Democrats lost despite having many advantages: much more money ($997 KK vs. $388 KK as of October 16th, with Super PACs raising about $550KK for each, which I think is additional), reportedly much better ground organization, popular abortion issues on the ballot, a disliked Republican candidate (many never-Trump Republicans voted for Harris and many of Trump’s first term staff campaigned against him), and many incumbent candidates down-ticket. Yet Trump has 3.5 million more votes nationally, as of 11/9 at 11 pm ET. In 2020 , he had 7.1 million fewer votes and in 2016, 2.6 million fewer votes. So far, 147.9 million votes are recorded, compared to 158.5 million in 2020 and 136.7 million in 2016, so I’ll discuss turn-out below. The final count might exceed 150 million and Trump’s margin might dip to about 3 million. While this is a victory for Trump, I see it as more of a significant repudiation of the Democrats.
In 9 of 10 states, a majority voted to
protect abortion. In Florida, the abortion bill was defeated despite a
57% vote, because state law requires 60%. In Nebraska, the current
3-month protection was retained but not extended to viability. Despite
the advantage of an abortion vote, Harris won only three of these 9
states. Now, 30 states have protected abortion.
Minimum wage laws passed in 3 of 5
states. CA didn’t raise its minimum wage to $18, and MA didn’t increase
minimum wage for tipped waiters. Ironically, Harris won in both states
where minimum wage laws were defeated but lost the three states where such laws
passed (AK and MO to $15 and AZ minimum wage applies to tipped workers).
All 9 states with education
propositions voted for the teachers’ union preference. Harris won only 4
of those states. Four states (AR, RI, NM, UT) increased school
funding. CO and KY rejected school choice. Nebraska overturned a state
law that allows scholarships to private schools for low-income students.
Florida kept school board races non-partisan. Massachusetts ended a
requirement that high school graduates pass a test.
Medical marijuana use passed in
Nebraska, but medical psychedelic drugs use lost in Massachusetts.
Recreational marijuana use lost in all 3 states (ND, SD, FL, although 56%
approved in FL). Trump and Harris both supported legalization.
Ranked-choice voting (RCV) was
defeated in 9 of 10 states but was hampered in most situations. In 4
states, it was packaged with a multi-party primary that, my review of news
reports makes me think could have allowed all the final candidates to be from
the same party even if that party got a minority of the votes, whereas NV
rejected RCV packaged with a multi-party primary rule that would have advanced
two people from each party to the final election. I’d prefer to implement
RCV without a multi-party primary. In MO, the proposition to ban RCV
included banning illegal aliens from voting; that’s already illegal but was
used to distract people from the real issue. In Alaska, RCV was
repealed. CO and OR rejected what I think were straight RCV bills.
The two major parties continue to collaborate to thwart democracy.
The dissatisfaction with incumbent
progressive district attorneys was huge. Nathan Hochman routed George
Gascon in LA (61% to 38%); Pamela Price was recalled in Oakland (30%
margin). Kim Foxx chose not to run for re-election in Chicago.
Earlier, Baltimore replaced Marilyn Mosby. California also passed
Proposition 36 partly reversing a 2014 proposition; Prop 36 increases penalties
for repeated theft offenses and certain drug crimes.
Some good things about this election:
- Many
people voted for a party they had never voted for before. This is
healthy. The Democrats have promoted “identity” politics and have
taken minority voters for granted.
- People
split ballots as indicated in the propositions discussed above and some
legislative elections.
- I
understand that 37 out of 40 “Problem Solvers” got re-elected, with a few
races undecided, all of which they are leading. The Problem Solvers Caucus are Congress people who get together with peers across the aisle to
discuss how they can govern more effectively. The “No Labels” organization stimulated this movement.
- I
understand, of course, that many of you think it is good that President
Trump won. While I don’t agree on that point, I know we agree on
many things. When I congratulated a strong Trump voter, he asked me
what I’d like to see in Trump’s second administration. I chose to
also tell him what I did not want to see. We largely agreed as you
can see below my signature block.
Why did Trump have such a decisive
win?
