Originally Posted by
Dan Druff
This is unprecedented territory, and very hard to predict.
The Democratic candidate -- the sitting President -- has been abruptly swapped out for the formerly unpopular VP. That new candidate has been propped up by a coordinated media propaganda campaign, the likes of which has never been seen in this country.
At the same time, we have a very polarizing Republican candidate who got voted out after 1 term, and is back as the candidate again. Also something we've never seen in our lifetime.
Also, the new Democratic candidate is subsisting via tightly controlled teleprompter speeches and the fawning media. She has not stated policy positions (nor is it on her website), and she is prone to being very unlikable (and comes off as ignorant) when off script.
Also, the Republican candidate made an odd VP choice -- picking someone who is young, polarizing, and likely to turn off some independent voters, especially females.
So there's a lot of ways this can go.
Kamala might expose herself as Kamala in the next few months, and it will be game over.
Trump might have a hard time countering what will likely be a 3-month media propaganda blitz against him, which will be far worse and more biased than he ever dealt with when facing Hillary or Biden.
Trump might find out that he was only viable because everyone was so afraid of senile Biden having a second term.
Kamala might find out why she flamed out so badly in the 2020 primary, and see the same occur here. Remember, at one point in 2019, she was considered the favorite to get the nomination, but was the first major candidate to drop out.
It really comes down to the swing states, and whether the media can continue fooling everyone about Kamala. Everyone knows what Trump is. For the independent voters, it becomes a matter of whether they think Kamala is a reasonable person to lead the country (in which case they will pick her over Trump), or if they realize she's a cackling idiot who was elevated as an emergency replacement for Senile Joe (in which case they will go with Trump).
And it's all about the swing states. Georgia, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan, Arizona, North Carolina. I think Trump pulls off Nevada, Georgia, Arizona, and North Carolina. I think Kamala wins Michigan and Wisconsin. Pennsylvania should be the decider here. That's why it was a huge mistake for Kamala to pass over Shapiro for Walz. But you know... it's hard to pick a Jewish VP when the loudest people in your party hate the Jews so much.