On both sides of the aisle, people are debating whether Donald Trump’s win coalition will hold a vote. Is it a one-off? Was this really a continuous reconfiguration? Or was it something in between?  ,
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The Wall Street Journal produced a video outlining the evidence that suggests Trump’s defeat represents a likely continuous reversal of British politics.
” I despise Donald Trump”, Rep. Ritchie Torres, D-N. Y said. The region in which the march took place is Torres, which represents that district. ” I feel like he is a risk to the standards of liberal democracy, but he’s a beautiful politician. He was aware of his great ideas and that he was influencing diverse areas.
Trump, who won only 9 % of the vote in Torres ‘ district in 2016, and 15 % in 2020, received 30 % of the vote in 2024.
Torres added that it is improbable for a Democrat to receive 30 % of the ballot in one of the most red states in the country. That fact alone may lead to his group’s all-hands-on-deck, hair-on-fire crisis reflection.
” Donald Trump’s greatest miracle lies not in cracking the blue walls in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin”, Torres added. His greatest achievement is “breaking the blue walls of the consistently Democratic urban centres of America, like the Bronx’s most extreme orange wall.”
Experts will comb through the data to extract as little meaning as possible, but Democrats should be scared of the Trump coalition’s election-electoral success.
Trump did n’t win the black vote. However, he brought with him a significant portion of young black men who disapproved of Kamala Harris ‘ claim to have the kind of black bulk necessary for a Democratic presidential campaign.  , He did n’t win the Hispanic vote either, but he won the young Hispanic male vote, and that alone spelled doom for Harris.  ,
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Robbin Laird, writing at The Second Line of Defense:
The Republicans have realigned. Trump’s alliance was originally the Bush-era group. Trump has acted as a political magnet for a wide range of Americans, including those who are racial, college-educated, and non-college educated ( by which definition do you mean having degrees rather than connoting having degrees with life in the sense that they are actually educated in a life sense ) ).
The Democrats then face the challenge of reconfiguration. Personality politicians have shaped the contemporary Democratic Party. What will change this target? Who lead the energy? When and how properly?
Perhaps nothing has this “iron files” result been more effective than in Pennsylvania. For the majority of this year, Senator John Fetterman has been raising concern about what is happening to his group. He wonders if Harris ‘ race was essentially insurmountable because the public had already surpassed the Democrats.
Semafor asked , why he went on Joe Rogan’s audio despite Democrats condemning him for it.
But, I was happy to show up there. And it also addresses an important kind of an matter, in my opinion, with the Democratic Party. We have a problem. We have our own style of” unmarried cat ladies” circumstance:” Bros”. These younger men are known as “bros,” which is obviously not a good term. They’re described as dopes, or foolish, or beasts. The entire single feline ladies phenomenon was so absurd that it was discontinued. That violates the simple, basic principle of politicians. Do n’t subtract, do addition. That was, in my opinion, a component of the new coalition that truly gave Trump a very crushing defeat.
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Did the left really think that denigrating young white males, castigating them for their white male “privilege”, and fingering them as the villains in the culture would n’t have electoral consequences?  ,
Feterrman’s concerns about Pennsylvania becoming dark are justified. When you consider the industrial vote for Trump in towns like Pittsburg, Philadelphia, and Allentown and the union voting that broke for the previous president, it’s reasonable to question if Pennsylvania is still a jump position.
Democrats have not indicated that they are changing their views on personality politics. The extreme left is still in charge and may continue to do so. Liberals are likely to continue to lose primaries until the party’s far-left can take control of it.