This is an interseting thread. How do we decide who to vote for, that's a good question.
Here is part of the salon article Helene posted:
Quote
Clinton personifies the meritocracy that to an angry middle class looks increasingly like just another privileged caste. It’s the anger captured best by the old ‘Die Yuppie Scum’ posters and in case you haven’t noticed, it’s on the rise. Republicans love to paint Democrats as elitists. It’s how the first two Bushes took out Dukakis, Gore and Kerry — and how Jeb plans to take out Hillary. When she says she and Bill were broke when they left the White House; when she sets her own email rules and says it was only for her own convenience; when she hangs out with the Davos, Wall Street or Hollywood crowds, she makes herself a more inviting target.
Is this an accurate assessment? I am not so sure. I think Dukakis took himself out. Certainly the Willie Horton ad was vicious. But did it portray him as an elitist? And he put himself in that tank. And when some reporter asked him, referring to the WH ad, how he would feel if his wife were raped, he alone decided how to respond. "Ordinary people" certainly understood that George Bush I was from the elite in a way the Dukakis could never be. But bush looked competent, and I would say he turned out to be competent.
I am certainly "middle class". Not "angry middle class" but perhaps "skeptical middle class".
How about "ordinary Americans"? Who are they? Well, I am. And my parents were. My father belonged to a labor union and I expect that he mostly voted Democratic. In 1952 he voted for Eisenhower as did a lot of others. The Korean war was on, Ike said "I will go to Korea" and "ordinary Americans" understood this to mean "I will take care of this". And he did.
Liberal pundits like to explain away the failure of their candidates by suggesting that "ordinary Americans" are on a hate binge. If they actually want to win an elction instead of explain why they lose one, they might want to re-think that.