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KH's avatar

Great article! While I also have some questions about some of the assumptions and method Morris made (like defining moderation as deviation from the baseline ideology in the district etc), I still think the conclusion he drew is “nominate a candidate who fit the district” - that said, his “moderation is overrated” is clearly used by some of those progressive ppl prob without examining what he’s actually doing and that’s been frustrating. (His war method, to me seems a bit over complicated but it’s still worth noting that “let’s nominate AOC/Mamdani in North Carolina” is clearly not the conclusion he draws

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Michael's avatar

I don't understand the point of this exercise. It's seems like it is producing an answer that has little real value for Democratic strategists but will be willfully misunderstood in a way that appears to benefit moderates.

There is no meaningful electoral benefit to, all things equal, moderation. Whether or not AOC could gain a point or two in the polls by moderating vs. tacking further left makes no difference to anything - she is going to hold that district for as long as she wants to because it is a deep blue progressive district and she is generally a fit for it.

If the Democratic party had the power to enforce ideological discipline throughout the party and they used that power to push all of their candidates a bit to the right, at best you would get a marginal benefit through improved performance in swing districts, while there would be a lot of wasted energy pushing on progressive members who were going to win anyway and on red state/district candidates who are going to lose anyway because even some moderation won't be enough.

The type of "moderation" that the Dems really need to do is not about getting existing reps and Senators to change their views, but about creating a place in the tent for conservative Dems who can expand the map.

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