Update: They don't learn.
Do you think Special Counsel Robert Mueller should testify before Congress?
— Senate Democrats (@dscc) May 1, 2019
Original Post
The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee suffered a marketing fail of epic proportions over the weekend. In what they were probably hoping would be a sound shellacking of President Trump's most recent Supreme Court pick, Brett Kavanaugh, ended up being a win for the conservative and an L for their pick, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. The Democratic group posted a poll asking social media users which justice they prefer, Ginsburg, one of the liberal justices on the court, or Kavanaugh, a conservative.
Here was the tally, before the group admitted defeat and deleted the poll. Not very judicious, if you ask me.
3. The @dscc has deleted this tweet after the results didn’t end up in their favor. pic.twitter.com/hb7IDdLMDi
— Yashar Ali ?? (@yashar) May 5, 2019
Yikes.
A lot of people noticed the DSCC's counterproductive ratio, and offered them some advice for next time.
Yikes! #Kavanaugh > #Ginsburg not the results @dscc was looking for lol pic.twitter.com/VhC6opt8jw
— JJ Gonzalez (@jjgonzalez901) May 5, 2019
They forgot the first rule of good lawyering, you never ask a question you don’t already know the answer to.
— Jason Vance (@achilles1974) May 5, 2019
At 224,000 votes it was:
Kavanaugh 71%
Ginsburg 29%
Recommended
Kavanaugh's confirmation hearings this fall were the most contentious in recent memory. He was painted as "evil" or as a rapist by Democrats who took his accuser Christine Blasey Ford at her word. She claimed, with "100 percent" certainty, that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her at a high school party in the 1980s. But he just as vehemently denied the story. Following a series of "he said, she said" hearings, the Senate Judiciary Committee confirmed Kavanaugh as the 114th Justice of the Supreme Court.
Even Justice Ginsburg regretted the partisanship she was seeing on the hill and wished the hearings had gone more smoothly. She was easily confirmed by a vote of 96-3 when President Bill Clinton nominated her in 1993. "That's the way it should be," she said. Now, it's "a highly partisan show."
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