.@AOC was an inspiration to a lot of progressives, but in many ways her story is atypical compared to what I’m seeing.
-She wasn’t JUST “a bartender,” she had an extensive network & history of organizing in the district
-She had the full might of DSA & Justice Dems all-in on her
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Not to mention the fact that
@AOC is a generational political talent who is charismatic and can hold a town hall space in a way 99% of sitting members of Congress can’t.2 replies 0 retweets 6 likesShow this thread -
Lots of great candidates are trying to follow in her footsteps without checking the prerequisite boxes for success. You don’t win an insurgent campaign by just planting a flag, having good policies, making a snappy video, & copying AOC’s slanted-name graphic design branding.
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One unfortunate side effect of the Presidential race is that many of the Left-Wing grassroots organizations with actual volunteers that would otherwise be working on recruiting quality candidates and setting them up for success are instead busy trying to elect Bernie (or Warren).
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So we’re seeing a lot of 1st time candidates who are under-prepared jumping in late, running in a district too big, raising zero dollars, & then getting frustrated that the progressive ecosystem isn’t showering them with $ & canvassers to make them viable without doing the work.
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Probably 75% of the progressive insurgent candidates running for Congress that I’ve reviewed so far would be better off running for state legislature or city council or DA. Going from zero-to-Congress is non-optimal, & will be rare. We need to build the bench with local races.
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Now, people from underrepresented communities who are new to politics probably can’t be expected to know things like “how much money do I need to have raised by the new year to have a chance in hell?” so it’s on progressive grassroots groups to help do that education.
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I’m a fan of underdogs - most progressives are! But there’s a BIG difference between the underdog with $200k vs the incumbent with $2million, compared to the underdog with $5000 who spends all their time tweeting vs the incumbent with $2million.
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Replying to @AlexanderMcCoy4
I would add few candidates do the appropriate analysis of their districts to set appropriate goals for their campaign. Losing is not bad if you can start moving the needle to the left.
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Replying to @RVHoyos @AlexanderMcCoy4
We had several congressional districts move to the left for the first time in many years, the candidates didn't win, but they provided options for voters where previously there were none.
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I'm running again because our analysis shows the district (TN-02) has been moving to the left since 2008 even after being redistricted by republicans in 2012. There's still opportunity in the South if we choose to take it.
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