explains why the most distinct split between voters was education level. Those less educated were more likely to accept a generalized term like "fix it" without asking, 'how the hell are you going to do that?' Better educated voters, a little better trained in critical thinking, would naturally ask, 'how the hell are you going to do that?'
Gee. Seth got this at 7:45am EST which is 5:45 MST so were you up all night? Take a break, you have four years and two months to figure out what happened. Let me save you the work, inauthentic loses every time, it is as simple as that. Crazy Kameka was inauthentic and our President is not. Gee see this is why I am still ABD after all these years, academics are looking under rocks for what is right in front of them. Best always, Lynn