Democrats Will Learn All the Wrong Lessons From Brush With Bernie

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Democrats Will Learn All the Wrong Lessons From Brush With Bernie

If they had any brains, Beltway Dems and their clucky sycophants like Capeheart would not be celebrating this week. They ought to be horrified to their marrow that the all-powerful Democratic Party ended up having to dig in for a furious rally to stave off a quirky Vermont socialist almost completely lacking big-dollar donors or institutional support.

They should be freaked out, cowed and relieved, like the Golden State Warriors would be if they needed a big fourth quarter to pull out a win against Valdosta State.

But to read the papers in the last two days is to imagine that we didn't just spend a year witnessing the growth of a massive grassroots movement fueled by loathing of the party establishment, with some correspondingly severe numerical contractions in the turnout department (though she won, for instance, Clinton received 30 percent fewer votes in California this year versus 2008, and 13 percent fewer in New Jersey).

The twin insurgencies of Trump and Sanders this year were equally a blistering referendum on Beltway politics. But the major-party leaders and the media mouthpieces they hang out with can't see this, because of what that friend of mine talked about over a decade ago: Washington culture is too far up its own backside to see much of anything at all.


Since The People is an annoying beast, young pols quickly learn to be focused entirely on each other and on their careers. They get turned on by the narrative of Beltway politics as a cool power game, and before long are way too often reaching for Game of Thrones metaphors to describe their jobs. Eventually, the only action that matters is inside the palace.

Voter concerns rapidly take a back seat to the daily grind of the job. The ideal piece of legislation in almost every case is a Frankensteinian policy concoction that allows the sponsoring pol to keep as many big-money donors in the fold as possible without offending actual human voters to the point of a ballot revolt.

This dynamic is rarely explained to the public, but voters on both sides of the aisle have lately begun guessing at the truth, and spent most of the last year letting the parties know it in the primaries. People are sick of being thought of as faraway annoyances who only get whatever policy scraps are left over after pols have finished servicing the donors they hang out with at Redskins games.

Democratic voters tried to express these frustrations through the Sanders campaign, but the party leaders have been and probably will continue to be too dense to listen. Instead, they'll convince themselves that, as Hohmann's Post article put it, Hillary's latest victories mean any "pressure" they might have felt to change has now been "ameliorated."

The maddening thing about the Democrats is that they refuse to see how easy they could have it. If the party threw its weight behind a truly populist platform, if it stood behind unions and prosecuted Wall Street criminals and stopped taking giant gobs of cash from every crooked transnational bank and job-exporting manufacturer in the world, they would win every election season in a landslide.

This is especially the case now that the Republican Party has collapsed under the weight of its own nativist lunacy. It's exactly the moment when the Democrats should feel free to become a real party of ordinary working people.

But they won't do that, because they don't see what just happened this year as a message rising up from millions of voters.

Politicians are so used to viewing the electorate as a giant thing to be manipulated that no matter what happens at the ballot, they usually can only focus on the Washington-based characters they perceive to be pulling the strings. Through this lens, the uprising among Democratic voters this year wasn't an organic expression of mass disgust, but wholly the fault of Bernie Sanders, who within the Beltway is viewed as an oddball amateur and radical who jumped the line.

Nobody saw his campaign as an honest effort to restore power to voters, because nobody in the capital even knows what that is. In the rules of palace intrigue, Sanders only made sense as a kind of self-centered huckster who made a failed play for power. And the narrative will be that with him out of the picture, the crisis is over. No person, no problem.

This inability to grasp that the problem is bigger than Bernie Sanders is a huge red flag. As Thacker puts it, the theme of this election year was widespread anger toward both parties, and both the Trump craziness and the near-miss with Sanders should have served as a warning. "The Democrats should be worried they're next," he says.

But they're not worried. Behind the palace walls, nobody ever is.



Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/politic...from-brush-with-bernie-20160609#ixzz4BDqk0vfM


I wanted to share a few bits and pieces of this fantastic article and I highly suggest everyone read the whole thing. Democrats on Capitol Hill are so out of touch with the people that claim to serve that they can't even see the antiestablishment fervor that is permeating throughout the country. The fact that these people are for the most part dumb enough to think that this was all about Bernie Sanders as a person are either incredibly naïve or willfully ignorant.
 
bernie and trump are the same thing

one blames the rich and one blames the mexicans (and muslims)

both demagogues appealing to stupidity and fear
 
bernie and trump are the same thing

one blames the rich and one blames the mexicans (and muslims)

both demagogues appealing to stupidity and fear

Right just like salads. There's absolutely no difference between a potato salad, and a Caesar salad.
 
I think the author does fine at describing different ways the Sanders near win could be interpreted.

I'm a little skeptical about their claims that no one has learned the right lesson, though. I haven't heard any real analysis or interpretation from anyone, much less key figures, about what should we take away from this.

I suppose there is the danger of complacency. Presuming Clinton wins, that would mark 6 of the last 7 where Democrats have won the popular vote, and it can be easy to think you've got the winning formula and can just coast.

Still, for Trump's once-unthinkable GOP win and Sanders' virtual tie with a well-connected figure the party was fully behind not to get anyone thinking "the people are getting sick of the status quo" would really be kind of astonishing.

But, 'on the third hand', the Republican Party has really shown almost no ability to learn from their mistakes at the top level, so maybe the Democrats could possibly be equally myopic.
 
I think the author does fine at describing different ways the Sanders near win could be interpreted.

I'm a little skeptical about their claims that no one has learned the right lesson, though. I haven't heard any real analysis or interpretation from anyone, much less key figures, about what should we take away from this.

Well there is the two articles that were mentioned in the article I posted.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...ders-liberals-think/5757867a981b92a22deb72ee/

https://www.washingtonpost.com/blog...sanders-and-donald-trump-are-the-same-person/

The Washington Post is truly an insufferable news publication.

I suppose there is the danger of complacency. Presuming Clinton wins, that would mark 6 of the last 7 where Democrats have won the popular vote, and it can be easy to think you've got the winning formula and can just coast.

Still, for Trump's once-unthinkable GOP win and Sanders' virtual tie with a well-connected figure the party was fully behind not to get anyone thinking "the people are getting sick of the status quo" would really be kind of astonishing.

But, 'on the third hand', the Republican Party has really shown almost no ability to learn from their mistakes at the top level, so maybe the Democrats could possibly be equally myopic.

At this point I literally cannot be surprised by how out of touch these establishment politicians are. I think you sort of hit the nail on the head in that they've grown complacent and just expect things to always be the same.
 
They're not the same thing. Trump doesn't get schlonged.

He most certainly will in the general. The Democratic primary was the race for president and the only time trump shines in debates is when he's surrounded by a bunch of other retarded Republicans.
 
Don't praise any one candidate just quite yet this may be the weakest group we have had in a while. We'll see whoever is elected if they can come through or fail like all the rest. Demopublicans are the worst because one provides the ghettos and the other provides the guns, who to choose from?
 
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I think a lot of people will honestly forget about him. My peers my age are already forgetting about him and are into the latest fad/trend.
 
I think a lot of people will honestly forget about him. My peers my age are already forgetting about him and are into the latest fad/trend.

It's not about him. It's about the movement that he set fire to by choosing to fight for real progressive values when no other politicians were brave enough to do it. Bernie's political revolution will reverberate from now all the way to the next election cycle.
 
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