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Uncle Joe

(58,349 posts)
Tue Sep 15, 2015, 01:50 PM Sep 2015

Why Bernie Sanders's rise is more impressive than Donald Trump's



New polls show Sanders leading Hillary Clinton in both Iowa and New Hampshire. His leads aren't Trump-size — at least not yet — but they were secured without the wall-to-wall media coverage that attends Trump, without the name recognition Trump brought to the race, and against a much stronger frontrunner than Trump faced.

And Sanders has built those leads while remaining, well, Sanders. He promised he wouldn't run a negative campaign, and he hasn't — a fact that Clinton allies privately mention with relief. He hasn't signed on with a Super PAC or begun taking money from the kinds of donors he campaigns against. His campaign has been free of stunts and provocations and dense with policy proposals and issue papers. He's attracting supporters the old-fashioned way — by convincing people he's the kind of politician they want to back.

There is nothing inevitable about any of this. It was not obvious six months ago that Sanders would pull ahead of Clinton in Iowa and New Hampshire. Nor can his rise be explained away as simple "anyone but Hillary" sentiment: Sanders holds huge leads over Vice President Joe Biden, former Govs. Martin O'Malley and Lincoln Chafee, and ex-Sen. Jim Webb.


(snip)

Where Trump has never held elected office, Sanders is one of the longest-serving members of Congress; where Trump calls himself a Republican but seems to loathe his party, Sanders calls himself an independent socialist but acts like a loyal Democrat; where Trump delights in attacking his fellow candidates, Sanders refuses to go negative; where Trump heightens the contrasts between him and his critics, Sanders has been unveiling new policies to quell doubts from Black Lives Matter activists; where Trump is limiting the Republican Party's ability to reach beyond its base and win minority voters, Sanders is trying to expand the Democratic Party's base among the white working class and evangelicals; where Trump is a billionaire attempting to take over American politics, Sanders is a congressman of unusually modest means trying to stop billionaires from taking over American politics.

(snip)

By contrast, Sanders, who is already the ranking member on the Senate Budget Committee, is pushing the Democratic Party in a direction many of its most influential members — from officeholders to labor unions — already want it to go. He's showing that the political style initially associated with Elizabeth Warren wasn't dependent on her; that there's a real constituency in the Democratic Party, and perhaps even beyond it, for politicians who fight economic inequality by fighting political inequality. In some ways, Sanders is a better test case for that proposition than Warren would have been, as, unlike Warren, he wasn't considered a wildly charismatic politician before this campaign, so his success makes a stronger argument that it's the message that has resonance, not just the messenger.

(snip)

http://www.vox.com/2015/9/14/9324501/bernie-sanders-donald-trump

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