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2016 Postmortem
Showing Original Post only (View all)And the 2016 Ralph Nader Award Goes to Bernie Sanders - Time.com [View all]
Sanders distracted Hillary Clinton from creating a unified vision for the futureOn Election Day, Senator Bernie Sanders earned the 2016 Ralph Nader Award for the Leftist Most Responsible for Helping Republicans Win the Presidency. True, Donald Trump cleverly exploited voters frustrations. And Hillary Clintons campaign in 2016 was as rigid and empty as it was when she lost in 2008. Still, Sanders helped Clinton lose. His insurgency pushed her too far left to prevent an effective re-centering in the fall, while goading her into wooing different constituencies rather than uniting the nation.
In fairness, Sanders ran a surprisingly effective campaign tapping the same anti-establishment fury Donald Trump stirred. Although Sanders and Trump are very different, their campaigns were not. Each treated Hillary Clinton as a compromised, Wall Streetworshipping, Establishment sellout. Both demonized Washington insiders and free trade, rather than tackling the real structural problem: the United States deindustrialized because Americans refuse to pay what it costs to hire American workers and instead buy cheaper imported products. As a result, just as Ralph Nader siphoned tens of thousands of votes on Election Day 2000 in Florida from Al Gore, causing the deadlock and George W. Bushs victory, Bernie Sanders similar vampire effect enfeebled Hillary Clinton.
This dynamic followed a classic historical pattern. Sanders drew Clinton from the center toward the Democrats extreme flank. That shift paralleled Jimmy Carters leftward lurch when Ted Kennedy ran in 1980, and George H.W. Bushs rightwing swerve when Pat Buchanan rebelled in 1992. Each time, the frontrunners felt forced to placate loyalists they should have been able to take for granted, while embracing extreme positions that haunted them during the general election campaign.
This year replayed that Insurgents Vampire Effect. Clinton expected to inherit the nomination without serious opponents. Joe Biden and John Kerry, each of whom sees a potential president whenever he looks in the mirror, didnt run, deferring to the Clintons power in the party and to Hillary Clintons claim that it was our time as women to win the presidencyan appeal that, surprisingly, bored younger women.
As an independent, Sanders lacked such loyalty. His hip campaign addressed the displaced and disempowered, claiming Hillary Clinton was the problem not the solution. In response, Hillary Clinton channeled Walter Mondale in 1984, desperately appealing to different special interests. Characteristically, after winning Super Tuesday, she declared: We have to defend all our rightsworkers rights, and womens rights, civil rights and voting rights, LGBT rights and rights for people with disabilities. This pluralistic appeal failed to offer a unifying national mission. It illustrated Donald Trumps complaint that Democrats were so busy kowtowing to minorities they neglected the white majority and the nations need for consensus.
Having catered to the millennial and minority sensibility in the spring, Hillary Clinton missed the mainstream, failing to recalibrate for the fall. This misread was most apparent in her neglect of her greatest political ally, Bill Clinton, and his legacy. In the 1990s, President Clinton shrewdly led from the center, forging a Third Way progressivism more balanced than the big-government, special interest group-oriented liberalism which Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush handily defeated in the 1980s. Clintonite centrism embraced free trade as bringing prosperity not exporting jobs. Clinton fought crime, framing it as threat to all Americans, especially blacks. Clinton reformed welfare to restore governmental credibility and recipients dignity. Clinton talked candidly about restructuring the economy while rebuilding traditional culture, because too many Americans felt they were living in the funhouse.
Pressed by the Sanders Sensation, intimidated by Black Lives Matter, even Bill Clinton backpedaled, apologizing for fighting crime and his centrist legacy. With no one explaining how bad crime was in the 1990s, how dysfunctional the welfare system was, how two-thirds of blacks supported both initiatives, Clintons legislation seemed draconian. Hillary Clinton became a doughnut candidate, sprinkling sweets to particular groups but lacking any core. That distortion made her the perfect foil for Donald Trumps demagoguery.
Sanders liberals considered Clintonian centrism not liberal enough, not minority-sensitive enough, not pure enough. The result is a president-elect hostile to liberalism, unafraid of demonizing minorities and epitomizing a killer instinct that makes Clintonian triangulation look naïve. All this makes Bernie Sanders the Ralph Nader of 2016
In fairness, Sanders ran a surprisingly effective campaign tapping the same anti-establishment fury Donald Trump stirred. Although Sanders and Trump are very different, their campaigns were not. Each treated Hillary Clinton as a compromised, Wall Streetworshipping, Establishment sellout. Both demonized Washington insiders and free trade, rather than tackling the real structural problem: the United States deindustrialized because Americans refuse to pay what it costs to hire American workers and instead buy cheaper imported products. As a result, just as Ralph Nader siphoned tens of thousands of votes on Election Day 2000 in Florida from Al Gore, causing the deadlock and George W. Bushs victory, Bernie Sanders similar vampire effect enfeebled Hillary Clinton.
