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riversedge

(70,242 posts)
Wed May 18, 2016, 06:10 PM May 2016

Liberal allies turning on Bernie Sanders after Nevada donnybrook

Going going......


https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/powerpost/paloma/daily-202/2016/05/18/daily-202-liberal-allies-turning-on-bernie-sanders-after-nevada-donnybrook/573b56ed981b92a22d86b9d2/


Liberal allies turning on Bernie Sanders after Nevada donnybrook




By James Hohmann May 18 at 7:30 AM



............................

-- Sanders is quickly becoming a figure every bit as divisive and polarizing among Senate Democrats as Ted Cruz is in the eyes of his Republican colleagues. He may not have forced a government shutdown, but his obstinacy may yet imperil HRC. His defiance is burning bridges, which will make it harder for him to be an effective member of the Senate going forward.

-- We’ve reached another pivot point in the race. The donnybrook at the convention has been a wake-up call for many liberal commentators, who have viewed Bernie positively because of his success at pulling Hillary to the left. But a new mindset has begun to take hold: If Trump becomes president, Sanders will deserve a big share of the blame. Take this sampling of commentary that posted overnight:



The New Republic’s Dana Houle:
“It is Sanders’s prerogative to remain in the race. But exercising that prerogative makes it easier for mega-wealthy conservatives to spend hundreds of millions of dollars to lethally bludgeon both Clinton’s candidacy and the progressive agenda to which Sanders has devoted his career. This is not solely about combating the grave threat of a Trump presidency. It is also about the potential of a Democratic landslide and the progressive achievements that could follow, which is an opportunity too rare and precious to squander.… The best way for Sanders to advance the progressive cause is to end his campaign and unabashedly ask his supporters to join him in helping to elect Clinton.”



Talking Points Memo’s Josh Marshall:
“Sanders is telling his supporters that he can still win, which he can't. He's suggesting that the win is being stolen by a corrupt establishment, an impression which will be validated when his phony prediction turns out not to be true. Lying like this sets you up for stuff like happened over the weekend in Nevada.”



Mother Jones’s Kevin Drum: “
Before this campaign, [Sanders] was a gadfly, he was a critic of the system, and he was a man of strong principles. He still is, but he's also obviously very, very bitter…. By all objective measures he did way better than anyone expected and had far more influence than anyone thought he would, and he should feel good about that. Instead, he seems more angry and resentful with every passing day.”



The Atlantic’s Clare Foran:
“As the Sanders campaign presses forward, it must carefully consider whether the senator’s ambition for a political revolution is a goal best achieved by actively stoking the anger of his supporters — and, in a sense, encouraging them to tear it all down.”


Vox’s Jeff Stein:
“Sanders needed to win Kentucky to maintain an increasingly far-fetched path to the Democratic nomination. The fact that he lost — albeit by what appears to have been a very small margin — will only dramatically increase the calls for him to exit the race.”

-- A number of top Sanders staffers have left the campaign in recent days,
including his director of technology and three out of four members of his original California leadership team, Politico reports. The new departures come just a few weeks after Sanders let hundreds of field staffers go in an effort to slash costs.



-- A Sanders superdelegate flipped his allegiance to Clinton,
per Bloomberg. Emmett Hansen II, Democratic National Committee member for the U.S. Virgin Islands, shifted his support. “There are no more windmills to joust against and no more mountains to climb,” he said.

-- The mainstream coverage is overwhelmingly negative. “He lost," writes Jon Ralston, the dean of the Nevada press corps. "And the reaction to the vanquishing was akin to the petulant mewling of a baby who had been pampered until the moment he first was told no, wailing with no purpose other than to be loud. And just like an infant, the Sanders folks wanted it to be all about them.… I seriously doubt he can put out the fire he has set.”

“Sanders doesn't seem very interested just now in preserving goodwill he's built up within Democratic Party after losing nomination," writes the New York Times’ John Harwood.


“Clinton is now 96 percent of the way to reaching the 2,383 delegates needed for the Dem nomination. 94 delegates short," notes the AP's Ken Thomas.

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Liberal allies turning on Bernie Sanders after Nevada donnybrook (Original Post) riversedge May 2016 OP
Well they can fuck themselves too. So much misinterpretation of the climate of the times. I swear, highprincipleswork May 2016 #1
There are a lot of tassel loafers to keep buying in D.C. They know who signs the checks... nt villager May 2016 #3
Liberal Allies pmorlan1 May 2016 #2
Ah more yuppie horseshit Armstead May 2016 #4
^this Cheese Sandwich May 2016 #6
No, Bernie turned on them with that disgusting victory speech and his comments later. Jitter65 May 2016 #5
 

highprincipleswork

(3,111 posts)
1. Well they can fuck themselves too. So much misinterpretation of the climate of the times. I swear,
Wed May 18, 2016, 06:12 PM
May 2016

a bunch of old fogies, who still think that even after Occupy Wall Street, Obama's successful elections, Bernie's surprising candidacy, and even Trump's nomination that the rules of the game are the same ones instigated by the everloving charlatan Saint Ronnie.

How many times do they have to be shown they are wrong for them to finally get it right?

 

Cheese Sandwich

(9,086 posts)
6. ^this
Thu May 19, 2016, 09:02 AM
May 2016

Bernie hasn't lost any support over the Nevada riot/brawl. If anything it will probably help him because it makes it seem like the fight is still on, it's not over yet.

 

Jitter65

(3,089 posts)
5. No, Bernie turned on them with that disgusting victory speech and his comments later.
Wed May 18, 2016, 06:25 PM
May 2016

Finally seeing him for who he is. Those who jumped on his wagon of early on are hardening their positions because of their pride and inability to say they made a mistake.

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