On Election Day, msnbc.com users expressed frustration with the quality of the candidates, concern over a disconnect in the electorate between issues and party, and shared mixed opinions on gun control and marijuana legalization.
Frustration with candidates
bodhidave: Maybe these latest voting results will give cause for prospective leaders to put PR polls and focus group findings more to the side, and really speak to and run on their actual convictions.
Ilene from Illinois: My friends and I all in our 70s and 80s were out there canvassing and phone banking for months and for Democrats. What we needed were candidates who would stand with the president and not be weak and scared.
08willow: I love the diversity in the likely new Senate committee chairs. Look at all the minorities represented … #snark
Purplestatekitty: We don’t hate Obama in Colorado. Udall ran a crappy campaign and he got the votes he deserved. Gardner lied about his record. Nothing more to add.
AgingDiva: It saddens me that in this country people that firmly believe the Earth is only 5,000 years old are considered leadership material.
IAMMYOWNWOMAN: In Udall’s case he was afraid to bring up the Latino issue because of the negativity about immigration on the part of the Republicans. He should have just gone with his heart, not his fear.
Dogjudge: So would the Democrats have been more successful if they had been more aggressive in pushing their agendas through? While I voted both times for the president, I do have to say that I’ve been extremely disappointed in his accomplishments. And don’t tell me about the House and the Senate. Reagan had to deal with the Democrats being against him and used his office as a bully pulpit to get things done. One comment that was made early on about President Obama versus, say, an Al Sharpton, was that Obama was much less confrontational in his approach to things. One can only wonder.
Issues vs. party
jbloe: The funny thing is that, in most cases, when issues are on the ballot, people tend to vote Democratic. When candidates are on the ballot, things are “mixed.” Apparently, people do not clearly understand what party represents which issues.
TheBugMan: Given the outcome last night, a federal minimum wage hike from Congress is a lost cause; don’t even bring it up. Instead, get it on the ballot in those states who don’t have one yet. If the state legislatures are truly bodies which represent the people, then let the people speak, and don’t oppose it (it may come back to haunt some legislators).
Ixnay66: I live in Colorado and I couldn’t believe Cory Gardner won. We can’t blame this on voter suppression either because we have a 100% mail-in ballot. It seems that ballot measures that are voted down, like personhood here in Colorado, mean nothing when electing officials. We vote down personhood but vote in Cory Gardner who believes in it as well as making abortion illegal, including instances of rape and incest. In Kentucky, voters want to raise the minimum wage but vote for Mitch McConnell, who is against a minimum wage increase. I just don’t get it.
Jared Bergman: I am very happy the republicans did so well last night, but I am also becoming afraid that pro-life people will start to gain traction. People like choice, why take it away? How do abortions that strangers receive effect other people’s lives? I do not understand that.









