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Here’s the best and worst of 2020 politics (nationthailand.com)
Here’s the best and worst of 2020 politics
InternationalDec 23. 2020
Tabe Mase gives President-elect Joe Biden his first dose of the coronavirus vaccine on Monday, Dec. 21, 2020. MUST CREDIT: Washington Post photo by Jonathan Newton
By The Washington Post · David Weigel
Outside Georgia – and apparently the Oval Office – the political year is over. Here are the highlights.
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Campaign of the Year: Joe Biden for president
No way around it. If you were reading The Washington Post one year ago, you knew about Joe Biden’s weakness in New Hampshire and Iowa, the worries Democrats had about nominating an “old White guy,” and the grass-roots organizers who’d lapped the former vice president on the ground. In mid-February, Biden was in the weakest position of any perceived front-runner since Howard Dean; by mid-March, he was about to wrap up the nomination faster than any Democrat since John Kerry.
But Kerry lost the presidency and Biden won it, in part by mastering what failed candidates had never figured out. He was fast to respond to a charge of impropriety, which faded quickly as an issue, unlike the attacks on Kerry’s service in Vietnam. He invited allies of Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., to help shape the party’s platform, which kept the left inside the Democratic tent with only minimal risk. He had one consistent message, and his convention had a single goal, which it achieved: make voters comfortable about Biden becoming president and handling everything from civil unrest to mass vaccination. Biden benefited from Democratic unity, and the intensity with which his base focused on defeating President Donald Trump. But other candidates have had that, and lost – and never took the risk of pausing in-person campaigning for months while their opponent continued it.
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Campaign of the Year (nonpresidential): Mike Garcia for Congress
First-time candidate Mike Garcia started his campaign last year as a long-shot challenger to Rep. Katie Hill, D-Calif. When she resigned under pressure from a sex scandal, Garcia still had to beat the district’s former Republican congressman, win the first special election of the pandemic era and hold the district as Biden carried it in November. He pulled it off – the last part of it by just a few hundred votes.
Runner-up: Susan Collins for Senate
Unlike Garcia, Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, entered her toughest race with universal name recognition, and with most voters having supported her in the past. But Collins had a target on her back since her 2018 vote to confirm Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court, she faced an opponent with bottomless resources and the blessing of national Democrats, and she trailed in every poll.
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State Party of the Year: The Democratic Party of Wisconsin
First there was the primary, bundled with a state Supreme Court race that Ben Wikler’s Democrats could not afford to lose. Then came the campaign, with Democrats simultaneously battling in court to expand voters’ options and run an absentee chase program big enough to endure pandemic conditions. The Democratic National Convention was downgraded from a Milwaukee-based coronation to a virtual telethon, and a police shooting in Kenosha, followed by street protests, became a pivotal moment in the campaign, with Republicans seeing a way to win back suburban voters. But Wisconsin Democrats held on to enough voters to win, protected one of the last House Democrats whose district was carried by Trump, then survived a wave of lawsuits designed to overturn the election – by a single vote, thanks to winning that court race.
Runner-up: The Florida GOP
The math looked bad for Republicans this summer, with the president losing steam with older White voters. Chairman Joe Gruters forged ahead, building on the party’s Latino turnout efforts, reinforcing its grass-roots canvassing operation and focusing on turning out hundreds of thousands of voters who liked the president but had skipped the last election. It worked brilliantly, with the party gaining ground at every level, even in the sorts of places that trended hard toward Democrats in other states.
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Pollster of the Year: Ann Selzer
Who doesn’t love a comeback story? Selzer’s year began with a debacle, when a blunder on one call sheet led to the cancellation of her final poll before the Iowa caucuses. It ended not just with a triumph but with a repeat of one of her greatest triumphs – a pre-election poll that showed Trump and the rest of the Republican ticket rebounding in Iowa. Selzer’s final 2016 poll captured the trend that swung the election in the Midwest, and her final 2020 poll portrayed what even Republicans doubted – after flirting with Democrats all year, rural White voters without college degrees were sticking with Trump. That kept Iowa red, and it made the Midwest much closer than many other pollsters expected. Again.
