angrysoba
Philosophile
Well sure, but all we can go on is what we know: Sanders couldn't even get enough Democrats to vote for him. In a GE against a candidate who had mobilized enough of the Republican electorate and enough of the swing states in general, I think it would have been harder for Sanders to win. I just don't see enough Democrats lining up behind him as they did for the all-but-elected Clinton.
Really? I think comparing the Democrat primaries with the General Election is a mistake.
I think that if it had been a head-to-head between Marco Rubio and Donald Trump then Rubio would have got the nomination for the Republicans, but Clinton would probably have beaten Trump.
I think if we imagine a level-playing field from the start for the Democratic primary, then *maybe* Sanders would have won that.
Besides, the question is not whether millions of people would have voted for Sanders in California or other places which would have voted Democrat anyway, the question is in the particular swing states.
Either Trump was unstoppable there, or maybe a candidate that best spoke in their interests would have won there. I *think* Sanders could have been that person.
And for those who say, "well who cares? Why bother talking about this now? What does it matter?" etc...
It matters because if the Democrats ever want to win the electoral college vote again, and hence the presidency, they need to reach out to the very voters who for some reason thought Trump was their guy.
Remember that Obama won those states. It cannot simply be voter suppression or racism that led to Trump winning. It could be a case of failing to get out the vote in the important areas (which I think is partly Clinton's fault, and which I think Sanders might not have made that mistake about).