2016 Presidential Candidate Bernie
Sanders
By Ted Glick
A
CNN/ORC poll that came out a couple of days ago shows that Bernie
Sanders is rapidly shrinking Hillary Clinton’s lead in the polls. Over
just the last two months he has cut it down by more than half, from
57-14 in a late June CNN/ORC poll to 47-29 today. And then there’s the
Boston Herald poll showing Bernie winning New Hampshire by 7 percentage
points.
How does this compare with Hillary Clinton vs. Barack Obama at a comparable time in their 2007/2008 race? Pretty favorably; polls back then had Clinton ahead by 15 percentage points, very close to where Sanders is right now.
Of
course, that hasn’t made much difference to the talking heads and
supposed political experts who get paid by the corporations who own much
of the mass media. Virtually all of them, whether liberal or
conservative, keep saying that “Bernie can’t win.”
However there’s another CNN/ORC poll from a month ago, July 26th,
that tells a very different story. In that poll, Bernie came out the
winner in head-to-head match-ups with Donald Trump (59-38), Scott Walker
(48-42) and Jeb Bush (48-47). And this is despite the fact that, in
that same poll, 41% of those polled said they really didn’t know enough
to have either a favorable or unfavorable opinion about Bernie!
What
are the reasons given for why Bernie can’t win, other than the usual
“conventional wisdom” from supposed know-it-alls on TV?
One
is his age. He’s six years older than Hillary, 73 vs. 67, not a huge
difference there. How old was Ronald Reagan when he took office? 70, and
he was 78 when he left. Bernie would be 75 upon taking office. And when
you compare Bernie’s energy to Hillary’s energy, who seems to have
more?
The age issue is really a non-issue, or at worst a minor issue.
Then
there’s the fact that he calls himself a “democratic socialist.” This
is an interesting one, given that the July CNN/ORC poll had him beating
the then-top-three Republican candidates in a head-to-head match-up. How
could this be? How could an avowed socialist be in such a strong
political position nationally? Clearly, it has a lot to do with his
authenticity, his adherence to basic principles over the course of his
political life, his popularity among the Vermont electorate and the fact
that the ideas and proposals he has been espousing for 30 years are,
indeed, ideas whose time seems to have finally arrived. Hooray for that!
It
is realistic to expect that both the Clinton Democrats and the
Republicans, if he wins the Democratic nomination, are going to use this
one to try to paint him as out of the mainstream, far left, not in
touch with American values, etc. That will have some impact, though I
think the odds are just as good that it could ultimately rebound in
Bernie’s favor, as more people take a closer look at him and find that
his positions on many issues are very similar to theirs. And Bernie is
no spring chicken when it comes to dealing with these kind of attacks;
it has happened in Vermont, and in Bernie’s last re-election campaign
for the US Senate, he won with 71% of the vote.
The
latest reason being given, probably the most substantive, is that he is
not well known by and has low levels of support among African Americans
and other people of color compared to Hillary Clinton. What’s the
reality about Bernie’s history on issues specific to people of color?
It’s pretty good. He was an activist in the civil rights movement of the
60’s, getting arrested for his activism, and he attended the August,
1963 March on Washington at the Lincoln Memorial. He has a near-100%
voting record from the national NAACP. He voted against Bill Clinton’s
very problematic and discriminatory “welfare reform” legislation in the
90’s. When disrupted by Black Lives Matter supporters recently at
rallies, he came out with a strong and comprehensive platform on racial
justice issues. He seems to be taking this issue seriously and is moving
to address it.
He
can’t let up on this, and neither can his supporters. The progressive
movement in the USA has a long history of not dealing well with issues
of particular importance to people of color. Bernie and those white
people around him need to have the intelligence and sensitivity to model
a positive way of dealing with these issues. If he and they do so,
Bernie’s strengths in so many other areas should lead to a significant
change in the level of both active and passive support for his candidacy
from people of color going forward.
Finally, there’s the issue of money.
This
is a two-edged sword. On one side is the conventional wisdom that you
can’t win the Presidency unless you sell out to the Wall Street crowd to
get their money to buy TV ads. This has certainly been true up to now.
But there’s another side, and that’s the political power of a genuinely
people-powered and people-financed campaign. When Bernie is consistent
and makes an issue of his unwillingness to take Super PAC money or be
dependent on the big donors, that position resonates with lots of
people. And he sure seems to be doing well with his fund-raising from
we, the people.
Many
more of we, the people need to see it as a personal responsibility to
make sure Bernie’s campaign has the money needed so that he can win,
donating as generously as we can.
One
key component of a Bernie win, both for the Democratic nomination and
then in November of next year, is an expansion of the electorate. When
he won election and then re-election for mayor in Burlington, Vt. in the
1980’s, I remember seeing stories of voter registration doubling during
that time.
Turning
on those who, for good reason, have turned off to the US political
system, getting them to register and getting those registered to turn
out on election, or caucus, day is critical for the Sanders campaign,
and I’m sure Bernie and his team know it. They also know that defending
the right to vote and going after those who are working to restrict it
has to be a priority.
Bernie
can win. That’s not a belief, and it’s not even influenced by my
personal support of the guy. It is an objective assessment of the
political realities of the country, the state of both the Sanders and
Clinton campaigns, polling and the rising currents of progressive
activism. Si, se puede!
Ted Glick has been an activist, organizer and revolutionary since 1968. Past writings and other information can be found at http://tedglick.com, and he can be followed on Twitter at http://twitter.com/jtglick.
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