Runner-up: SurveyUSA
“America’s neighborhood pollster” takes an approach usually frowned upon, relying on automated callers rather than humans to conduct interviews. This year, amid speculation that many Trump voters did not want to admit who they supported, this worked out well: SurveyUSA was one of the few pollsters to show Biden with a margin-of-error lead in Georgia, and revealed that the president’s push for Minnesota was being stymied. In a bad year for the industry, that stood out as perceptive.
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Ad of the Year (30 Seconds): “Defend”
The later, celebrity-voiced ads got more attention and had snappier production values. But Biden’s most distinctive and effective ad had almost no production at all, cutting together snippets of the section of his Democratic National Convention speech dealing with the coronavirus. There was no musical soundtrack, which helped the ad stand out, and the focus on Biden’s words helped counteract a problem: voters who thought he was too old and doddering to be president.
Runner-up: “Latinos por Trump”
A theme song so catchy it rewires your brain, clips of the president awkwardly dancing, and visions of the “good life” if the president gets a second term. The Trump campaign so frequently resorted to negativity that it sometimes drowned out its intended pre-pandemic message: Aren’t things basically great?
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Ad of the Year (Short Film): ‘Ed Markey, The Green New Dealmaker’
The left had a strong year in primaries, ousting three incumbent House Democrats and replacing them with grass-roots activists, but its biggest coup was helping the 74-year-old Sen. Ed Markey of Massachusetts fend off Democratic Rep. Joe Kennedy. With this online spot, Markey pitched himself as a master legislator who could literally save life on Earth, and got into Kennedy’s head with one line: “It’s time to ask what your country can do for you.”
Runner-up: ‘Texas Reloaded: Greatest Joint Campaign Ad in History’
Is it cheating when the title of an ad informs you that it’s going to be the best? Rep. Dan Crenshaw of Texas, who gained unexpected celebrity after a “Saturday Night Live” joke about his war injury, leaned hard into his image for what became the first in a series of ads portraying Republicans as members of an elite strike force. Most of them won, and the ads captured the ethos of post-Trump GOP politics: Look cool, talk confident and own the libs.
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Worst Ad of the Year: ‘Break In’
After the election, Democratic leaders and liberal pundits blamed some of their down-ballot disappointments on “Defund the police,” a slogan coined by Black Lives Matter activists and immediately weaponized by Republicans. Yet the initial Republican advertising on the slogan was so ham-handed that it fell flat; in Pennsylvania, it was in rotation with an ad blaming Biden for high incarceration rates, clashing directly with its message. The Trump campaign’s cartoonish view of the suburbs, and Biden, was costly, even if similar messaging worked against less well-defined opponents.
Runner-up (tie): ‘Bounty’
The Lincoln Project, a coalition of Republicans who devoted themselves to defeating Trump, made some of the year’s buzziest ads, born to be viral. They were also frequently ineffective. This ad dramatizes a story that Trump critics could not believe was not bigger news: Russia paying bounties to Taliban fighters who killed Americans. The combination of its heavy-handed presentation and its focus on an issue that was not connecting with voters exemplified a mistake that Biden, mostly, did not make: chasing the worst story of the day about Trump instead of making a pitch for himself.
‘Sex Changes for Kids’
The conservative American Principles Project had a theory: Democrats had given conservatives a potent culture-war issue by embracing transgender rights. Claiming that its ads had moved votes in Kentucky’s 2019 race for governor (which Republicans narrowly lost), it re-upped spots about the threat of “boys” playing “girls’ sports,” and used a Biden answer on trans acceptance to claim, incorrectly, that he’d fund “sex changes for kids.” In every swing state where the ads ran, Trump lost.
