Do Democrats really not see their party has moved way too far to the left?

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So much for moving "too far to the left". :rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:

The far bigger issue is that Trump and the MAGA Cuck Party are out of their ******* minds....which is why they are going to lose badly in November.
Why do you always derail threads and not stick to the topic? Do you have brain damage?
 
The right wing is now fascist and the democrats are moderates. All the right wants is a white Christian culture and betraying the constitution is a small price to pay.

These fckers hide behind made up democratic stances because they can’t argue reality.

You will likely burn in the midterms. You deserve it.
Why can you stick to the topic?! Are you mentally retarded? Open borders and men playing versus women is “moderate”? You British cigarette
 
Self-identified ideology among Democrats: In 1994, 25% of Democrats called themselves liberal (48% moderate). By 2022-2025, this rose to 54-59% liberal, with moderates declining sharply (Gallup and Pew data).


• Voter ideology scores: American National Election Studies (ANES) show Democratic voters’ average self-placement shifted markedly left from 2012-2020 (mean from ~3.3-3.7 toward more liberal scores), widening the partisan gap, with both white and nonwhite Democrats moving left.


• Congressional voting records (DW-Nominate): House Democrats have become more liberal on average since the 1970s (e.g., median shifting from around -0.31 to -0.38 or further), though Republican rightward movement has been steeper in some analyses. Overall polarization has increased with reduced overlap.


• Platform and policy evolution: The 1990s Clinton-era platform emphasized centrism, welfare reform (“end welfare as we know it”), tough-on-crime policies, and market-friendly economics. Later platforms and priorities shifted toward expansive social spending, student debt relief, wealth redistribution emphasis, more progressive taxation, identity-focused equity policies, and cultural liberalism (e.g., stronger stances on abortion, immigration, policing).


• Broader trends: Pew and other analyses note Democrats moving left on social issues and safety net expansion since the 1990s, with rising influence of progressive factions (e.g., Squad, Sanders wing) and declining moderate influence within the party. Public perception and some electoral analyses link this to losses among working-class and moderate voters.

• Transgender participation in women’s sports: Many Democratic leaders and platforms have supported or defended policies allowing biological males to compete in women’s categories, despite declining public support (e.g., Gallup shows Democratic backing for transgender athletes in gender-identity teams dropping from 55% in 2021 to 45% in 2025, with overall U.S. opposition at ~69%). Critics argue this prioritizes ideology over biological fairness and women’s opportunities.


• Patriotism and national symbols: Declining national pride among Democrats (Gallup: only 36% “extremely/very proud” to be American in 2025, down sharply in recent years) and high-profile incidents like NFL anthem protests (often defended by Democratic figures/politicians), reduced emphasis on flag respect in some progressive circles, and platform shifts (e.g., 2024 platform opening with land acknowledgments vs. earlier patriotic framing). Analyses note a patriotism gap hurting the party with moderates.


• “Defund the Police” movement: Prominent support from progressive Democrats and figures (e.g., some Squad members, initial endorsements or praise from officials like Kamala Harris in 2020) during 2020 protests, leading to budget cuts or reallocations in several Democratic-led cities. Though later walked back by many, it contributed to perceptions of reduced support for law enforcement amid rising crime concerns in some areas.


• Emphasis on identity politics and DEI: Greater focus on race/gender equity frameworks (e.g., critical race theory elements in education, expansive DEI mandates in institutions/government), gender ideology in schools/curricula, and group-specific appeals over class/economic populism. Post-election analyses link this to alienation of working-class and male voters.


• Immigration and border policies: Shift toward more permissive stances (e.g., opposition to stricter enforcement, sanctuary policies, resistance to border wall expansions), with progressive wings pushing decriminalization or reduced ICE funding—contrasting earlier bipartisan efforts and contributing to voter backlash on security.
Straits are closed again.
 
As a willing, dumocrat voting radical leftist, The Party looks too far to the right for me.
 
Why do you always derail threads and not stick to the topic? Do you have brain damage?
This is the topic.....not your imaginary, deranged MAGA propaganda.

If what you said was true, then the Democrats would not have a 78% chance of winning the House in November.
 
Self-identified ideology among Democrats: In 1994, 25% of Democrats called themselves liberal (48% moderate). By 2022-2025, this rose to 54-59% liberal, with moderates declining sharply (Gallup and Pew data).


• Voter ideology scores: American National Election Studies (ANES) show Democratic voters’ average self-placement shifted markedly left from 2012-2020 (mean from ~3.3-3.7 toward more liberal scores), widening the partisan gap, with both white and nonwhite Democrats moving left.


• Congressional voting records (DW-Nominate): House Democrats have become more liberal on average since the 1970s (e.g., median shifting from around -0.31 to -0.38 or further), though Republican rightward movement has been steeper in some analyses. Overall polarization has increased with reduced overlap.


