If the democrats are hopeful at the beginning of 2019, this is understandable.
Their victory on November 6, adding 40 places and taking control of the Chamber of Representatives, was impressive. And with the complete voting of the party significantly exceeding the total total of GOP, the place has become a route.
In six states of New England, Republicans no longer take up one place at home. Susan Collins from Maine is the last GOP senator.
In California, the Democrats took the governor, each state office, 45 out of 53 home seats and both legislator’s homes by over 2 to 1. In Goldwater-Nixon-Reagan Golden State Bastion of Orange County, no congressmen GOP survived.
Is this rejection of GOP in 2018 cover the defeat of Donald Trump in 2020, assuming that he is still in the position?
Not necessarily.
To consider. Nancy Pelosia may want to end his career as a speaker with solid achievements, but he can face rebellion in his party who wants to face, not a compromise with Trump.
The national debt may grow, but Capitol Hill will demand “Medicare-for-ALL” and free tuition fees to study. Haters Trump will make a rice of calls and demand impeachment.
Other democrats, seeing indulgent attention in which their colleagues receive from the media, will join. Chairman Jerrold Nadler, a court committee, may be forced to Sans-Culottes.
Did America vote for it?
In ides from March, a dozen democrats could declare the president. But looking at the field, no potential candidate seems terribly powerful, and the strongest, unlike Barack Obama in 2008, is too ancient to set the base.
According to the USA Today, 59 percent of Democrats claims that they would be “excited” “someone completely new” running the party in 2020. Only 11 percent say that they would prefer a familiar face.
However, who perceived the same democrats the most favorably? Joe Biden, a 76-year-old white man, first elected to the Senate, when Richard Nixon was the president.
Biden probes better than any of his rivals, and 53 percent of all Democrats claims that they would be “excited” his candidate, and only 24 percent claims that he should not last for the third time for the president.
The candidate who is closest to Biden in an exhilarating base is 77-year-old socialist Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders. Bernie’s problem?
Almost the same number of democrats believe that he should not run again because he would be excited to have him as a candidate.
As for Elizabeth Warren, the US survey must be depressing news. Twenty-nine percent of Democrats would be excited to her candidate, but 33 percent believe that the 69-year-old senator Massachusetts should not run.
Beto O’Rourke, a three-period Congresmen from Texas, who was afraid of Ted Cruz’s senator in November, is less known than Bernie or Biden. But excited people O’Rourke exceed the number of those who think he should not run.
Senators Kamala Harris and Cory Booker, both African -American ones, are less known, but they have more democrats excited about them than they are against.
However, because Harris comes from California and Booker from New Jersey, both blue is found that the democrats are almost sure that in 2020 they wear equal o’rourke or sleep in 2020. Sherrod Brown from Ohio, who won the re -election when his state was riding a Republican.
However, Brown also qualifies at Medicare at the age of 66.
Biden-Brown ticket would be problems for GOP. But does the Democratic Party, which constantly celebrates racial and ethnic diversity and refer to women and generations of millenniums, nominating a ticket of two white men for social security?
Other problems become acute in the black coalition, gays, gays, Asians, Latinos, Women and LGBT, shred to the sutures of the party.
After the leader of the Nation of Islam, Louis Farrakhan, praised the co -author of the Women’s March, Tamika Mallory and announced Jews for the enemy in a speech in February last year, the movement of the march of women was falling apart.
Asian-Americans who vote for democratic in the country become bitter in relation to the policy of diversity in Ivy League schools and elite schools that admit to black and Latin students over Asian students with much higher test results.
BDS movement (boycott, sale, sanctions), directed to Israel, the anger of Jewish Democrats, while obtaining support on camps.
Elizabeth Warren opposes BDS, but also opposes the efforts to punish those who support BDS. “I think that Israel’s boycott is wrong,” said Warren at a meeting in the town hall, but he added that “prohibiting the protected activity of freedom of speech violates our basic constitutional rights.”
In identity policy, loyalty to breeds, ethnic group and gender often pierce party claims. Democrats, which one day will separate their party, celebrate diversity, because the social, cultural and racial revolutions from the 1960s separated the FDR and LBJ party.

