His support for the Rittnhouse verdict was the last straw.Unless there is a nominee other than Biden or Harris I am Republican from 2024 to 2028.If the election was tomorrow between Biden or Harris or Trump Id be the first in line to vote Trump.Democrats need to punished for their betrayal to progressives and minorities.
If he's not going to change anything,or even fight to change anything I might as well enjoy the lower taxes I get from republicans.
If Biden or Harris is the nominee I will for 4 years.It was a hard decision to make but Bidens betrayal is worse than Trump for me. The only people he is fighting for is centrist whites.Let him try winning with them alone in 2024.Progressives and minorities wont be coming out for him in 2024 like they did in 2020.
Dems need to be punished until they get the message imo.Thought they would have learned after progressives and minorities stayed home in 2016 but they haven't. Ill give another Dem a chance in 2028 or 2024 if Joe is smart enough to realize he will be slaughtered (in the election)and steps down and there is another nominee other than Harris.
I just don't get the contradiction of saying Biden didn't deliver for minorities and the disenfranchised, and then voting for someone who'd see them hang? You're basically punishing them along w/the dems. I gave Bernie Bros shit for sitting out 2016, I'm more sympathetic now. I'm obviously talking a Trump/DeSantis type in that scenario. A milquetoast repug that didn't ballwash Trump is basically a wash to another Biden term.
Biden didn't just not deliver it is a complete betrayal and lack of even trying.Blacks don't appreciate the betrayal either.
https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2021/11/glenn-youngkins-win-in-virginia-six-takeaways.html There were unquestionably turnout patterns that benefitted Youngkin The early Election Night impression of most observers was that turnout was up pretty much everywhere, and indeed, total turnout was 55 percent of registered voters, up from 48 percent four years ago (though not, of course, anything like the 72 percent turnout in the presidential year of 2020). But as Ron Brownstein pointed out, the turnout jump was not uniform in size or shape, and thus the electorate skewed red as compared to both 2017 and 2020: Compared with the 2017 governor’s race, or the 2020 presidential contest in the state, the electorate Tuesday was older, whiter, less college-educated, and more Republican, the exit polls found. Census figures show that voters of color have increased as a share of the state’s eligible voter population since 2017, but in the exit polls nonwhite voters plummeted from about one-third of the electorate in both 2020 and 2017 to only a little over one-fourth this year. Voters under 30 fell from 20 percent of the vote in 2020 and 14 percent in 2017 to just 10 percent Tuesday. College graduates shrank from nearly three-in-five voters in 2017 to just under half. And although Democrats outnumbered Republicans by 11 percentage points in the 2017 electorate, the exit polls found that GOP voters almost exactly equaled them this year. There are other indicators that the shape of the electorate this year was friendlier to any Republican who might have been on the ballot. The Black percentage of the electorate was 20 percent in 2017. In 2021 it was 16 percent. Self-identified conservatives represented 31 percent of the vote in 2017 and 36 percent in 2021. Perhaps most tellingly, white voters without a college degree were 26 percent of the electorate in 2017 and 36 percent in 2021 (white college graduates dropped from 41 percent in 2017 to 37 percent in 2021).