- Probably a lot has to do with
the economy. I am disappointed that people focus on the short-term
economy and secondarily that they vote to benefit themselves rather than
what they think is best for the country. (I’m not taking a position
here on which Presidential candidate was better for the country, I’m
simply saying that patriotism should outweigh personal benefits, at least
for those who can afford to feed their families.) Both parties
encourage short-sighted voting, rather than educating us (actually
mis-educating us).
- Voters rejected the Biden
administration with which Harris aligned. President Biden promised
to bring us together then veered left. No wonder people did not
believe that Harris, a more leftist politician than Biden historically,
would tack toward the center. In addition to Biden’s broken promise
and the economy, there were crime, the border, energy, electric car
mandates, the international crises, education, etc.; each of which cost
Harris significant votes. The Trump ad that “Biden/Harris broke it
and he’ll fix it was probably effective.”
- The Democrats have foisted
hoaxes on voters for 3 straight Presidential elections. In 2024,
they covered up President Biden’s diminished cognition, but that hoax
backfired. In 2020, the White House orchestrated 51 former
intelligence officials falsely suggesting that Hunter Biden’s laptop was
Russian disinformation. In 2016, Hillary Clinton commissioned the
Steele dossier. In each case, the mainstream media helped the
Democrats. For example, in 2020, the mainstream media failed to report that the FBI
knew that Hunter Biden’s laptop was real; they did not report that many
former intelligence officials refused to sign the misleading statement;
and they did not expose the White House staff involvement.
- The public rejects wokeness
when given a private vote. The lack of courage in public is
disheartening. When I hear the media talk about “birthing people”
and “assigned gender”, I think they are cowards to accept such censorship
and rejection of science. There are many sub-issues here, including
LBGTQ+ issues; oppressive DEI; “intersectionality” postures that broaden
non-profit entities’ missions and ostracize supporters who don’t agree on
a tangential issue; rejection of “merit” and grades; etc.
Likely lesser issues:
- 6.7% fewer votes have been
counted than in 2020 (despite presumably more eligible voters), but that
might end up less than 5%. Assuming the 6.7%, if all these 10.6
million had voted, Harris would have needed 67.6% of them just to tie the
popular vote. In 2020, 72% voted early in-person (26%) or by mail
(46%) vs. 60% combined in 2024 (I couldn’t find further breakdown).
In 2020, ballots were sent to 21.3% of voters; even if 2% of those mailed
ballots were fraudulently returned “on behalf” of people who were dead, in
prison, or in nursing homes, that’s only 0.4% of the total vote and 5.9%
of the 10.6 million. I’ve seen no claim or evidence of “voter
suppression”. Voter suppression, and fraudulent voting do not appear
to have been meaningful factors in either 2020 or 2024. When writing this originally, I thought
low turn-out was not an issue, but I’ve since seen some data that suggests
that the voter turn-out reductions came in Democratic-leaning
counties. So, this could have been
a significant factor.
- Third parties: Jill Stein,
Robert Kennedy and Chase Oliver each have 600,000-700,000 votes and there
were 350,000 other write-ins. Overall, this is a minor effect,
probably harming Trump.
- Actions against Trump were seen
as partisan.
The Democrats are blaming the loss
(sometimes claiming that “accountability” is different than “blame”), on Biden,
Harris, Harris’s campaign strategists, and voters. Few accept personal
responsibility or that the party’s platform is responsible. Sure, Biden’s
attempt to get re-elected and his terrible performance as President were
critical, but his critics (such as Nancy Pelosi) pushed him to take those
positions and actively participated in the hoax (for example, criticizing
Robert Hur for accurately reporting the President’s condition. Only Dean
Phillips challenged Biden in the Democratic party and when he did, his
peers
said he was destroying his promising career and helping Trump. Now those
same people who caused Biden’s failure or aided and abetted it, point fingers
at him.
Voters are criticized as racist,
misogynist, religious zealots, ignorant, etc. The below exit poll data
shows that Trump’s support among White males has been significantly
decreasing. His support among minorities has steadily increased, probably
because minorities did unusually well economically in his presidency (until
COVID), because of education issues, etc. Although he did worse with
Whites than in the past and better with minorities, there still is some bias
against voting for a Black female, but it does not seem to be the major reason
for Harris’s loss.
