By Ted Glick
Those
Bernie supporters who saw media reports yesterday of the latest
national Presidential poll by Quinnipiac couldn’t feel too good about
the results. Quinnipiac had Hillary ahead by 30 percentage points,
60-30. News stories I saw also said that the poll reported that more
Hillary supporters than Bernie supporters were firm in their choice, not
open to changing it.
Other
polls over the last couple of weeks have been similar, though closer.
ABC/Washington Post had it 60-34 for Hillary on November 22. Also on the
22nd Fox had it 55-32. On the 20th Bloomberg had it 55-30 and on the 17th Rasmussen had it 50-29.
However,
and it’s a big however, Quinnipiac also polled on head-to-head
match-ups between Hillary and the four leading Republicans—Trump,
Carson, Rubio and Cruz--and did the same with Bernie. In this polling
both Hillary and Bernie came out ahead in every case, but there was a very surprising result: Bernie did better than Hillary in three of the four match-ups, and they were tied in the fourth. Hillary’s average polling margin was 3 ¾%; Bernie’s was 6 ¼%.
How
can this be explained? I’d say it’s because, first of all, Bernie is
getting more well-known as his campaign keeps rolling along. He was
relatively unknown, compared to Clinton, when he first announced. That
has definitely changed for the better.
Secondly,
the Clintons, both Bill and Hillary, are polarizing figures. They’ve
got an awful lot of baggage, and that is probably translating into less
support for Hillary from independents compared to actual independent
Bernie Sanders. Most independents are that way because they have
problems with both the Republican and Democratic parties, and Hillary is
nothing if not a Democratic Party person, deep into it for decades,
including all of the corporate culture and corporate money that has such
a big influence.
It sure seems like major media should report on this out-in-the-open polling win for Bernie.
This
polling win points to Bernie’s path to victory: building an alliance
between progressive Democrats, progressive independents, a small
percentage of moderate Republicans disgusted by what has happened to
their party, and other moderates/centrists who might have concerns about
Bernie’s democratic socialism but have even greater concerns about
ultra-rightist extremism rampant within the Republican Party.
Of
course, for this to happen, Bernie needs to win the Democratic Party
nomination. He needs to win or come close in the Iowa caucuses and the
same in New Hampshire. He probably needs to actually win at least one of
those elections. These results will undoubtedly lead more people to
check him out, more doubts about Hillary and momentum going into the
elections in South Carolina, Nevada, Super Tuesday March 1 and beyond.
All
of this is possible based on current polling in Iowa and New Hampshire.
Bernie is also doing well from a fund-raising standpoint—though there’s a definite need for more people to contribute—and from the standpoint of using his refusal to accept super PAC money as a reason why people should support him.
Finally,
but by no means least, he is doing a good job of rolling out more
specific policy proposals whose content, by and large, is consistently
progressive, though he is not taking pacifist or hard-left positions.
There is certainly constructive criticism to be made of aspects of his
overall platform, but any objective assessment of it as found on his
website and as reflected in his public speeches and statements must
conclude that, if elected, Bernie will lead our country in a very
different, hopeful, much needed and much more progressive direction than
Hillary Clinton.
Keep it up, Bernie!
*My first “Bernie Can Win” column can be found here.
Ted
Glick has prioritized building the climate and climate justice movement
since 2003. 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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