Presidential Candidate Bernie Sanders: Sheepdogging
for Hillary and the Democrats in 2016
Vermont
senator and ostensible socialist Bernie Sanders is
playing the sheepdog candidate for Hillary Clinton
this year. Bernie's job is to warm up the crowd for
Hillary, herding activist energies and the
disaffected left back into the Democratic fold one
more time. Bernie aims to tie up activist energies
and resources till the summer of 2016 when the only
remaining choice will be the usual lesser of two
evils.
By Bruce A. Dixon
“The
sheepdog is a card the Democratic party plays every
presidential primary season when there's no White
House Democrat running for re-election.”
Spoiler
alert: we have seen the Bernie Sanders show before,
and we know exactly how it ends. Bernie has zero
likelihood of winning the Democratic nomination for
president over Hillary Clinton. Bernie will lose,
Hillary will win. When Bernie folds his tent in the
summer of 2016, the money, the hopes and prayers,
the year of activist zeal that folks put behind
Bernie Sanders' either vanishes into thin air, or
directly benefits the Hillary Clinton campaign.
Don't
believe us? Then believe
Bernie himself
interviewed by George Stephanopoulos on ABC News
“This Week” May 3.
STEPHANOPOULOS: So if you lose
in this nomination fight, will you support the
Democratic nominee?
SANDERS: Yes. I have in the
past.
STEPHANOPOULOS: Not going to
run as an independent?
SANDERS: No, absolutely not.
I've been very clear about that.
Bernie
Sanders is this election's Democratic sheepdog. The
sheepdog is a card the Democratic party plays every
presidential primary season when there's no White
House Democrat running for re-election. The sheepdog
is a presidential candidate running ostensibly to
the left of the establishment Democrat to whom the
billionaires will award the nomination. Sheepdogs
are herders, and the sheepdog candidate is charged
with herding activists and voters back into the
Democratic fold who might otherwise drift leftward
and outside of the Democratic party, either staying
home or trying to build something outside the two
party box.
1984 and 88
the sheepdog candidate was Jesse Jackson. In 92 it
was California governor Jerry Brown. In 2000 and
2004 the designated sheepdog was Al Sharpton, and in
2008 it was Dennis Kucinich. This year it's Vermont
senator Bernie Sanders. The function of the sheepdog
candidate is to give left activists and voters a
reason, however illusory, to believe there's a place
of influence for them inside the Democratic party,
if and only if the eventual Democratic nominee can
win in November.
Despite
casting millions of voters for the likes of Jesse
Jackson, Al Sharpton and other sheepdogs, those
leftish Democrat voters are always disregarded when
Democrats actually win. Bill Clinton gave us NAFTA,
a vicious “welfare reform,” no peace dividend or
push for DC statehood, lowered unemployment but
mostly in part time and low-wage jobs, and mass
incarceration of black and brown people. President
Obama doubled down on bailouts of banksters and GM,
and immunized them from prosecution but failed to
address the most catastrophic fall in black
household wealth in history. We got health care for
some instead of Medicare for All, the Patriot Act
renewed instead of repealed, a race to privatize
public education, drone wars and still more mass
incarceration of black and brown people. And if
President Obama gets his way, we may soon have a
global job-destroying wage-lowering NAFTA on
steroids, with the TTP and TTIP.
The
sheepdog's job is to divert the energy and
enthusiasm of activists a year, a year and a half
out from a November election away from building an
alternative to the Democratic party, and into his
doomed effort. When the sheepdog inevitably folds in
the late spring or early summer before a November
election, there's no time remaining to win ballot
access for alternative parties or candidates, no
time to raise money or organize any effective
challenge to the two capitalist parties.
At that
point, with all the alternatives foreclosed, the
narrative shifts to the familiar “lesser of two
evils.” Every sheepdog candidate surrenders the
shreds of his credibility to the Democratic nominee
in time for the November election. This is how the
Bernie Sanders show ends, as the left-leaning
warm-up act for Hillary Clinton.
Intent on
avoiding the two-party “lesser evil” trap this year,
about two hundred activists gathered in Chicago last
weekend to consider the future of electoral
organizing outside the Democratic and Republican
parties. Many of the participants were Greens,
including former presidential and vice presidential
candidates Jill Stein and Rosa Clemente, the former
Green mayor of Richmond California, and many others.
There were also representatives from Seattle, where
Socialist Alternative's Kshama Sawant won election
to Seattle's city council, as well as Angela Walker,
a black socialist who received 67,000 votes for
Milwaukee County sheriff in 2014, and many others,
including some who took part in the recent Chicago
mayoral election.
There was
trans-partisan interest in a 50-state ballot access
drive to put the Green Party's Jill Stein on the
presidential ballot for 2016 presidential race.
Currently the law keeps Greens and others off the
ballot in more than half the states. Precise details
vary according to state law, but if a third party
candidate after obtaining one-time ballot access
receives about 2% of total votes, a new ballot line
is created, granting ballot access to any potential
candidate from school board to sheriff to US
congress who wants to run as something other than a
Republican or Democrat. That, many participants
agreed, would be a significant puncture in the legal
thicket that now protects Democrats against
competition on the ballot from their left. But a
nationwide trans-partisan ballot access campaign to
create a national alternative to the two capitalist
parties is something left activists must begin
serious work a good 18 months before a November
election, essentially right now.
Whether or
not a national ballot access campaign is undertaken
by Greens and others, a Bernie Sanders candidacy is
an invitation to do again what's been done in 1984,
1988, 1992, 2000, 2004 and 2008. Bernie's candidacy
is a blast toward the past, an invitation to herd
and be herded like sheep back into the Democratic
fold, to fundraise and canvass and recruit and
mobilize for Bernie, as he warms up the crowd for
Hillary. Bernie is a sheepdog.
The
question is, are we sheep?
Bruce
A. Dixon is managing editor at Black Agenda Report,
and a state committee member of the GA Green Party.
He lives and works near Marietta GA and can be
reached at bruce.dixon(at)blackagendareport.com.
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