Election 2024

Liz Wolfe | 2.28.2024 9:30 AM

Actually cool results: Last night, Michigan's primaries brought a welcome surprise: As of this morning, over 100,000 Democratic voters had chosen "uncommitted" instead of casting votes for Joe Biden—up from roughly 20,000 uncommitteds in each of the last three Democratic presidential primary races. This means that Biden won 81.1 percent of the vote, while "uncommitted" won 13.3 percent, with 98 percent reporting. (Archetypal L.A. woman/self-help queen Marianne Williamson won just 3 percent, alas.)

Biden still won the Democratic primary, and Donald Trump still beat former South Carolina governor (and drop-out refusenik) Nikki Haley in the Republican one, as was to be expected. But the uncommitted results show that more people are choosing protest votes than in the last few races, perhaps reacting to historically unpopular candidates. ("Biden vs. Trump: The 2024 race a historic number of Americans don't want," declares a recent CNN headline.)

Of course, in Michigan, there are other issues at play, too. With a massive Muslim population (more than 300,000 total), the uncommitted votes can also be read as a repudiation of Biden's support for Israel in its war against Hamas following the massacre on October 7. In fact, there was a campaign—supported by Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D–Mich.)—to mobilize Democrats to cast protest votes against Biden for his handling of the war in Gaza. (Other groups, like associations of Armenians pissed off by the administration's support for Azerbaijan, also supported the effort.)

"Trump won the state by just 11,000 votes in 2016 over Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton, and then lost the state four years later by nearly 154,000 votes to Biden," reports the Associated Press. "Organizers of the 'uncommitted' effort wanted to show that they have at least the number of votes that were Trump's margin of victory in 2016, to demonstrate how influential the bloc can be."

Amusingly, Biden chose not to acknowledge the uncommitteds in a statement he released following the Michigan win. If you simply pretend they aren't there, maybe they'll go away!

Speaking of ignoring major political issues: New polling from Gallup indicates that immigration is now top of mind for a majority of people when assessing who they want to vote for in 2024. It's the "first time immigration has been the single most important problem since 2019," writes Gallup's Jeffrey M. Jones. And it's changed rather quickly, too: "Significantly more Americans name immigration as the most important problem facing the U.S. (28%) than did a month ago (20%)."

Currently, the U.S. is dealing with an immigration court backlog of 3 million cases, more than 1 million of whom have filed for asylum already. "Only about 3 percent of the people who have submitted green card applications will receive permanent status in the United States in fiscal year (FY) 2024," per a Cato report from earlier this month. "The U.S. Border Patrol had nearly 250,000 encounters with migrants crossing into the United States from Mexico in December 2023, according to government statistics," reports the Pew Research Center, calling December 2023 the "highest monthly total on record, easily eclipsing the previous peak of about 224,000 encounters in May 2022." The situation has not abated so far in the first two months of 2024.

The southern border is facing extraordinarily high crossing volumes coupled with total inefficiency at processing claims quickly while piling red tape on these migrants that disallows them from seeking gainful employment once here. And we wonder why places like New York—a fertile receiving ground for these migrants due to a "right-to-shelter" mandate put in place in the '80s, which was supposed to guarantee overnight shelter to all who sought it but has in fact done nothing of the sort—is souring on its obligation and seeking to overturn it.

The system can only take so much. This new polling data lends credence to the idea that voters across the country are increasingly frustrated by the status quo, in which taxpayers in some places are denied services they were promised while migrants suffer on the streets or in ill-equipped shelters, with no clear path forward.

Scenes from New York: Literal communists are marching in Downtown Brooklyn. It is their right to do so, but I am also within my rights to be grouchy.

I truly cannot stand the tote bag class––high in formal education, low in experience, always flaunting their morality (which is more developed than yours, they want you to know), totally ignorant of history, won't interact with actual poor people who do manual labor (scary!) https://t.co/aHUAwf52yn

— Liz Wolfe (@LizWolfeReason) February 27, 2024

WOW — 65% of San Franciscans support more than DOUBLING the size of SFPD! Read more: https://t.co/BUDnaVrTQe pic.twitter.com/UndQ54yaN4

— GrowSF (@GrowSF) February 27, 2024

This is the argument you make when you still think "woke" = "liberal social justice." In fact, they are polar opposites. At this point almost all of the progressives I know have come around to the fact that wokeness is not progressive and not good for progressive causes. The woke… https://t.co/BPpkVq74My

— Tim Urban (@waitbutwhy) February 27, 2024

Most people imagine that after the Chernobyl disaster, the whole area became a barren wasteland.

In the accident, only one out of four reactors blew up.

The other three kept operating, with one of them making electricity until the year 2,000 (!)

Another fascinating fact is… https://t.co/e0pOCbSqXq

— isabelle ???? (@isabelleboemeke) February 27, 2024

QOSHE - Commitment Issues - Liz Wolfe
menu_open
Columnists Actual . Favourites . Archive
We use cookies to provide some features and experiences in QOSHE

More information  .  Close
Aa Aa Aa
- A +

Commitment Issues

3 1
28.02.2024

Election 2024

Liz Wolfe | 2.28.2024 9:30 AM

Actually cool results: Last night, Michigan's primaries brought a welcome surprise: As of this morning, over 100,000 Democratic voters had chosen "uncommitted" instead of casting votes for Joe Biden—up from roughly 20,000 uncommitteds in each of the last three Democratic presidential primary races. This means that Biden won 81.1 percent of the vote, while "uncommitted" won 13.3 percent, with 98 percent reporting. (Archetypal L.A. woman/self-help queen Marianne Williamson won just 3 percent, alas.)

Biden still won the Democratic primary, and Donald Trump still beat former South Carolina governor (and drop-out refusenik) Nikki Haley in the Republican one, as was to be expected. But the uncommitted results show that more people are choosing protest votes than in the last few races, perhaps reacting to historically unpopular candidates. ("Biden vs. Trump: The 2024 race a historic number of Americans don't want," declares a recent CNN headline.)

Of course, in Michigan, there are other issues at play, too. With a massive Muslim population (more than 300,000 total), the uncommitted votes can also be read as a repudiation of Biden's support for Israel in its war against Hamas following the massacre on October 7. In fact, there was a campaign—supported by Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D–Mich.)—to mobilize Democrats to cast protest votes against Biden for his handling........

© Reason.com


Get it on Google Play