General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Sanders to run as a Democrat -- but not accept nomination (2018 Senate) [View all]karynnj
(61,056 posts)He argued for what he believed in and against things like income inequality - something many many mainstream Democrats have argued has been a problem for decades - including Clinton in 2016. There were very strong speeches given in the early 1990s speaking of the 1970s and 1980s - when there was large economic gains, that almost entirely went to the top income earners. Yet, that trend accelerated during the Clinton years.
There are multiple wings of the Democratic party. Where Bernie argued that we had not done enough for those lower on the distribution, he was speaking from a wing of the party that was seen as the loser in 1992 -- when the new Democrats (DLC) argued that the Democratic party had to change. Would you say that Clinton and Gore, as the first winning DLC nominees, were attacking the party when they said very negative things about the unions and liberals?