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Sanders backers rue an opportunity lost

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., speaks to a crowd as he campaigns for Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and Russ Feingold, Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate, at Monona Terrace Community and Convention Center in Madison, Wis., on Oct. 5.

By Matt Flegenheimer and Yamiche Alcindor

New York Times

Even to skeptics, the presidential campaign of Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont has often appeared less quixotic with the benefit of hindsight.

If Sanders had only edged Hillary Clinton in Iowa — and not the other way around — before winning a blowout in New Hampshire, perhaps things would have been different.

If he had only attacked Clinton’s use of a private email server as secretary of state, instead of offering her a reprieve, some supporters lamented, perhaps things would have been different.

And now, as Clinton contends with daily disclosures from the hacked messages of top campaign aides — missives that have reinforced the central progressive criticisms of her bid, including her coziness with Wall Street — some of Sanders’ admirers have been compelled to consider again what might have been.

With a couple of breaks and more fortunate timing, many of them believe, the rumpled socialist really, truly could have been president.

“I think they should have put the damn emails out before the primaries were over,” said RoseAnn DeMoro, executive director of National Nurses United, a union that campaigned heavily for Sanders. “Bernie could have won the election, and that’s the most irritating and painful thing. It would have made a world of difference.

“Now we are going to have a dynamic status quo,” DeMoro predicted. “It’s going to look like change. But it’s not change.”

Not all Sanders supporters believe an earlier release would have altered the election.The emails — disseminated by WikiLeaks from the account of John D. Podesta, Clinton’s campaign chairman, who has attributed the hack to Russian intelligence officials — have created a relatively modest headache for Clinton as she nears Election Day, providing occasional fodder for Donald Trump as Democrats condemn the apparent foreign interference in a U.S. election.

But the content of the messages, while a measure short of astonishing so far, almost certainly could have upended a primary campaign premised largely on Clinton’s place in an increasingly progressive and populist Democratic Party.

In excerpts from paid speeches to financial institutions and corporate audiences, Clinton embraced unfettered international trade and offered praise for a budget-balancing plan that would have required cuts to Social Security. She spoke of the need for “a public and a private position” on politically sensitive issues. And she allowed that her family’s growing wealth had left her “kind of far removed” from the experience of the middle class.

“I feel like I’m channeling Captain Renault from ‘Casablanca,’” said Jonathan Tasini, a former union leader who challenged Clinton in her Senate primary in New York in 2006. “I’m shocked — shocked! — that Hillary Clinton has a close relationship with Wall Street.”

It is a familiar, if still painful, sensation for Sanders backers, even as most of his voters drift toward Clinton, some more haltingly than others.

For at least a handful, the emails have especially rankled given the seeming free fall of Trump, which has bolstered their view that Sanders’ proudly left-wing politics would not have precluded victory in the general election.

On the heels of leaked emails over the summer from the Democratic National Committee, which suggested favoritism toward Clinton among party leaders, and persistent complaints that Sanders’ bid was not taken seriously enough from the start, Sanders allies say the latest revelations have heightened tensions that are likely to persist if Clinton is elected.

“There is still this real disconnect between her and working people. That’s very difficult to see,” Winnie Wong, a founder of People for Bernie, a group of Sanders supporters, said of Clinton. “The people really have to get together and make sure some of these agenda items on the platform become a reality.”

DeMoro, of the nurses’ union, expressed outrage over an email sent to Podesta by Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, who vowed to combat the nurses’ “high and mighty sanctimonious conduct.” (Podesta replied, “Thanks.”)

“We are going to have to fight and organize like we would against a Republican, if the emails ring true,” DeMoro said.

On the campaign trail, Hillary Clinton has insisted that she is fully committed to progressive policies, frequently trumpeting a college tuition plan that absorbed elements of Sanders’, among other agenda items.

And Sanders himself has suppressed any latent frustrations, continuing to campaign aggressively for Clinton and declining to dwell on the emails.

“The job of the progressive movement now is to look forward, not backward,” he said in a statement after the speech excerpts were revealed. “No matter what Secretary Clinton may have said years ago behind closed doors, what’s important today is that millions of people stand up and demand that the Democratic Party implement the most progressive platform in the history of our country.”

Some supporters, too, have cast doubt on whether the emails would have affected Sanders’ chances had they surfaced before the primaries.

Dan Cantor, national director of the Working Families Party, which supported Sanders and has since endorsed Clinton, said the emails would have been unlikely to dent Clinton’s support among the black voters who helped lift her to the Democratic nomination.

“Hillary’s firewall was based above all on strong support from African-American leaders and voters, and they weren’t in the dark about her relationships on Wall Street,” Cantor said. “Bernie did something incredible that will have long-lasting effects, but Clinton won fair and square.”

4 responses to “Sanders backers rue an opportunity lost”

  1. CEI says:

    Bernie and his wide-eyed supporters got railroaded by the big money crowd whom Hillary Clinton is forever beholden to. The Wikileaks releases prove that beyond a shadow of a doubt. That is why we were admonished by the Clinton News Network (CNN) that it is illegal to view Wikileaks documents.

    • kuroiwaj says:

      IRT CEI, fully agree with your post. Now, it’s the Sanders supporters who must make a decision if they will support Ms Hillary in the voting booth.

  2. davcon says:

    Bernie might have flipped however is supporters haven’t, as much as they dislike Trump they hate Hilliar more and this is why Trump will win. They would much rather stay home than vote for Clinton and what she stands for. Obama said it all, a no vote for Hilliar is a vote for Trump.

  3. AhiPoke says:

    I’m a capitalist through and through but given a choice between Clinton, Trump and Sanders I would very possibly vote for Sanders. I find it both amazing and disgusting to witness the levels to which the DNC and the Clinton campaign influenced the primaries toward Clinton. Now those same groups are using every trick/scheme, legal or not, to sway the general election. I’m not a Trump supporter but I still find it distasteful to witness our political process.

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