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Culture War Roundup for the week of June 24, 2024

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I mostly think the Dems won't attempt a Hot-Swap for all the reasons you outline for why Newsom wouldn't do it. The candidate is likely doomed. That said, I think your analysis misses a bunch of key points that need to be considered, and if there was a Hot-Swap I wouldn't be surprised to see Newsom placed in the candidate slot.

Newsom would get to run for President against Donald Trump. That's a huge advantage being handed to him. The campaign so far has had the feeling of one of those extra inning baseball games where nobody seems to want to win, and both teams seem unable to string together any hits. Rat race for last place vibes. Trump's support is terry cloth soft among a large part of the suburban Republican base. This is hard to see on the internet, the left wants to paint every Republican as a MAGAtard and the online right is largely running Trump for GEOM. But day to day, it's different. Going door-to-door for local candidates, you run into a lot more of "I'm a registered Republican but I haven't voted Republican in years" or "I'm a Republican but I'm embarrassed about it." Nikki Haley continued to get 20% of the vote in states where she was on the ballot, even after she dropped out and stopped campaigning. His favorability is 11% underwater among the general population. He could literally end up with a prison sentence!

Anecdotally, I'm not seeing the same enthusiasm for Trump I saw in prior years. Fewer Trump flags, fewer red hats that aren't for the Phillies, a lack of homemade Trump signs, less outre Trump memorabilia. It's early yet, and I didn't keep records, but at this time in 2016 and 2020 it felt like every road trip through the country was filled with homemade Trump signage and billboards and barn paintings. This year, it mostly falls flat. Even at the beach, even in North Carolina, the novelty shops aren't stocking Trump-joke T shirts and knick-knacks the way they did before. There was a Trump rally in my town, and my whole family planned our day around it, basically planning on avoiding leaving the house for fear of traffic/disruptions; this was based on prior experience of Trump visits. Nothing really happened, the turnout numbers are always fake and gay, but there wasn't even really a profusion of signs on the route for Trump, just for other Republican primary candidates who wanted to piggy-back on him. A lot of Republicans want to be rid of Trump, even if it cashes out to just a few percentage points it makes a big difference on election day.

But the biggest weakness for Trump isn't the Republicans who lack enthusiasm, it's the die-hards who have too much enthusiasm for Trump and who they are. This is why I'm still expecting Dem victories in November despite the headwinds, what Trump supporters might do (and/or be baited into doing by November. I fully expect someone in a red hat to shoot a cop by October, and for that to be treated as the number one issue on the news for weeks. The other thing you run into when you go door-to-door is people who scare you. Guys adjacent to this aren't all that rare and a lot of them have Trump flags outside their home. Does Trump actually control their actions in any reasonable way? No, but when you lie down with dogs you get fleas, and the media certainly isn't going to be hesitant to tie them together.

Newsom also gets the nomination handed to him in a way where California is massively valuable, having a huge mass of delegates and a font of fundraising, rather than a liability in a primary campaign where significant numbers of Democratic primary voters might not like the place. Which isn't a small thing, many cognoscenti anointed candidates have fallen apart in the primaries, from Mario Cuomo to Ron Desantis. You might get unlucky like Hillary in '08 or Huntsman in '12 and run a good campaign but run into a better talent on the other side that you don't even know about yet and can't beat. If you get on the ballot with a major party nomination, you at least get a puncher's chance.

In sports, I frequently talk about how we underrate runners-up, second place finishers. The Reid-McNabb Eagles teams I grew up with are always considered bridesmaids, teams that were good but never quite made it, because they never won the Super Bowl. But if, say, Tom Brady tears his ACL in the playoffs in 2005, we're talking about them as the first Eagles team to win the Super Bowl. And you can never know when someone will tear their ACL. Boxing and MMA are littered with examples of guys who were considered routine title fights for dominant champions, or guys who never should have gotten title shots at all, and got lucky. Chris Weidman won his first shot against Anderson Silva because Silva got cocky and lazy, and won the rematch against Silva because Silva's leg just kind of did that. Matt Serra and Buster Douglas were both lucky enough to get shots at dominant champions when those champions were partying too hard. My point being, if you get a title shot you should take it, because you might get lucky.

