TurkeysGhost
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2018
- Messages
- 35,043
Not really sure why you think one statement (Sanders isn't a democrat) automatically leads to the other (supporters not democrats). Its certainly possible for some democratic supporters to thrown their support behind an "outsider".
I guess the question is, if he wasn't co-opting the machinery of the democratic party, would he even get enough support to become a spoiler?
I don't think he was a 'big name' prior to his 2016 election run, and its not like he had the financial resources to 'buy' his way into spotlight (a la Ross Perot).
Maybe if Sanders ran as an independent (or for some 3rd party ticket) he might have ended up siphoning off some support from Clinton. On the other hand, he might have also siphoned off some of the 'BernieBros' who migrated to Trump. (Plus, without the prolonged Clinton/Sanders battle, perhaps the Democrats would have been better focused on Trump.)
My point is this. What does it mean to be a Democrat?
Bernie is running as a Democrat and getting lots of support from Democratic primary voters.
So yeah, if being a Democrat means getting the blessing of the DNC elites, then Bernie isn't a Democrat.
If being a Democrat means people in that party turn out to vote for him in large numbers, then he obviously is.
People saying "Bernie isn't a Democrat" would be more accurate in saying "Bernie isn't sanctioned by the party elite".
Who decides who is a real Democrat? Is it the primary voters who like Bernie, or the party establishment who don't?
WHen people say "Bernie isn't a Democrat" the implied statement is also "Democratic voters shouldn't vote for Bernie". Seems presumptuous to me.
As an example. Many people said that Trump wasn't a Republican. Obviously he is. He's more Republican than any other mainstream Republican he beat. The Republican voters were the final authority, not some party operative.
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