By David Walsh
January 20, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
CNN and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, Democrat from
Massachusetts, with powerful establishment support,
combined to stage a provocation this week aimed at
slowing down or derailing the campaign of Vermont
Senator Bernie Sanders for the Democratic Party
presidential nomination.
Through CNN, the
Massachusetts senator’s camp first alleged that
Sanders told her in December 2018 a woman could not
win a presidential election, an allegation Sanders
strenuously refuted. At the Democratic debate on
Tuesday night, CNN’s moderator acted as though the
claim was an indisputable reality, leading to a
post-debate encounter between Warren and Sanders,
which the network just happened to record and
circulate widely.
This is a political stink bomb, borrowed from the
#MeToo playbook, typical of American politics in its
putrefaction. Unsubstantiated allegations are turned
into “facts,” these “facts” become the basis for
blackening reputations and damaging careers and
shifting politics continuously to the right. Anyone
who denies the allegations is a “sexist” who refuses
“to believe women.”
The Democratic establishment is fearful of
Sanders, not so much for his nationalist-reformist
program and populist demagogy, but for what his
confused but growing support portends: the movement
to the left by wide layers of the American
population. The US ruling elite seems convinced,
like some wretched, self-deluded potentate of old,
that if it can simply stamp out the unpleasant
“noise,” the rising tide of disaffection will
dissipate.
CNN’s operation began Monday when it posted a
“bombshell” article by M.J. Lee with the headline,
“Bernie Sanders told Elizabeth Warren in private
2018 meeting that a woman can’t win, sources say.”
The article animatedly begins, “The stakes were
high when Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren met at
Warren’s apartment in Washington, DC, one evening in
December 2018.” Among other things, the CNN piece
reported, the pair “discussed how to best take on
President Donald Trump, and Warren laid out two main
reasons she believed she would be a strong
candidate: She could make a robust argument about
the economy and earn broad support from female
voters. Sanders responded that he did not believe a
woman could win.”