GOtV efforts at Ohio State, Penn State, Pitt, U Wisconsin- Madison
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Give to Biden
Give to US Senate candidates
Biden has a huge money advantage over Trump, plus the Lincoln Project on his side, plus just isn’t spending on travel and rallies, unlike Trump. And this isn’t a heard sign and car magnet heavy campaign, since people are afraid of threats and vandals. There are only so many ads he plus the Lincoln Project can run in swing states.
My money is going to winnable Senate races, like the seats held Corey Garner, Thom Tillas, Lindsey Graham and Susan Collins. The AZ race and the GA races. Helping a Dough Jones hang on. Plus Moscow Mitch, although that seat probably isn’t winnable.
Biden and Harris can get a lot done in 2 years with Senate and House majorities vs what they could do with an R Senate. Every Senate seat counts.
Op here. I agree with this. But right now I am interested in spending money to reduce the chance of authoritarianism or our continued slide into it. I see all Republicans as a symptom but Trump is the most important part. As Masha Gessen says, when an autocrat tells you what they are going to do, believe them. I don’t want to be sitting around in 20 years wishing I had done more to avert long term, irreversible damage or an end to our democratic form of government and as a corollary, our way of life.
Thus, I am particularly interested in spending money on this pursuit. I have already given to several of the races you mention anyhow. If Biden already has a lot of money would they spend it if I gave them more? Or are there other places I can give that will have the energy to use it effectively?
Thanks for any advice in advance.
Anonymous wrote:Trump is a danger. So is Mitch and his caucus. Mitch isn't going to lose but we can try to give the Senate back to the Dems.
Trump will be able to do a lot of damage in the WH but a Dem Senate can slow him down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://election.princeton.edu/category/moneyball/
This site is kind of neat-takes a very data driven approach to what races are likely to flip and where
But this won’t dump trump. This is long game stuff.
The long game stuff is important too. Especially in this year when the winners will determine redistricting. It’s important to dump Trump but we also need to have solid institutions at the local and state level too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Give to Biden
Give to US Senate candidates
Biden has a huge money advantage over Trump, plus the Lincoln Project on his side, plus just isn’t spending on travel and rallies, unlike Trump. And this isn’t a heard sign and car magnet heavy campaign, since people are afraid of threats and vandals. There are only so many ads he plus the Lincoln Project can run in swing states.
My money is going to winnable Senate races, like the seats held Corey Garner, Thom Tillas, Lindsey Graham and Susan Collins. The AZ race and the GA races. Helping a Dough Jones hang on. Plus Moscow Mitch, although that seat probably isn’t winnable.
Biden and Harris can get a lot done in 2 years with Senate and House majorities vs what they could do with an R Senate. Every Senate seat counts.
Anonymous wrote:Give to Biden
Give to US Senate candidates
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://election.princeton.edu/category/moneyball/
This site is kind of neat-takes a very data driven approach to what races are likely to flip and where
But this won’t dump trump. This is long game stuff.
The long game stuff is important too. Especially in this year when the winners will determine redistricting. It’s important to dump Trump but we also need to have solid institutions at the local and state level too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://election.princeton.edu/category/moneyball/
This site is kind of neat-takes a very data driven approach to what races are likely to flip and where
But this won’t dump trump. This is long game stuff.
Our primary objectives in North Carolina are to: 1) flip the U.S. Senate seat currently held by Thom Tillis, 2) win the state’s 15 Electoral College votes, and 3) break Republican control of the state legislature by flipping one or both chambers.
In the state Senate, we are currently targeting eight districts—six GOP-held seats and two Democratic holds. With North Carolina’s newly drawn districts, 2020’s competitive seats are scattered across the state, spanning the suburbs of Raleigh, Fayetteville, Charlotte, and Winston-Salem.
In the state House, we are currently targeting 12 districts—seven GOP-held seats and five Democratic holds. State courts also ordered new districts in the state House in 2019. Our target districts for 2020 include parts of Fayetteville, Charlotte, Winston-Salem, and other ex-urban or rural regions in western North Carolina.
Anonymous wrote:https://election.princeton.edu/category/moneyball/
This site is kind of neat-takes a very data driven approach to what races are likely to flip and where