Dems May Need to Cheat in More Than Just Swing States to Win This November

by
Steve MacDonald

I’ve been muddling through the post-debate analysis, and the Democrats have a problem. All that effort they’ve been putting in, projecting Joe Biden’s mental decline onto President Trump, just got smashed against the ragged rocks of reality.

Even CNN was forced to admit that Joe looked bad – On CNN.

None of the people or groups he mentioned seems to have sensed that this is where Biden is mentally. That says a lot about the progressive propaganda machine’s ability to deceive and the willingness of the Left’s political-industrial complex to swallow whatever it served them. Talk about getting high on your own supply.

We are clearly (clear as Vodka, comrade?) living in entirely different worlds, and ours just crashed into theirs, and they don’t know what to do next. In other words, maybe there wasn’t any plan to replace Biden all this time, and now, suddenly, the growing consensus is that he’s unfit for office.

Wasn’t it clear when their special prosecutor claimed Biden wasn’t competent to stand trial?

Nope.

But folks willing to bet money on the November Election have noticed.

Post-debate “betting” odds aren’t helping.

So what are they left with? Well, He’s not Donald Trump, and that may still work for the core 30 percent of Lefties from sea to rising sea who don’t care about anything but party affiliation.

That leaves a lot of everyone else, including disenfranchised minorities, union workers, and other common Dem constituencies crushed by Sundown Joe and the toe-tapping Trotskyites running the White House.

That opens up states they probably thought they had locked up. And November is Coming.

Author

  • Steve MacDonald

    Steve is a long-time New Hampshire resident, blogger, and a member of the Board of directors of The 603 Alliance. He is the owner of Grok Media LLC and the Managing Editor of GraniteGrok.com, a former board member of the Republican Liberty Caucus of New Hampshire, and a past contributor to the Franklin Center for Public Policy.

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