What Will
Many Bernie Sanders Voters Do After July?
By Ralph
Nader
March 04, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- The hard-bitten, corporatist Democrats are
moving Hillary Clinton through the presidential
primaries. They are using "Republican-speak" to beat
down Bernie Sanders as favoring Big Government and
more taxes and they may unwittingly be setting the
stage for a serious split in the Democratic Party.
What is
emerging is the reaction of millions of Sanders
supporters who will feel repudiated, not just left
behind, as the Clintonites plan to celebrate at the
Democratic Convention in July. The political
experience gained by the Sanders workers, many of
them young, helped Sanders register primary
victories over Hillary in Colorado, Oklahoma,
Minnesota, Vermont and New Hampshire with their
energy and votes. They came close in Nevada and
Massachusetts and probably won in Iowa.
Hillary's
rhetoric has outraged Sanders' supporters. She
berates Sanders regularly for not being practical or
realistic about his Medicare-for-all, breaking up
big banks, a $15 minimum wage, a tax on Wall Street
speculation and carbon and getting big money out of
politics. Clinton's putdowns exemplify why so many
people who back Sanders want to defeat her. Clinton
is the candidate of the status quo, favored over all
other candidates from both parties by the Wall
Street crowd and quietly adored by the
military-industrial complex who see Generalissima
Clinton as a militarist who would maintain the
warfare state.
Democrat
Robert Reich, former Secretary of Labor under Bill
Clinton, derided this "We Shouldn't Even Try"
attitude common among many frightened Democrats.
These are, in Reich's words, "the establishment
Democrats - Washington lobbyists, editorial writers,
inside-the-Beltway operatives, party leaders and big
contributors who have grown comfortable with the way
things are." These hereditary Democrat
opinion-shapers tell their audiences that Hillary
personifies experience and electability. They argue
it is either Clinton or Trump or some other crazed
Republican.
Here we go
again. Every four years, the Democratic leaders
define the Democratic candidate by how bad the
Republicans are. This is designed to panic and mute
their followers. Every four years, both parties
become more corporatist. Sanders' voters want to
define the Democratic Party by how good it can be
for the people. And these Sanders voters may not go
back into the Democratic Party fold.
Low turnout
for the Democratic Party's primaries is being
compared to a much higher Republican voter turnout
for their candidates. Low turnout in November would
dim Hillary's chances in an electoral college,
winner-take-all system.
Such
Democratic Party misfortune can become more likely
should Bernie endorse Hillary at the Democratic
Convention without any conditions or her acceptance
of his agenda, assuming she is the nominee. Last
year he declared that he would endorse "the
Democratic nominee." Certainly, all the Democratic
politicos in the Congress who endorsed Hillary set
no conditions. The large labor unions that went with
Hillary are known for giving their endorsements
without receiving any benefits for workers. So,
Hillary would have no mandate should she win the
election. And you know that Clintons without
mandates tend to bend toward Wall Street and
rampant militarism.
It is
doubtful whether Hillary will credibly adopt any of
Bernie's agenda, considering where her campaign
money is coming from and how unwilling she is to
alienate her circle of advisers.
Where does
this leave the Sanders people who see Hillary as
experienced in waging wars, qualified as an
entrenched pol, and realistic to suit the
plutocracy's tastes, and not really getting much of
anything progressive done (alluding to the ways she
has described herself)?
The
energetic Sanders supporters, including the
Millennials who voted so heavily for Bernie, could
form a New Progressive movement to exercise a policy
pull on the establishment Democrats before November
and to be a growing magnet after November with the
objective of taking over the Democratic Party
starting with winning local elections. This will
have long-term benefits for our country.
To those
who point to history throwing water on such a
potential breakout, I tell them to look at the 2016
presidential primaries. All bets are off when
political debates become big media business with
huge ratings, and when a gambling czar and builder
of expensive real estate, Donald Trump (a hybrid
Rep/Dem), is overturning all the old homilies about
presidential politics, and is in a primary contest
with two freshmen Senators whose vacuous ambitions
are their only achievements.
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