NOVALibertarian
Member
- Joined
- Jul 30, 2012
- Messages
- 358
And maybe it will help with African Americans but really, that's an irrelevancy. Blacks are only 13% of the population and most of them live in states Republicans easily win anyway. If Rand successfully portrays himself as the candidate of middle class families, then he dominates the white middle class vote in the North and Midwest and you are looking at a Reagan like landslide.
You're right about the "Elite vs. Everyone Else" populist platform being the way to go for Rand in 2016, although I think combining it somewhat with the "Red vs. Blue" would also be beneficial; probably more-so in Rand's outreach to the African-American community.
Whilst they're only 13% of the population nationwide, they're a significant amount of the population in some of the large cities that could determine where a swing state decides to swing. Rand's message can reach cities in swing-states such as Philadelphia, Columbus, and even Detroit. A combination of the "Elite vs. Everyone Else" and "Red vs. Blue" argument would be beneficial in those cities. If anything, invoking some of the "Red vs. Blue" rhetoric could help lure some African-Americans in these cities away from the Democrats for good, for a truly Conservative/Libertarian GOP would be entirely beneficial for their community, as opposed to the "Progressive" Democratic Party who, because of their ideology, will always be a detriment for their community no matter their intentions.
The "Red vs. Blue" appeal in these cities would work via Rand saying that the Democrats held power for nearly a decade, yet they did absolutely nothing to repeal portions of the War on Drugs which, by design or not, mainly targets African-American males. Because of the broken homes and ruined lives that have arisen as a result of this policy, Rand would be an idiot not to make this part of his main pitch to African-Americans in 2016. Like I mentioned before, Rand should also play towards the anti-illegal immigration sentiment that seems to growing within the Black Community. This is where the "Red vs. Blue" and "Elite vs. Everyone Else" argument would intertwine, for he could mention that the elite Democrats are more worried about people that aren't even citizens than the AMERICAN citizens in cities like Detroit who are crying for help, yet are being ignored by Obama and the rest of the Democrats in power. And yes, I know that some of this would be an exaggeration as opposed to what is actually happening, but no Populist platform has ever succeeded without a ton of exaggeration. Playing to the emotions of a population is the key to a Populist platform, imo.
I posted a video below to illustrate my point that some of the African-American vote is within Rand's reach. Whilst this takes place in Chicago (and I doubt that Rand will be able to swing Illinois), I doubt that this is just a feeling that is quarantined to just the African-American community in Chicago. The people in this video aren't advocating a switch to the Republican Party, but they're making it known that the previous loyalty that African-Americans seemed to demonstrate for the DNC seems to be fleeting. With the right message, Rand can gain their support, and thus expand the hole in the Progressive Titanic, that will lead to them sinking in November 2016.
For what it's worth, I think that being "betrayed" by one of their own (Barack Obama) might have led to some of them waking up.