This dynamic followed a classic historical pattern. Sanders drew Clinton from the center toward the Democrats extreme flank. That shift paralleled Jimmy Carters leftward lurch when Ted Kennedy ran in 1980, and George H.W. Bushs rightwing swerve when Pat Buchanan rebelled in 1992. Each time, the frontrunners felt forced to placate loyalists they should have been able to take for granted, while embracing extreme positions that haunted them during the general election campaign.
This year replayed that Insurgents Vampire Effect. Clinton expected to inherit the nomination without serious opponents. Joe Biden and John Kerry, each of whom sees a potential president whenever he looks in the mirror, didnt run, deferring to the Clintons power in the party and to Hillary Clintons claim that it was our time as women to win the presidencyan appeal that, surprisingly, bored younger women.
As an independent, Sanders lacked such loyalty. His hip campaign addressed the displaced and disempowered, claiming Hillary Clinton was the problem not the solution. In response, Hillary Clinton channeled Walter Mondale in 1984, desperately appealing to different special interests. Characteristically, after winning Super Tuesday, she declared: We have to defend all our rightsworkers rights, and womens rights, civil rights and voting rights, LGBT rights and rights for people with disabilities. This pluralistic appeal failed to offer a unifying national mission. It illustrated Donald Trumps complaint that Democrats were so busy kowtowing to minorities they neglected the white majority and the nations need for consensus.
Having catered to the millennial and minority sensibility in the spring, Hillary Clinton missed the mainstream, failing to recalibrate for the fall. This misread was most apparent in her neglect of her greatest political ally, Bill Clinton, and his legacy. In the 1990s, President Clinton shrewdly led from the center, forging a Third Way progressivism more balanced than the big-government, special interest group-oriented liberalism which Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush handily defeated in the 1980s. Clintonite centrism embraced free trade as bringing prosperity not exporting jobs. Clinton fought crime, framing it as threat to all Americans, especially blacks. Clinton reformed welfare to restore governmental credibility and recipients dignity. Clinton talked candidly about restructuring the economy while rebuilding traditional culture, because too many Americans felt they were living in the funhouse.
Pressed by the Sanders Sensation, intimidated by Black Lives Matter, even Bill Clinton backpedaled, apologizing for fighting crime and his centrist legacy. With no one explaining how bad crime was in the 1990s, how dysfunctional the welfare system was, how two-thirds of blacks supported both initiatives, Clintons legislation seemed draconian. Hillary Clinton became a doughnut candidate, sprinkling sweets to particular groups but lacking any core. That distortion made her the perfect foil for Donald Trumps demagoguery.
Sanders liberals considered Clintonian centrism not liberal enough, not minority-sensitive enough, not pure enough. The result is a president-elect hostile to liberalism, unafraid of demonizing minorities and epitomizing a killer instinct that makes Clintonian triangulation look naïve. All this makes Bernie Sanders the Ralph Nader of 2016
http://time.com/4569766/bernie-sanders-ralph-nader-2016/
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And the 2016 Ralph Nader Award Goes to Bernie Sanders - Time.com [View all]
factfinder_77
Jan 2017
OP
Sanders also claimed that the election process was rigged and Trump quoted him
Gothmog
Jan 2017
#101
no, he offered unrealistic promises based on simplistic solutions which appeals to large numbers of
Bill USA
Jan 2017
#170
Three strikes was supposed to be for violent felons and the GOP took it further ...
bettyellen
Jan 2017
#9
Oh gosh no. Bernie gave ammunition to the same folks who STILL are saying
Eliot Rosewater
Jan 2017
#152
Hogwash. Your hobby of making Sanders out to be a greedy money-grubbing opportunist is pathetic
ThirdEye
Jan 2017
#85
Right. According to him, bernie has to have suitcases of dirty cash stashed somewhere...
dionysus
Jan 2017
#89
The OP is mostly BS. Sanders attacks had an effect but Hillary still won the pop. vote by 3 million
brush
Jan 2017
#56
Not only is it BS. It's the same dog whistle narrative we've been hearing for 2 months.
