A failed strategy leads to this:
Did you give credence to some of the early polling that showed Rep. Minnick with a measurable lead?
We were ahead in all of our internal polling all the way up to the final days. Every single undecided voter broke against Walt. I'll make one comment about some of the post-election analysis: There seems to be an assumption that Democrats stayed home. The reality is that there are a lot fewer of them. The state has become a lot more red. More Democrats became independent and more independents became Republicans.
[...]
But if you did have a few minutes with some people who could rebuild the party, where would you start?
By not worrying about rebuilding the Democratic Party. The state is ruby-red Republican, and likely always will be. Any advice I would have to give would be to accept that reality and move on. Do not assume that you're going to get the state to change. It's Republican. It's conservative. Your strategy needs to be built around that reality.
Failure. Failure to understand that the failed strategy led to the failure.
It may feel better to blame the failure on a variation of a Bruce Hornsby lyric... but it doesn't make it so.
The more the Democrats in Idaho try to kiss the electorates ass by being just as conservative as the Republicans the less votes they will net. The Democrats really need to re-establish themselves as a true alternative to the mindless fanaticism that permeates the current political landscape and propose some real ideas and programs rather than positioning themselves as Republican lite. Allred is a prime example, running as an independent with democratic backing (or was that a democrat with an independent streak) he tried to hard to be "republican lite" and failed, in the end, to differentiate himself enough to become electable.
Posted by: ericn1300 | December 04, 2010 at 11:24 PM
Holy cow! That guy was the executive director of the state Democratic party?
Well ... that explains a lot.
Posted by: Kent | December 14, 2010 at 12:06 AM