This is a fair point. One should have to resign and run again. |
No he won't. That won't play in WV. |
| Sinema and Manchin will have much less importance in the new Congress than in the current Congress because of the House flipping. Beginning Jan 3 nothing can be enacted without Republican votes and anything that passes the House would have some Republican support in the Senate. The only things Senate Democrats will be able to do without Republican votes are appointment confirmations. |
And judicial confirmations. |
Parties aren't elected, people are. |
Are you sure about that? Shortly after Manchin voted for the Inflation Reduction Act legislation, which doesn’t work to reduce inflation, his approval rating in West Virginia plummeted. Mooney is going to run against him in 2024. |
My suspicion is, as investigations in the House progress, more moderate Senators will break rank from the leftists, if only to survive. |
So this will be like all the other really successful republican investigations? Like...? |
What is the point of a primary election then? |
You should be asking what the point it of the general election, which is to elect a person to the US Senate. The primary is irrelevant. |
Party nominees automatically on general ballot. No need to gather signatures. Party nominees get party funding. Sinema took the DNC/DSCC/Actblue money. |
What is the upside for Manchin of quitting the Democratic party? I can't see one. On the other hand, there are a lot of downsides. Democrats might nominate someone else. He would have to spend money to get on the ballot. He would lose access to party funding. He might lose votes from Democrats. |
Manchin can’t be too worried about a Democratic challenger. Meanwhile he gets to operate as a de facto centrist Republican and tell his constituents about supposed bipartisan bona fides while cruising around in his Maserati. The best of both worlds cashing corporate donor checks for blocking filibuster reform. |
Manchin doesn't need Democrat votes to get elected. He barely won his last election, and might lose his next one. Switching parties gives him a pretty good chance of getting reelected, as Republicans probably wouldn't beat him in a primary in WV. By threatening to quit, it shuts down all of the liberals attacking him for not giving them everything they want. They can't take away his committee chairmanship, because he could easily switch to get Republicans back to a power sharing position, and McConnell will give him the chairmanship to do it. |
Absolutely everything you wrote is wrong. How can someone pack so much wrong into so few sentences. Hats off to you. |