2016 Margin
2020 Margin 2024 Margin
White
Males +31
+23
+20
Trump did worst with White men when running against Harris
White
Females +9
+11
+5
White women liked Biden best and Harris least.
Black
Males -69
-60
-58
Trump has been gaining support among Black men, albeit is still far behind.
Black
Females -90
-81
-85
Black women overwhelmingly vote against Trump and exhibit the most pro-gender
voting.
Latino Males -31
-23
10
Trump has been gaining support among Latino men and actually had a majority
among them.
Latino
Females -44
-39
-24
Trump has been gaining support among Latino women.
See below my signature block for what
I’d like to see and not see during Trump’s second administration. These
are numbered to make it easier for you to refer to them; they are not
prioritized.
Claude
Thau
Phone direct: 913-707-8863; Schedule time with me by clicking here
Click here to connect with
Claude on LinkedIn
I continue to believe that if people spoke with each other rather than ignoring each other or yelling at each other, we’d learn that there is a lot we agree on! For example, the strong Trump voter with whom I corresponded agreed on #1-17 and #21-25. On #18 (Speaker’s Project) and #19 (Ranked-Choice Voting), he’d need more info. We have at least some overlap on #26-27 and would need more discussion to ferret out disagreement. On #29, he is a strong supporter of school choice because of the teachers’ union’s far left agenda that forces two teachers in his family to teach things they don’t believe in; I’d want to learn more about those issues. We disagreed on #20 (abortion somewhat); #28 (agreed relative to tips and overtime, but not on other issues). On #30, he is open to considering my position. That’s a lot of agreement and potential agreement!
Things I expect to see in a second
Trump administration:
- Ukraine: I imagine Trump
will threaten Putin to secure a peace settlement. Ukraine will lose
some territory but remain independent. Ukraine’s loss is clearly
Biden’s fault. As I’ve indicated in my blogs, Biden triggered
Putin’s invasion and kept Ukraine from winning by putting crazy
restrictions on Ukraine’s actions.
- Environmental progress: We’ll
continue to make environmental progress because it makes sense
economically. I hope we internalize more of the cost of
environmental impact. (Art Laffer, a contender to Chair the Federal
Reserve, is pro-carbon tax, so maybe Trump will support a carbon
tax.) The automobile manufacturer EV mandates (50% by 2032) seem
likely to go away, which I think is a good idea because it is not even
clear that EV are better than hybrids; we don’t have good enough batteries
yet; we rely on China for rare earth minerals; and the EV cars may be less
safe and bad for our infrastructure.
- Energy: We’ll have a more
intelligent energy program which will help other countries be able to
depend on us for energy, rather than being dependent on our enemies.
More energy production in the USA is good for the environment because our
production is much cleaner than production in Venezuela, Iran, Russia and
the Arab countries. The energy policy will increase jobs and income
and may help reduce our debt.
- Debt: Unfortunately, both candidates
ignored this critical issue during the campaign. Instead, they both tried to buy votes by
promising more give-aways (which aren’t even their prerogative as
President). It is important to
remember that even if a President avoids a deficit, our debt will continue
to grow because of off-ledger items and interest due. This is a serious issue which is made
worse by the threat of war.
- Israel: Both Trump and Biden
have claimed to be Israel’s greatest friend. We’re still benefiting
from Trump’s past impact, such as the Abraham Accords.
Unfortunately, although Trump is more supportive of Israel, he may want to
punish Netanyahu for past slights. If Trump threatens to support
Israel more strongly, Hamas might be more motivated to negotiate or at
least release US hostages. I continue to fear a third World
War. If we appease Russia and Iran, we make such a war more
likely. We need Teddy Roosevelt “Speak softly but carry a big
stick.” In the context of Ukraine, this could mean threatening Putin
privately, so as not to embarrass him. Perhaps such
behind-the-scenes threats might be attractive to Trump relative to Israel
because he might avoid seemingly supporting Netanyahu.
- Supreme Court: Reform is
probably dead. I’d support term limits, but the Democratic plan to
move existing judges to non-voting jobs and to end the filibuster and pack
the Court was a disaster.
- The filibuster and electoral
college will continue. I support both. The Democrats who were
so critical of the filibuster may be using it a lot.
