Yeah that's a dealbreaker.If I wasn't afraid of her winning the nomination
Yeah that's a dealbreaker.If I wasn't afraid of her winning the nomination
Well, what gives me that idea is the profile of his donors:
https://www.opensecrets.org/news/2019/09/sanders-vs-warren-who-has-more-working-class-donors/
To me this suggests that Bernie is the guy with the potential to move beyond the Democrats' obvious stranglehold on highly educated, somewhat more affluent voters. What worries me about Warren is that I believe her demographic base of support sets us up for Hillary's election loss Mk2. She is strongest among the voters the Democrats can hopefully already count on to vote for whomever the Democrats nominate.
https://boingboing.net/2019/08/11/36m-from-746k-donors.html
This is another reason to think that Bernie has widespread appeal:
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They had to make a separate map excluding Bernie to show other candidates' fundraising. Notice how Bernie is the lead recipient of donations in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Ohio, and Florida: the key states we need to win in order to win this election.
Well, what gives me that idea is the profile of his donors:
https://www.opensecrets.org/news/2019/09/sanders-vs-warren-who-has-more-working-class-donors/
To me this suggests that Bernie is the guy with the potential to move beyond the Democrats' obvious stranglehold on highly educated, somewhat more affluent voters. What worries me about Warren is that I believe her demographic base of support sets us up for Hillary's election loss Mk2. She is strongest among the voters the Democrats can hopefully already count on to vote for whomever the Democrats nominate.
https://boingboing.net/2019/08/11/36m-from-746k-donors.html
This is another reason to think that Bernie has widespread appeal:
![]()
They had to make a separate map excluding Bernie to show other candidates' fundraising. Notice how Bernie is the lead recipient of donations in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Ohio, and Florida: the key states we need to win in order to win this election.
The flaw with that analysis is that voter turnout in the US is so low that the ignorant USian you describe isn't even likely to bother voting at all.Donors are representative of the politically active. That doesn't address the issue of broad appeal. No amount of "look at how fired up the politically active are" is going to change the fact that the vast bulk of the electorate is hardly paying attention yet, and if he gets the nomination then when their attention does turn to the election it will be during a barrage of ads scaremongering about socialism. There are three ways Sanders could win:
1) He has aged so much and so badly that when people see the image of him declaring himself a socialist they can be convinced it is fake.
2) Between now and next November the entire electorate gets reeducated and suddenly comes to an understanding of what socialism actually is.
3) The Trump effect is so powerful that the Democrats win no matter who they nominated.
Number one would involve him denying that he is, or ever said that he was, a socialist. That ain't happening. Two is a total pipe dream since nothing is so secure as the intentional ignorance of the USian electorate. Which leaves three, and we know how counting on that turned out last time.
Presidential elections turnout runs 50-60%, and the politically active account for maybe 20% at the outside. So no, you cannot count on the politically active to carry the day.The flaw with that analysis is that voter turnout in the US is so low that the ignorant USian you describe isn't even likely to bother voting at all.
That doesn't address the issue of broad appeal.
I'm hoping on #3, especially since it includes the idea that there are Trump country folks and people who voted Trump last time to "see what happens" who are at the "eff that, he sucks" point by now. Bernie and Biden seem like the best candidates to get those votes, and Biden loses too much of the youth/hard left vote in terms of motivation.There are three ways Sanders could win:
1) He has aged so much and so badly that when people see the image of him declaring himself a socialist they can be convinced it is fake.
2) Between now and next November the entire electorate gets reeducated and suddenly comes to an understanding of what socialism actually is.
3) The Trump effect is so powerful that the Democrats win no matter who they nominated.
I also think you are drastically overestimating the negative impact of "socialism". How many political taboos does Donald Trump have to break before it dawns on people that the old rules no longer hold?
More importantly, even we accept your arguments as true, what reason is there to think that any other Democratic candidate in the running will do better?
Where are you getting those numbers? Only 20% are educated voters?Presidential elections turnout runs 50-60%, and the politically active account for maybe 20% at the outside. So no, you cannot count on the politically active to carry the day.
Where are you getting those numbers? Only 20% are educated voters?
Trump doesn't break political taboos, he breaks social taboos. Politically he hasn't strayed an inch off of the standard conservative Republican line. If he's paving the way for anyone in that regard it is Buttigieg, not Bernie.
As to why someone else would do better...no one else has such an obvious easy path to being scaremongered that is so hard to counter.
Bernie beat Trump in Texas in a recent poll. If there were ever a state where socialism fearmongering would work its Texas. In order for your hypothesis to hold water you'd have to assume Bernie couldn't flip the three swing states that gave Trump his win. Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. Two of those voted Bernie over Clinton in 2016 primaries. The idea that Trump would beat Bernie because "socialism" is based on pretty shakey ground.The turnout numbers are readily available. The "20% at the outside" is a picked from the air number based on turnouts for primaries, attendance at non campaign appearances by representatives, numbers of donors, people who choose a party affiliation in states where it isn't mandatory, and other general observations. "Educated" has nothing to do with any of that, it's a question of interests and priorities.
The funny thing about those "indifferent" voters is that they jus went through 8 full years of Republican pundits calling Obama and every centrist associated with him a socialist. The socialist fearmongering is as likely to fall on deaf ears with them as any other criticism.I don't think that it is safe to count on the vote of the more indifferent people. Also, they would have to be quite selectively indifferent if (eg) they care about 'Socialism' but not about scandals or establishment born-in-purple's.
And politically Bernie hasn't strayed far from the standard New Deal Democrat line.
The Republicans are going to call anyone the Democrats run a socialist. 63% of Republicans believed that Obama was a socialist in 2010. This obsession you have with "socialism" as a liability for Sanders just doesn't compute for me. I suspect it's a generational thing.
Absolutely. Which is why if Bernie gets nominated you will see massive socialism fearmongering in Texas. And I agree, it would work.Bernie beat Trump in Texas in a recent poll. If there were ever a state where socialism fearmongering would work its Texas.
Again, primaries are predominantly the turf of the politically active. It really makes no difference who wins the primary in a given state, what matters is how effective the winner of the primary is at drawing votes from the people who didn't vote in the primary but feel "obligated" to cast a ballot in the general.In order for your hypothesis to hold water you'd have to assume Bernie couldn't flip the three swing states that gave Trump his win. Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. Two of those voted Bernie over Clinton in 2016 primaries.
It is impossible for me to understand how you don't see a difference between "yeah, the Republicans call everyone a socialist when they run against them, because they know that if they can get that stuck in people's heads they will win," and "well, they have him on tape admitting that he is in fact a socialist so that sticking it in people's heads is pretty much automatic."
I think most people just won't care. The type of people who care aren't going to vote for Democrats anyway.