Good link, Froot. I think Point #3 is the best way to read the special elections to date.
I also think this point is critical as, heh, it's the foundational assumption for my point on Ds (and, heh, the NRO's weaker point):
If these are districts that are important to the Ds path to regaining the House, well, then....you can't prog up.
I agree with your broad-based strategy. They can't necessarily pour in $30M, but they can spend a pretty fair amount of that on a huge swath of elections. I think you start out spending heavy in, say, the 80ish number you suggested. Really go hard at defining your opponent and then defining yourself. Then you see who is getting traction and maybe winnow out 20-25 longer shots and focus on 50-60. The Ds SHOULD be able to raise piles of money. DJT is good for business. They have a very credible shot to take the House with enough spending and, of course, the right message.
The latter is the concern to me. But, hey, far be it from me to tell the Progs how to be Progs!
I also think this point is critical as, heh, it's the foundational assumption for my point on Ds (and, heh, the NRO's weaker point):
Democrats had hoped that an Ossoff win would suggest that traditionally Republican suburban districts, particularly in the South, were abandoning their GOP roots and preparing to swing to the Democrats.
I agree with your broad-based strategy. They can't necessarily pour in $30M, but they can spend a pretty fair amount of that on a huge swath of elections. I think you start out spending heavy in, say, the 80ish number you suggested. Really go hard at defining your opponent and then defining yourself. Then you see who is getting traction and maybe winnow out 20-25 longer shots and focus on 50-60. The Ds SHOULD be able to raise piles of money. DJT is good for business. They have a very credible shot to take the House with enough spending and, of course, the right message.
The latter is the concern to me. But, hey, far be it from me to tell the Progs how to be Progs!
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