- Border: Trump will strengthen
the border, and I would support no longer bestowing citizenship
automatically to people born on USA turf.
- Anti-business bias of the Biden
administration: Trump will temper this.
- Separation of powers may
improve, despite Trump’s lust for power. The Supreme Court strongly
supports separation of powers and will thwart Trump if he tries to grab
too much power. I’m open to reducing the Federal Education
Department because it seems that education should be managed at the state
and local level.
- Election fraud: Our elections
will at least temporarily be protected against unlimited ballot harvesting
and banning of photo voter ID for federal elections, both of which the
Democrats have repeatedly tried to push through.
- Federal administrative and
college due process improved during Trump’s first term but, under Biden,
federal agencies once again became prosecutor, judge, and jury.
- Military strength is like to
improve, and the USA will be better respected militarily.
- The private ballot will likely
be protected in labor union elections.
- Public charter schools/open
enrollment in public schools: Trump may support these, which would be
great. We must give inner city children a way to escape the terrible
education we’ve been providing to them.
- Improved free speech, for
example, on college campuses (which have selectively protected for
liberals but not conservatives). I hope the media will have the
courage to abandon language such as “birthing people” and “assigned
gender”.
- People competing in sports
based on birth gender.
Things I’d like to see but don’t
expect Trump to support:
- Progress in implementing the
“No Labels” Speaker’s Project Speaker’s Project and similar Congressional reforms.
- Ranked-Choice voting: both
parties oppose it because it threatens their grip on power.
- Abortion: more states
protecting abortion.
Things I don’t want to see in a second
Trump administration:
- Pursuit of internal political
“enemies”: I hope he ditches his idea of revenge. Some people say he
should pardon Hunter Biden. I wouldn’t push for that, but I would
not object.
- Taiwan taken by China: Trump
says he’ll threaten China with 200% tariffs if they invade Taiwan.
I’m not comfortable that such a threat is sufficient. But I think
our enemies will be much more wary of us with Trump at the helm.
Biden’s weakness lit the world on fire. Now that the world is on
fire, I’m not confident that Trump can put out the blaze.
- The Environmental Protection
Agency closed down: this agency needs to operate at the national level.
- Rudeness, lies,
misrepresentations (from either party).
- More new executive orders that
encroach on Congress’s authority. However, executive orders
cancelling prior executive orders are fair game (e. g., student loans)
- Mass deportation: I hope Trump
does not expel illegal immigrants who have lived here peacefully a long
time. In addition to sympathy and appreciation of their
contributions, deporting them is harmful to their families and employers,
thereby having a meaningfully bad impact on our economy. I have been
opposed to sanctuary cities but may change my position if Trump is too
extreme.
- Rampant Tariffs: Targeted
tariffs (to induce fair trade, for security reasons, etc.) are
appropriate, but Trump went too far in his first administration and says
he’ll go further this time. I’m concerned about the impact of
tariffs on our economy, inflation, and foreign relationships.
- Unwise Tax give-aways: As a
high tax guy in general, I wouldn’t have voted for Trump’s tax cuts.
However, in fairness I note that revenue from income taxes has increased
well since his tax cuts were adopted. Of the tax cuts scheduled to
be cancelled, I’d most favor reducing the tax-free threshold for estates,
but that won’t happen. I hope he backs away from ending income taxes
on tips, overtime and social security benefits and resurrecting the state
and local tax deduction.
- Private/Religious school choice
with public funds: I’m a strong believer in public charter schools and
open enrollment in public schools to allow inner-city children to escape
their poor educational environments. I have not
supported school choice (letting students use public money to attend
private school; whether or not denominational). However, the Left
can push me into the arms of the Right on this issue if it is the only way
I can see to help inner-city students.
- Re: Trump trials. I’d
rather have seen the Trump election obstruction legal action continue, but
that won’t happen. The improper retention of government documents
was a good case, except it was compromised by: a) the decision to treat
Hillary Clinton more laxly than other people when she endangered national
secrets with her computer; and b) by not letting President Biden off the
hook despite having knowingly kept papers than he shouldn’t have had and
telling his biographer to be careful with them because they weren’t
supposed to have them.