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Interviews with interesting people on science, ethics, and politics, with a focus on guests from Effective Altruism and Left-wing communities.
28 - David Shor on Why Bernie Would Have Won in 2016- But Not in 2020
The Most Interesting People I Know
1 hour 13 minutes 52 seconds
4 years ago
28 - David Shor on Why Bernie Would Have Won in 2016- But Not in 2020
David Shor is a data scientist and the former head of political data science for Civis Analytics, a Democratic think tank. In 2012, he developed the Obama campaign’s in-house election forecasting system, which accurately predicted the outcome to within a point in every state. David was the subject of some controversy this summer when he was fired following his tweeting of an academic paper. The paper argued that violent protests decreased Democratic presidential vote share while nonviolent protests increased vote share. Unfortunately, David is not at liberty to discuss the details of this incident, which is an excellent example of what happens when employment protections don’t exist.
I want to state up front that the focus of this episode is on how to improve the electoral prospects of Democrats, which is David’s expertise. I have many disagreements with the Democratic party and its leaders, and there are many pathways to power beyond electoral politics. But America’s political institutions are extremely powerful, and ensuring that they are controlled by the non-death cult party is important.
We discuss:
What happened in the 2020 election
Why the electoral college is biased towards Republicans
Efforts to combat structural bias against the Democratic party
Why the polls were wrong again and why they’ll be very hard to fix
Why Bernie would have won in 2016 but may not have in 2020
How Democratic staffers and left wing activists are massively unrepresentative of the American public
The electoral obstacles to passing Medicare for All and how to make the policy more politically popular
Policies that combat inequality without raising taxes
Whether Democrats actually want to win
Why Democrats need the working class to win power
Why good politicians stay relentlessly on message
How we can move voters towards policy positions we think are just
Why Democrats should talk more about issues and less about values
What we can learn from the growth in support for same sex marriage
The importance of getting the media on your side
Links:
National Popular Vote Interstate Compact
Matt Grossman on Twitter
David Shor on Twitter
The Most Interesting People I Know
Interviews with interesting people on science, ethics, and politics, with a focus on guests from Effective Altruism and Left-wing communities.