Because everything worth doing is worth doing with fake math, let's play with the numbers a bit. Assuming that we're only modeling odds of becoming POTUS, other goals are diffuse enough and unpredictable enough that they may be served better or worse by either course.

I think the puncher's chance for any candidate of a major party is never below 15%, because something horrendous can always happen to the other candidate. Plus whatever the chance is that everything goes right for both teams and Newsom and the Dems still win. FiveThirtyEight currently gives Biden a 51/49 edge in odds to win the presidency, while Manifold gives Biden+Harris+Newsom 37% odds. Let's take the Manifold number for a Dem winning is a good conservative estimate: Newsom gets somewhere between a 15% and a 37% chance of winning the presidency if he accepts the nomination.

Now, what if he runs in '28? I don't give any candidate a better than 50% chance of winning a national primary. Too many other candidates, too many variables. You might have a great campaign lined up and run into a junior senator from Illinois or a short-fingered vulgarian with his finger on the pulse of the nation. HRC in '16 was the best primary campaign ever run, having spent years putting the entire party apparatus behind her, and she only narrowly won. Then you have the odds that Dems win in '28. Obviously that depends on who wins in '24, and what happens to different political movements in between. If Biden wins on that 1/7-1/3 chance in '24, 12 years of Democratic rule seems unlikely, and if Harris or Whitmer win after a Hot-Swap then Newsom probably doesn't even get to run. Who emerges in the meantime on the R side, at this time in '04 Barack Obama hadn't even given his keynote speech at the DNC that catapulted him to fame; and at this time in '12 Trump was a punchline arguably at the nadir of his fame, with the Apprentice dropping from top-ten television to out of the top 100. Newsom himself will have significant weaknesses that grow between '24 and '28. But let's just call it 50% odds at this point, naively. That gives Newsom a 25% chance at POTUS if he runs in '28 or '32 instead, adjusted up or down for a number of other factors.

But we're probably modeling Newsom's decision making all wrong here. Maybe you know him personally, but my impression of him generally is a great haircut looking for a policy position. Nobody other than poor old uncle Claudius finds themselves in that kind of political power without a great deal of self belief. You don't survive multiple elections without self confidence, without thinking that maybe you're the best to ever do it. Newsom won't turn down the nomination if it is offered to him, because he's an optimist and an arrogant ambitious prick. He's likely to overrate his chances in '24 if he accepts the nomination. He's not a utility-maximizing computer program, he's not a timid investor carefully husbanding capital, he's an ambitious Governor, with only one brass-ring still to grasp, who got here taking chances and will keep taking them. Dangle it in front of him, and he's going to take it.

Further, theMotte has a noted weakness in always modeling institutional actors as cynical fakers. A lot of Catholic Church politics and policy, a lot of PRC politics and policy, makes more sense if you assume that a great many potentates within those institutions actually believe in what they are saying. Similarly, it is likely that Newsom rates the odds of Democratic victory a lot higher than we do, because he actually believes in Democratic policies, and thinks that the public does as well if only they had the right salesman. He likely believes in the Democrats' message, and if that message isn't reaching the public across the nation, he likely blames the messenger before he blames the message. With the right candidate, surely the people will see the light. Newsom likely doesn't believe that there's a huge backlash to woke/trans/BLM/LGBTQWERTY, or if he does believe that such a thing exists he believes that it is the result of misinformation, or a lack of zeal and skill on the part of the Biden admin. Put him, Gavin, and his haircut and his tasteful mild cosmetic surgery in charge of things and he'll roll up the deplorables and the bitter clingers.

So, that's my call: if Newsom were offered the job, he'd probably take it. And he'd probably be smart to take it.

Enthusiasm for Trump isn't what it was, but he's been in the sphere for close to 10 years, lessened excitement is to be expected. There was the euphoria among Obama supporters in 2008 that felt entirely gone by 2012. Disillusionment is some of it, but a rounding error is people flipping, a lot of it is going to be people who have become apathetic about politics or who have more immediate concerns in their life, but most in the right are the people who became disillusioned with the government. They hoped Trump was redress, everything got worse, now they want an open radical. A Tucker with Vivek's platform amped to 11: Garrote by XO the major alphabet agencies, fire everyone employed at the pleasure of the Executive including most of the military officership and start over. A tidier candidate with Trump's charisma--so easy--with that platform would do extremely well, especially in 2028.