• Platform and policy evolution: The 1990s Clinton-era platform emphasized centrism, welfare reform (“end welfare as we know it”), tough-on-crime policies, and market-friendly economics. Later platforms and priorities shifted toward expansive social spending, student debt relief, wealth redistribution emphasis, more progressive taxation, identity-focused equity policies, and cultural liberalism (e.g., stronger stances on abortion, immigration, policing).


• Broader trends: Pew and other analyses note Democrats moving left on social issues and safety net expansion since the 1990s, with rising influence of progressive factions (e.g., Squad, Sanders wing) and declining moderate influence within the party. Public perception and some electoral analyses link this to losses among working-class and moderate voters.

• Transgender participation in women’s sports: Many Democratic leaders and platforms have supported or defended policies allowing biological males to compete in women’s categories, despite declining public support (e.g., Gallup shows Democratic backing for transgender athletes in gender-identity teams dropping from 55% in 2021 to 45% in 2025, with overall U.S. opposition at ~69%). Critics argue this prioritizes ideology over biological fairness and women’s opportunities.


• Patriotism and national symbols: Declining national pride among Democrats (Gallup: only 36% “extremely/very proud” to be American in 2025, down sharply in recent years) and high-profile incidents like NFL anthem protests (often defended by Democratic figures/politicians), reduced emphasis on flag respect in some progressive circles, and platform shifts (e.g., 2024 platform opening with land acknowledgments vs. earlier patriotic framing). Analyses note a patriotism gap hurting the party with moderates.


• “Defund the Police” movement: Prominent support from progressive Democrats and figures (e.g., some Squad members, initial endorsements or praise from officials like Kamala Harris in 2020) during 2020 protests, leading to budget cuts or reallocations in several Democratic-led cities. Though later walked back by many, it contributed to perceptions of reduced support for law enforcement amid rising crime concerns in some areas.


• Emphasis on identity politics and DEI: Greater focus on race/gender equity frameworks (e.g., critical race theory elements in education, expansive DEI mandates in institutions/government), gender ideology in schools/curricula, and group-specific appeals over class/economic populism. Post-election analyses link this to alienation of working-class and male voters.


• Immigration and border policies: Shift toward more permissive stances (e.g., opposition to stricter enforcement, sanctuary policies, resistance to border wall expansions), with progressive wings pushing decriminalization or reduced ICE funding—contrasting earlier bipartisan efforts and contributing to voter backlash on security.
Didn't think it would happen but democrats ran up the white flag and let progressives win.
 
It sure is jobs double expectations past month revised up, wages up, take home pay up, DOW at record highs inflation stable, oil and gass dropping inflation will follow, investment in manufacturing at record highs.
You must live in CA or NY where democrat socialists are wrecking the economy
Inflation stable at 4.6%? Yeah, that's great.

93% of the markets are owned by the top 10%. 50% by the 1% alone.

The jobs are a mix of temp summer jobs for world cup venues and healthcare jobs. Regular non farm jobs are flat or decreasing.

You have to stop believing what the tRump *administration says. They lie.
 
This is the topic.....not your imaginary, deranged MAGA propaganda.

If what you said was true, then the Democrats would not have a 78% chance of winning the House in November.
Explain how that’s the case. Please do. Your party nominated a Nazi in Maine.
 
again, Do you even know wtf you are attempting to talk about?
Obviously, the Democratic Party has moved too far left: with their trans ideology and supporting Nazis for the Senate. You stupid lib.
 
Straits are closed again.
You’re a moron

The Strait of Hormuz remains open to commercial traffic, according to U.S. Central Command, despite claims from Iran it has shut it down.

"Iran does not control the Strait of Hormuz. Traffic continues to flow, and U.S. forces are monitoring the situation to ensure this remains the case," CENTCOM spokesperson Capt. Tim Hawkins said in a statement.
 
15th post
Who did Klashi say would win the Top vs JG fight? Kalshi = opinions

Your party has moved too far left.
Yet we're going to win in November. 🤷‍♀️ 🤷‍♀️ 🤷‍♀️

Even this conservative idiot Henry Olsen says the Democrats have an excellent chance at winning the Senate. --

Right now, polls show Democrats leading or statistically tied in all of the seats they need to retain. They also lead or are statistically tied in six GOP-held states: Alaska, Iowa, Maine, North Carolina, Ohio and Texas. And there could be one more to add to that list: A Democratic polling firm in May showed the expected Democratic nominee in Florida, retired Army Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, ahead of appointed senator Ashley Moody as well.

But surely no one in the Republican high command thought they would be trailing or tied in 10 critical Senate races at this stage. That sound you hear is a five-alarm fire bell at GOP HQ.
Plus, there’s a huge reason to take the current polling seriously: Trump’s abysmal job approval rating. Candidates do matter, but it’s an inescapable fact that the polarization of our era has greatly reduced any individual nominee’s impact — for good or for ill — on the outcome of an election. Today, most people vote based on either their party or their feelings toward the party in power.

 
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