• kava@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    it’s a bit of both. in 2016 around 24% of hispanics said they were gonna vote for trump. 2020 that number was 36%. in this election, we’re seeing around 48%

    the numbers for black people have also increased, although at lower rates.

    then you have a lot of disillusioned democrats who won’t vote for Trump - but also aren’t going to turn out for Biden

    the issue is that he won a lot of battleground states with small margins, so small changes will make or break him there. for example in michigan. the 100k or so people who voted “uncommitted” in the Democratic primary is enough to swing the state.

    it’s looking grim for democrats right now. i think their only chance is if they manage to get Trump in jail or he has a stroke or something. which are in the realm of possibility

    • HipHoboHarold@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Yeah, at this point I think that’s the big thing I’m looking at. Getting rid of Trump. I know who ever is next will also still be the right wing authoritarian the party wants, but they won’t have the cult following. They’re not a religious leader. It’s at least something.

      But either way, as a gay man, me and my boyfriend are thinking we might get out if the Republicans do win. He’s on his last semester of nursing school. I have an associates in accounting, which isn’t much, but I can hopefully still have some leverage with it.

      • kava@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        yeah it’s sad that the country has come to this. if it’s any consolation, i think a lot of the countries around the world are shifting to the right. it seems like we’re repeating the 1930s step by step.

        my advice is to go to south america. in the event of a nuclear war, i think Brazil/Argentina will be safest :P

        argentina’s also shifted far right with their new president, but the president of brazil is from the labor party