Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
November 19, 2018
Democratic donors are going to pour money into Beto to try to steer the party back in a direction of normalcy after they made the bizarre, panicked move of endorsing full-brown full-communism in the wake of Donald Trump’s 2016 win.
And all that money will be wasted.
Because there is simply no way in any single hell that a white guy can win a Democratic presidential primary in current year.
Sparked by his narrow defeat in a Texas Senate race, Beto O’Rourke is scrambling the 2020 presidential primary field, freezing Democratic donors and potential campaign staffers in place as they await word of his plans.
Even prior to O’Rourke’s meteoric rise, many Democratic fundraisers had approached the large number of 2020 contenders with apprehension, fearful of committing early to one candidate. But the prospect of a presidential bid by O’Rourke, whose charismatic Senate candidacy captured the party’s imagination, has suddenly rewired the race.
O’Rourke — who raised a stunning $38 million in the third quarter of his race — is widely considered capable of raising millions of dollars quickly, according to interviews with multiple Democratic money bundlers and strategists, catapulting him into the upper echelons of the 2020 campaign.
Mikal Watts, a San Antonio-based lawyer and major Democratic money bundler, said several donors and political operatives in Iowa, after hearing from other potential candidates in recent days, have called to ask if O’Rourke is running, a sign of his impact in the first-in-the-nation caucus state.
“They’re not wanting to sign on to other presidential campaigns until they know whether Beto is going,” Watts said. “And if Beto is running, what good progressive Democrat wouldn’t want to work for Beto O’Rourke?”
He said, “I can tell you that there has not been this kind of level of electric excitement about a candidate since” Barack Obama ran in 2008.
O’Rourke raised more than $70 million in total in his bid to unseat Republican Sen. Ted Cruz, mostly from small donors in a race that captured national attention. Though he fell short — losing 51 percent to 48 percent — his closer-than-expected performance in the largest red state on the map was credited with lifting at least two Democrats to victory over House Republican incumbents.
A POLITICO/Morning Consult presidential primary poll last week put O’Rourke in third place among Democratic voters, behind former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.).
A national poll doesn’t matter even a little bit in a presidential primary, and there is zero chance that any of those three guys are going to get the nomination.
It is going to be Kamala Harris, and she is going to lose by a wider margin than Hillary lost by to Donald Trump.
I don’t make hard predictions, ever, but I am making that hard prediction right now. So bookmark this page with a note to open it in May of 2020. And then again in November of 2020 to see if I was right about the electoral college margin.