Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search
Joe BidenCongratulations to our presumptive Democratic nominee, Joe Biden!
 

Gothmog

(152,088 posts)
18. The Establishment Didn't Destroy Bernie Sanders. He destroyed himself
Thu Mar 12, 2020, 07:27 PM
Mar 2020

I never considered sanders to be a serious candidate. sanders has zero major legislative accomplishments in part because none of his fellow Democrats really want to support his agenda. I do not understand sanders' political revolution and how this revolution would somehow force congress to adopt his agenda. The only thing that is clear is that sanders attacks on other Democrats and the Democratic Establishment have backfired




If you look back at Sanders’ share of the vote in each primary, he hasn’t actually lost ground. In Iowa and New Hampshire, he got a quarter of the vote. In Nevada, he got a third. In South Carolina, he got a fifth. On Super Tuesday, he stayed in the same range, drawing about a quarter of the vote in the states he lost and a third of the vote in the states he won. What hurt him was that Biden increased his share of the vote, while Sanders didn’t. As other candidates dropped out, their voters went to Biden, not Sanders. And one reason for this pattern is Sanders’ constant message of antagonism. He has cultivated enemies instead of friends. Now he’s paying the price. …..

Sanders’ first defeat, on Feb. 29 in South Carolina, was a warning that he needed to assuage fears about his candidacy. Instead, he celebrated those fears as proof of his success. On March 1, he proudly told a crowd in San Jose, California, that the turnout at his rallies was alarming the establishment. The next day, in St. Paul, Minnesota, he repeated that message. When Sanders was informed that fellow candidates Pete Buttigieg and Amy Klobuchar were dropping out and endorsing Biden, he said it was no surprise, since the corporate elite was out to get him. And when Maddow asked Sanders whether he was specifically running against “the Democratic Party establishment”—not just a generic “political establishment”—he replied: “Democratic establishment. Yes.”

At his rallies, Sanders has continued to call for a “political revolution.” And he has added another villain to his list of enemies: the stock market. When the market surged after Super Tuesday, Sanders, far from welcoming this news, cited it as evidence of Biden’s corruption. “We’re taking them all on,” he said of the companies whose valuations had increased. “The stock market went up this morning ’cause they thought that Biden did well.” Sanders told Maddow that “the health care industry and the drug companies did very well” because “Biden had a good day.” And he warned these companies that if he got his way, their stocks would suffer. “I got some bad news for those guys,” he said. “Don’t count your chickens until they’re hatched.” ….

Meanwhile, Sanders has escalated his talk of conspiracies. On Sunday, he claimed that “the establishment put a great deal of pressure” on Buttigieg and Klobuchar to “force” them out of the race. “What was very clear from the media narrative and what the establishment wanted,” he told George Stephanopoulos, “was to make sure that people coalesced around Biden and try to defeat me.” On Wednesday, after his defeats, Sanders again rebuked “the Democratic establishment” and insisted that “our campaign has won the ideological debate.”

What Sanders fails to understand is the connection between his defeats and his rhetoric. It wasn’t the media or the Democratic National Committee that turned Buttigieg, Klobuchar, and millions of voters against him. It was Sanders. His relentless message of conflict, along with his expanding list of putative enemies, attracted a fraction of the electorate but alienated everybody else. As the primaries narrowed to a two-man race, his base was no longer enough to win. The establishment didn’t destroy Bernie Sanders. He destroyed himself.
If I were to vote in a presidential
primary today, I would vote for:
Joe Biden
I remember that time as well PatSeg Mar 2020 #1
Like Pete Buttigieg said, we're long past due for a political reset. Turin_C3PO Mar 2020 #2
Exactly. As Democrats, we need to stop focusing primarily on Presidents. MineralMan Mar 2020 #9
Yes PatSeg Mar 2020 #10
Thank you for your thoughtful reply. MineralMan Mar 2020 #6
The term "unbending" PatSeg Mar 2020 #11
Exactly. That was what turned me off from the movement at that time. MineralMan Mar 2020 #13
Any study of the Russian revolution PatSeg Mar 2020 #14
Boris Pasternak's "Doctor Zhivago" is a pretty MineralMan Mar 2020 #16
Me too PatSeg Mar 2020 #17
I was so much older then musicman65 Mar 2020 #19
I agree Turin_C3PO Mar 2020 #3
I agree with some of them, although Hayden's understanding of many MineralMan Mar 2020 #7
Just a side note here PatSeg Mar 2020 #12
Too cool! MineralMan Mar 2020 #21
He was there the day PatSeg Mar 2020 #22
I followed that trial pretty closely. MineralMan Mar 2020 #23
Yes, that is what I recall PatSeg Mar 2020 #24
Patriarchy, absolutely. MineralMan Mar 2020 #25
For a lot of young men, PatSeg Mar 2020 #33
disagree with something from that piece. wyldwolf Mar 2020 #4
You're right about that, I think, although I don't like the word "white trash" one bit. MineralMan Mar 2020 #8
Movement politics Todd79 Mar 2020 #5
Tom was a good Irishman. H2O Man Mar 2020 #15
The Establishment Didn't Destroy Bernie Sanders. He destroyed himself Gothmog Mar 2020 #18
Good article. His conspiratorial talk bothers me. I think it bothers a lot of people who want emmaverybo Mar 2020 #26
Great post. brush Mar 2020 #32
The movement described in that piece resonates for me... The Sanders movement does not Blasphemer Mar 2020 #20
I have been poor. True Blue American Mar 2020 #28
Thank you for that! True Blue American Mar 2020 #27
the democratic party has been a party of movements rampartc Mar 2020 #29
It's interesting that you mention Ralph Nader. MineralMan Mar 2020 #30
a hero to many of us of that age rampartc Mar 2020 #35
I'm of that age, as well. I do not consider Ralph Nader to be any sort of hero. MineralMan Mar 2020 #36
Agreed, his favorite phrase, "fighting the establishment" is pure '60s campus radical... brush Mar 2020 #31
As we're seeing, though, young people are not flocking to the polls MineralMan Mar 2020 #34
Latest Discussions»Retired Forums»Democratic Primaries»Bernie Sanders and "Movem...»Reply #18