j4remi wrote:Phish Tank wrote:j4remi wrote:
No the belief has nothing to do with black voters here. It's just based on the margins of victory in these 4 states on Super Tuesday.
Texas:
Biden 725,562
Bernie 626,330
Warren, 239,237
Maine:
Biden 68,729
Bernie 66,826
Warren 32,055
Minnesota:
Biden 287,553
Bernie 222,431
Warren 114,674
Massachusetts:
Biden 473,861
Bernie 376,990
Warren 303,864
Bernie already polled as Warren voters' second choice comfortably above Biden without her endorsement. And that just tracks, compare his the proposals of the three and it's obvious who aligns closely with who. You take Warren out, add her endorsement and three of those states look guaranteed for Bernie to me, with Texas becoming an much closer race.
That's the numbers side. That cuts into Biden's positive momentum and the mass of positive media he got (especially if Bernie takes Texas). The race looks completely different that way.
And I think Bernie could have respected norms and asked Clyburn for an endorsement, but I don't think it would have changed much. It was poor etiquette, but neutral in terms of electoral impact.
I also don't think the 30% idea looks like a bad bet going into Super Tuesday. Biden was in 4th. Pete was in 2nd. I don't think it's easy to predict Pete dropping out to endorse Biden but Warren sticking around with no chance. If anything, it looked like the opposite was the more likely scenario. She had to take a Super PAC just to stick around because her funding was dried up and Pete had more reason to stay in and test the water.
fam, you know this better than I do, but what do you think the split was with Warren voters siding for Bernie vs Biden?
It broke north of 60/40 without a dropout and endorsement. I think the numbers swing much harder in favor of Bernie nationally under that scenario. Warren's competence as a planner is her big selling point, if she expressed support and confidence in Bernie; her supporters would know she's got a role in his Administration and swing HEAVY in his direction.
This was going to be my question as well, so I'm glad you answered it for Phish.
I'm not sure I'm subscribing to the logic that a Warren endorsement would have solidified things for Bernie though.
In December, the polling on who was the 2nd choice for Warren voters showed the split like this:
Bernie - 30%
Biden - 20%
Pete - 15%
So based on the result of Warren dropping out, Bernie slightly overperformed with Warren voters. If she removed herself from Super Tuesday, and Bernie wins 2 out of the 4 close states that you referenced above, what does that change other than the narrative, slightly?
Biden still ends the night as the delegate leader, and still racks up his wins on Super Tuesday II.
I totally agree that Liz should have dropped when everyone else did and give Bernie a clear shot at Biden, even if it probably doesn't change much. Her staying in was pointless, and once it became clear the party was coalescing to stop Bernie, she should have done her part as a progressive. I do think she was right to withhold her endorsement though, strictly speaking from the POV of her own ambitions to steer the direction of the party down the line.
Getting back to the Clyburn thing, I didn't mean that Bernie should have given a token request for the endorsement. I mean Bernie should have pursued it all out and performed some coalition building to secure it. He was never going anywhere in the primary without the black vote. That was a major takeaway from 2016, IMO.
I think that would have taken his campaign from conditional circumstances (needing the field to stay crowded, relying on the youth vote, hoping new voters show up) to something that has a real foundation.
Was such a thing possible? I don't know, but I doubt Bernie made the effort.