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Book of the Year: Rick Perlstein, ‘Reaganland’
Since 2001, when he told the story of Barry Goldwater’s failed revolution in “Before the Storm,” Perlstein has emerged from the archives every few years with a monolith-size history of American conservatism. His timing has never been better. “Reaganland” covers the months from Jimmy Carter’s election to Ronald Reagan’s first victory, explaining the collapse of liberalism along the way. A consistent theme is how the political analysts of the day were too slow to understand what was changing, then too hasty to explain why or write it off. When Perlstein writes about conservatives stopping legislation to end the electoral college, or Democrats panicking and endorsing an anti-tax measure because it has surged in the polls, you can see one version of the future as well as the past.
Runner-up: Gabriel Pogrund and Patrick Maguire, ‘Left Out’
How can a study of the Labour Party in the United Kingdom help you understand American politics in 2020? Because the American left took inspiration from the U.K. left, viewing Jeremy Corbyn’s takeover of Labour as what could have happened had Sanders won the Democratic nomination in 2016 – promoting a real working-class agenda and bringing disaffected voters back to the polls. Pogrund and Maguire start with Labour’s unexpectedly strong 2017 election performance and end with its 2019 landslide defeat.
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Podcast of the Year: ‘QAnon Anonymous’
More than any modern election, this one took place in two realities: the one we live in, and the one drawn up by conspiracy theorists. Understanding the motivations and arcana of this alternate reality was essential to understanding what was happening, and sometimes what was motivating the president. This podcast, hosted by three investigative reporters who often cannot believe what they’re hearing, was incredibly informative and frequently hilarious.
Runner-up: ‘Bad Faith’
Briahna Joy Gray was the host of Sanders’s campaign podcast. Virgil Texas was (and still is) the elections expert on the left-wing show “Chapo Trap House.” When Sanders’s primary campaign was over, they teamed up for a panel show that tackled news, policy, and political strategy from a perspective that rarely is reflected in big media, with top-tier guests (Noam Chomksy, Michael Moore, Ice Cube). If infighting on the right was a major story of the Trump years, the battle inside the left is going to be a defining one in the Biden years, and “Bad Faith” is right in the middle of it.
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Movie of the Year: ‘Feels Good Man’
The story of Matt Furie, a low-key cartoonist whose frog creation Pepe was appropriated by white supremacists, is also an alternate history of the past five years. The Trump era is willed into existence by “meme magic.” The rise of the alt-right is halted by a copyright lawsuit. Matt Braynard, whose Voter Integrity Fund is trying to compile enough fraud allegations to overturn the election, shows up as a meme guru who thinks Furie should be grateful that his character was adopted by the MAGA movement. Everything makes more sense when viewed through the eyes of a guy who wanted no part of this.
Runner-up: ‘Boys State’
The immersive journey inside the storied good-government program for high schoolers focuses on the conservative-leaning version that is run in Texas. Take away billions of dollars in campaign spending – and actual, lived experience – and you start to ask how many of our political problems are inherent, not forced upon us. One scene got richer after the election: The teen boys talk themselves out of passing silly resolutions during a meeting in the same room that Texas’s electors for Trump would occupy when they voted to deny the election results in swing states.
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Twitter Account of the Year: @PopulismUpdates
It’s anonymous, and a lot of its coverage focuses on news outside the United States, but no account is better at capturing the degree to which voters are throwing off the old political order. In an interview, the account’s owner suggested that “parties and figures that employ creativity will be the most successful,” especially the ones who tap into “insurgent networks who simply know how to pose a more persuasive or exciting or motivating vision of the future than others.” That was a very useful lens through which to view our election.
Runner-up: @MattGertz
The Media Matters researcher was essential reading during the entire Trump era, for one reason: He watched the same conservative media as the president, and could trace nearly everything Trump talked about to a segment that put him on to it. As we march toward the first-ever case of an incumbent president demanding a congressional challenge to his defeat in the electoral college, all of it is foretold in Gertz’s tweets.