Garrett78
Jan 2017
#72
Utterly ridiculous. Clearly you have not seen his schedule. He busted his ass on the trail for her,
JudyM
Jan 2017
#137
The OP is promoting the same narrative Bernie supporters have been pushing since the election.
Garrett78
Jan 2017
#94
Shout loudest + throw tantrums + don't see any bumper stickers they think they are the majority. T
factfinder_77
Jan 2017
#14
The guy who wrote this, Gil Troy, wrote one book called "Hillary Clinton, Polarizing First Lady"
Ken Burch
Jan 2017
#12
It's pertinent that the man has an anti-progressive bias of VERY long standing
Ken Burch
Jan 2017
#83
Yet he's promoting the same narrative that DU posters have been promoting for 2 months.
Garrett78
Jan 2017
#84
It's NOT that the party should stop talking about race or talk about it less
Ken Burch
Jan 2017
#141
Contrary to your assertions, Sanders policies are not that popular in the real world
Gothmog
Jan 2017
#150
Whatever else, you can never underestimate the influence Comey had on this election
world wide wally
Jan 2017
#16
That article is full-on love fest for Bill's campaigning and policies when in office. I'm sorry but
JCanete
Jan 2017
#19
we so far right right now with our new leader (DUMP) Bill Clinton looks like a radical leftist.
boston bean
Jan 2017
#130
If you actually elaborate here, some of us will actually read it. It won't be in vain, I promise. nt
JCanete
Jan 2017
#173
The OP is promoting the same narrative Bernie supporters have been pushing since the election.
Garrett78
Jan 2017
#71
It isn't that Bernie's positions on various issues are unpopular or wrong. Here's the problem:
Garrett78
Jan 2017
#107
we've had this discussion before, or at least we've been conversing about it in the same threads,
JCanete
Jan 2017
#109
seriously? this is a message board and people are discussing things. I'm talking about in THIS
JCanete
Jan 2017
#120
Thanks for the conversation. This won't be up much longer, so I know you may not have the time to
JCanete
Jan 2017
#165
thanks again for the discourse! Just to answer G really quick, because I think this is important.
JCanete
Jan 2017
#167
I'll just say quickly, that if that is the root, then you would have to be suggesting that we
JCanete
Jan 2017
#171
but as to human nature where does racism get placed? What fundamental itch is it scratching?
JCanete
Jan 2017
#177
O.K., I read that. I agree with all of it and I think the candidate I backed in the primaries
Ken Burch
Jan 2017
#158
Issues matter and Bernie's had broad cross-over appeal. Many Dems felt his issues mattered a great
JudyM
Jan 2017
#138
You got to be kidding-no one in the real world believe in those silly match up polls
Gothmog
Jan 2017
#123
Sanders was treated with kid gloves by the Clinton campaign and there was a ton of material
Gothmog
Jan 2017
#160
Polls suggest a majority support for his economic stances, but bigotry gets in the way.
Garrett78
Jan 2017
#169
I think Hillary would have lost the pop vote outright if she tacked center like this.
forjusticethunders
Jan 2017
#44
It's the same narrative Bernie supporters have been promoting since the election.
Garrett78
Jan 2017
#74
Sanders' agenda failed because it had no chance of being adopted in the real world
Gothmog
Jan 2017
#121
This is absolutely true. Bernie distracted Democrats with his attacks on them.
R B Garr
Jan 2017
#52
He didn't distract her. He simply never stopped fanning the flames of division.
NCTraveler
Jan 2017
#55
Ahh this one again from November. Must be running out of anti-Bernie pieces so we need repeats! nt
m-lekktor
Jan 2017
#58
It's the same narrative Bernie supporters have been promoting since the election.
Garrett78
Jan 2017
#70
But of course... certain parties here at DU realize their Sanders bullshit is about to shelf expire.
Raster
Jan 2017
#79
Simplistic, and totally ignoring the numerous voter suppression tactics employed by the GOP.
guillaumeb
Jan 2017
#76
What a load of horse shit. "He pushed her too far left to prevent an effective recentering"
dionysus
Jan 2017
#87
All I know is I've heard a whole lot of people voted for Trump only because they disliked Hillary.
Vinca
Jan 2017
#92
Yeah, its obvious the Democratic party wants to continue it's long slide into ignominy
Arazi
Jan 2017
#93
After the first paragraph I had to LMOA--Really now? Bernie hurt Clinton's chances? Ugh! n/a
vaberella
Jan 2017
#174
This is just counterproductive and serves no purpose other than to divide and conquer.
AgadorSparticus
Jan 2017
#178