I know SPEED keeps hanging his hat on polls (the Bitten edge) and says as we get closer to the election voter enthusiasm and crowds and money will come pouring in when the left selects their "CHOSEN" one. I hate to burst you leftest bubbles but things don't look good and I don't know if you have a rabbit you can pull out of your hats or possible ASSES that can save you dream!!

Trump and FOUR MORE YEARS...DEAL WITH IT
 Pollster: ‘I Did Not Meet One Biden Voter Who Was In Any Way, Shape Or Form Excited About Voting For Biden’
       Pollster: ‘I Did Not Meet One Biden Voter Who Was In Any Way, Shape Or Form Excited About Voting For Biden’
 
     
  
 Joe Biden has a major problem. Even among voters who support him,  there is a complete lack of enthusiasm. People like him and everyone  knows his name. Good old Joe has been around Washington forever and by  virtue of that, people appear to trust him more than say a Kamala Harris  or a Corey Booker. But try as he might, he cannot seem to energize his  base.
 Patrick Murray, director of the Monmouth University Polling Institute, recently 
told the New York Times, “I did not meet one Biden voter who was in any way, shape or form excited about voting for Biden.”
 Murray 
added  that, “They feel that they have to vote for Joe Biden as the centrist  candidate, to keep somebody from the left who they feel is unelectable  from getting the nomination.”
 Even Biden’s wife, Dr. Jill Biden, made this argument last week in New Hampshire. She 
told voters:
You know you may like another candidate better but you  have to look at who’s going to win…. So yes, you know, your candidate  might be better on, I don’t know, health care than Joe is, but you’ve  got to look at who’s going to win this election, and maybe you have to  swallow a little bit and say, ‘Okay, I personally like so-and-so  better,’ but your bottom line has to be that we have to beat Trump.
The New Republic’s Alex Shephard has published a piece entitled “
Is the Biden Bubble About to Burst?”  in which he argues that Biden’s “electability” pitch is “losing its  luster.” Shephard acknowledges that Biden has a commanding lead in all  of the polls. But, he 
says,  “that lead may be illusory. There’s a growing sense that Biden is  something of a starter nominee, a candidate that voters can glom onto  while they search for someone who better suits their values.
  
Now that voters are getting to know the candidates a bit better,  the issue of electability is less important. That’s why we’re seeing  Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders moving up in the polls. “
Both candidates  have used policy as the backbone of their campaigns, and both have  large and deeply loyal bases.” Other candidates who haven’t been able to  fall back on their ability to beat Trump have been busy coming up with  ideas and proposals which have excited Democratic voters, while Biden  has stood still. And they are beginning to see results.
 At a campaign event in Iowa last week, Biden was asked by Fox News’  reporter Peter Doocy if he was concerned to see Sen. Elizabeth Warren  draw a 12,000 person crowd on Monday in Minneapolis. The former vice  president 
replied, “It  depends on what the nature of the event is. What I’m trying to do is go  around from town to town, and I’m drawing as big a crowd or bigger than  anybody. Have you seen anybody draw bigger crowds than me here in this  state?”
 “Yes,” Doocy 
answered.
 Biden 
asked, “Oh, you have? Where?”
 Doocy 
replied, “Des Moines.”
 The political world is starting to notice that a shift is taking place among the candidates in the Democratic primary.
 JoAnn Hardy is the Democratic Party chair for Cerro Gordo County,  Iowa. She said of Biden that “he’s doing OK, but I think a lot of his  initial strength was name recognition. As the voters get to meet the  other candidates, he may be surpassed soon. I would not be surprised.”
 Shephard 
writes:
It is an explicit play it safe approach and one aimed at  Democrats who are concerned big policy ideas will alienate general  election voters. This is not exactly the stuff of which inspiring  campaigns are made. It’s condescending at best—existential policy  imperatives like climate change and health care are hardly trivial,  regardless of who occupies the White House—but it also contains an air  of menace. Biden and his supporters are trying to create a binary  choice: Vote for Joe and beat Trump, or don’t vote for Joe and lose. But  most early polling has suggested that any candidate with near-universal  name recognition—something that would automatically follow a major  party presidential nomination—would lead Trump in a head-to-head  competition.
Did Biden really believe he could simply coast to the nomination on  the electability issue? Did he think that all he needed to do was just  show up for a few rallies without even having done the work of putting  together a platform of policy proposals? It would appear so.
 In the last few months, Biden has actually given Democratic primary voters many reasons 
not to  vote for him. In addition to his clumsy flip flops on issues such as  the Hyde Amendment, he seems to commit a new gaffe every time he appears  at a campaign event.
 And sadly, it’s becoming apparent that age is starting to take its  toll on him. This, I think, may become his biggest roadblock to the  nomination.
 Speaking to the press last week in New Hampshire, a reporter said  that some voters are concerned about his age, to which he replied, “I  say if they’re concerned, don’t vote for me.”
 In the very near future, Biden may indeed learn that the electability  argument will only carry him so far. And as Shephard suggests in his  article, Biden’s bubble may be about to burst.