>>520776921
>data from 5 months ago before everything started going to shit
Alright, we'll take old data at face value and not that the publics perception is ever changing from a string of blunders.
>That is not going to magically make people vote for the opposite party
But it is.
Mid terms are notorious for the opposition party gaining traction capitalizing on current administration failures.
>if you are banking on the public's dissatisfaction at an economy that's had difficulties for 5 straight years you are going to be surprised when you are wrong again.
You cite reasonable person and voters in the same sentence. Browsing /pol/ hasn't taught you the average person is unreasonable and only votes for a handful of key issues that affect their lives. All failures will be put on the current admin whether they inherited issues or not.
>This is what I mean, you don't even understand what the fuck you're talking about.
But I do know, because I actually used the system unlike (jew)
>Yes, it's only at 69 percent.
With republicans. Once more you're selectively choosing information, even Trumps popularity currently is 50% within the republican party, and at historical lows with everyone else. All of this tanked in the last half year.
>With surging registrations and an election where every single county moved right
>a fucking year ago before he got into office and immediately 180'd on his policies
Sure thing man. DNC already knows pandering to wet backs is a losing issue after their loss, that's why they're pivoting to saving the benefits that republican voters overwhelmingly get support from.