That platform is the key, it's why I say Trump will win in a landslide. It's not him drawing a second wind in voter enthusiasm but the Michael Moore factor, the "Molotov at the establishment." A million if not millions will vote in November for Trump even as they dislike him or even hate him because they hate the establishment more. Trump's a lot of things, but for politics, the thing that matters more than all else is that he embodies being the anti-establishment, and it doesn't even have to be anything he's done, it's everybody who's against him. His haters are the cred.

On real issues, the price of milk and eggs should have the DNC in an endless waking panic, nothing should matter more. I'm a conscientious shopper with a damn near eidetic memory for grocery prices, I cook a lot, and I'm good with my money, but that's me. The people making less, worse with their money, less interested and capable in cooking, who now have to spend another $50 every trip, every week or every other week, what are they not buying? What are they delaying that they need or not paying off? There's a torrent of negative effects from decreased purchasing power and nothing causes regime change like economic instability. A lot of people experience this most viscerally in the checkout line gut punch, then they look at what the left is championing. I know there might be a million women who vote this fall for the sole reason of keeping abortion lines open, that's a "valid" insofar as it's an effective political platform, it's also grotesque. They can say it's not that, it is, its presence at all necessarily means it is, but also they should, because couching it? Yeah, in what? Doomsday climate change while opposing nuclear power? Increasing welfare? Not prosecuting violent criminals? Keeping the borders wide open? Classroom proselytizing of the queer religion? These people get the same say as me, I say keep it to abortion. Better insouciant than imbecilic.

But for all this, for an election scenario the DNC should be existentially incapable of winning because of the nature of the average voter's day-to-day experience with buying anything, the discussion here is the presidential prospects of the governor of the state most representative of the failures of establishment doctrine. Newsom is actually incapable of winning a national election unless he breaks his ankles pivoting so hard from the reasoning and politics of the decisions that ruined California, and that's 2028. Trump would slaughter him on the topic of the state, the state would become the topic of the election, and I bet Trump would, he certainly could do it while praising everything the state once was. It's wonderful even still, I'd love to live in California if I had a way to dodge the Big One, but it's so far from its past glory because of people who are selectively blind about what is and tragically govern on what ought to be.

fewer red hats that aren't for the Phillies

Bryce Harper for President! I’d say Rob Thomson, but he’s Canadian.

My pick would be Trevor Bauer for maximum seethe. He currently wears a red hat for the Diablos Rojos del México.

It’s interesting how so many fans in baseball still don’t want him on their team even if he was good. There basically is no evidence some people will accept to exonerate someone accused of sexual assault.

He was guilty.

Guilty of providing the sexual violence that a woman craved, and standing up for himself instead of Believing Women when they say he's wronged them, accepting a plea bargain, compen$ating the victims, promising to be better, and seeking therapy. Cheap bastard even only gave a queen thousands of dollars instead of the $1 million she deserved:

Esemonu sued Bauer in 2023, alleging he raped and impregnated her, and demanded he pay her more than $1 million to terminate the pregnancy.

He eventually paid her “thousands of dollars” that Esemonu used for an “all-expense paid” trip to Philadelphia to get LASIK surgery, his lawyers claimed in a countersuit.

True. Funny thing is these very same people would tell people not to kink shame.

There’s always an unholy alliance of conservatives and progressives eager to punish and villify men for women’s coffee moments, rather than consider if they should update their priors as to women’s Wonderfulness.

Men will continue to be confused and angry until they realize casual sex never existed and never will.

Maybe gay marriage got you turned around. The institution has a role beyond some legal conveniences and small tax advantages. There are some rules about it written down somewhere.

What happened to Bauer is obviously an outrage, but there were cultural protections that he didn’t feel like he needed for one night of fun.

Got into the league too young, he's still only 31.

Chase Utley, these days, is perfectly suited to be America's dad, having a catch. Utley/Howard '24? Pennsylvania is the Keystone.