2022"s worst candidates

floridafan

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On Wednesday, writing for The Washington Post, reporter Aaron Blake profiled many of the worst candidates to have run in the 2022 elections.

One of the common through-lines he identified? Former President Donald Trump backed all of them, sometimes against less controversial candidates in the Republican primary.

Among the candidates, Blake noted, were Christian nationalist and alleged January 6 participant Doug Mastriano for governor of Pennsylvania, for whom "national Republicans effectively conceded this race the moment Mastriano won his primary"; election conspiracy theorist and former Gen. Don Bolduc in the New Hampshire Senate race, who underperformed GOP Gov. Chris Sununu by 25 points; and white nationalist sympathizer Joe Kent, who "knocked out impeachment-supporting Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-Wash.) in the top-two primary, thanks to Trump’s support, and then proceeded to lose a district Trump had carried by four points."

Blake Masters, Sarah Palin, and J.R. Majewski all similarly blew winnable or even Republican-tilted races — and Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) came very close to losing a district that wasn't supposed to be competitive at all.

Then there was Kristina Karamo, a QAnon believer running for Michigan Secretary of State.

"Karamo, who rose to prominence thanks to baseless and false accusations about issues in the 2020 election, lost to the incumbent Democrat by 14 points," wrote Blake. "That’s the largest loss among the most prominent election deniers running for secretary of state, who themselves had a brutal election. It was also larger than the GOP’s deficit for governor (minus-10) and attorney general (minus-eight). Given that this is a state that was close in both the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections, all three results are pretty shocking. But Karamo’s was the worst, and now she’s running for state party chair."

Some of Trump's picks, Blake noted, were so unelectable they couldn't even make it through their primaries, like David Perdue for Georgia governor, Janice McGeachin for Idaho governor, Mo Brooks for Alabama Senate, and North Carolina Rep. Madison Cawthorn, who was thrown overboard by his own party after two years of causing controversies.
 
On Wednesday, writing for The Washington Post, reporter Aaron Blake profiled many of the worst candidates to have run in the 2022 elections.

One of the common through-lines he identified? Former President Donald Trump backed all of them, sometimes against less controversial candidates in the Republican primary.

Among the candidates, Blake noted, were Christian nationalist and alleged January 6 participant Doug Mastriano for governor of Pennsylvania, for whom "national Republicans effectively conceded this race the moment Mastriano won his primary"; election conspiracy theorist and former Gen. Don Bolduc in the New Hampshire Senate race, who underperformed GOP Gov. Chris Sununu by 25 points; and white nationalist sympathizer Joe Kent, who "knocked out impeachment-supporting Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-Wash.) in the top-two primary, thanks to Trump’s support, and then proceeded to lose a district Trump had carried by four points."

Blake Masters, Sarah Palin, and J.R. Majewski all similarly blew winnable or even Republican-tilted races — and Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) came very close to losing a district that wasn't supposed to be competitive at all.

Then there was Kristina Karamo, a QAnon believer running for Michigan Secretary of State.

"Karamo, who rose to prominence thanks to baseless and false accusations about issues in the 2020 election, lost to the incumbent Democrat by 14 points," wrote Blake. "That’s the largest loss among the most prominent election deniers running for secretary of state, who themselves had a brutal election. It was also larger than the GOP’s deficit for governor (minus-10) and attorney general (minus-eight). Given that this is a state that was close in both the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections, all three results are pretty shocking. But Karamo’s was the worst, and now she’s running for state party chair."

Some of Trump's picks, Blake noted, were so unelectable they couldn't even make it through their primaries, like David Perdue for Georgia governor, Janice McGeachin for Idaho governor, Mo Brooks for Alabama Senate, and North Carolina Rep. Madison Cawthorn, who was thrown overboard by his own party after two years of causing controversies.

Trump's main mistake was drinking his own Kool-Aide. He picked candidates to serve him, not the country or their state. This is why I believe Walker will lose in Georgia; Walker is the best pick for Trump and, to an extent, the Republican Party. Walker is not the best pick for Georgia citizens. While Warnock may not be the best candidate for the Senate, he's light years ahead of Walker where Georgians are concerned.

IMO, Warnock will win for those reasons. Not because of Trump, not because of the "D" or the "R", but because, of the two, Warnock is the best choice for Georgian citizens in Congress.
 
I thought that people generally wanted the best candidate to represent them... is that not the case when it comes to Democrats?
 
Was there ever a candidate from any party worse than Walker?

Not that I can recall. Why he was picked remains a mystery. Why didn't the Georgian Republican Party have a better candidate than a brain-damaged, mentally ill resident of Texas?
 
Not that I can recall. Why he was picked remains a mystery. Why didn't the Georgian Republican Party have a better candidate than a brain-damaged, mentally ill resident of Texas?

Because Rev. Warnock is black, and they wanted to run a black candidate who is amenable to being controlled and who kisses #TRE45ON's ring.
 
Because Rev. Warnock is black, and they wanted to run a black candidate who is amenable to being controlled and who kisses #TRE45ON's ring.

...and Herschel Walker was the only conservative African-American the Republicans could find in Georgia? Wow. That's pretty friggin' sad.

Worse considering that Walker admits he's a Texas resident. LOL

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/29/us/politics/herschel-walker-georgia-texas-residence.html
What to Know About Herschel Walker’s Residency Status in Georgia
The Republican Senate candidate listed his Atlanta residence on public records as a rental property in 2021, while receiving a homestead exemption in Texas.


Homestead exemptions are for primary residence only. :)
 
Before he posts it, the number is 83% (https://ballotpedia.org/Endorsements_by_Donald_Trump), but a large number of that include State races, tough to lose when you are endorsing the already GOP candidate for State positions in say Wyoming or Oklahoma

In battleground races, elections in swing districts, the key races, Trump candidates only won 40%, not a good day

I like to play the odds on the gambling sites. My philosophy being "Money talks, bullshit walks" https://www.predictit.org/markets/17/US-Elections
 
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