Kanyewest wrote:dckingsfan wrote:I think we can agree that Bernie would have needed to beat Hillary in the Democratic primaries to become the candidate - and he wasn't able to do that. I think we can see that Bernie isn't all that either - he is currently 3rd and sinking. He was always only popular with his following.
This is my only point of disagreement with your above post. Hillary did beat Sanders. But Sanders favorables/unfavorables were better than Hilary Clinton (IIRC no one as high as Sanders who was in the 70s). I had no problem with people who voted for Hillary Clinton if she indeed represented their values. But it was always going to be a more uphill battle for Clinton compared Sanders and probably any other generic candidate, at least that's what some experts were saying prior to the 2016 election.
Ultimately, it was a perfect storm. The states that Hillary needed to win like Michigan and Wisconsin were the ones where Sanders did better than Clinton. Clinton piled up her primary lead in states that ultimately did not matter (Alabama, Texas, California). Not to mention 3rd party candidates like Jill Stein who seemed to draw votes away from Clinton (and may have taken money from Russia).
Overall though, the DNC could have done a better job encouraging more candidates to run. They seemed to treat non-Clinton candidates rather unfairly in the debates which may have discouraged others from entering the debates and the optics were bad with DWS being the head of the DNC, who was Hillary's campaign manager in 2008. Not sure why the Democrats dismissed Howard Dean back in 2008 as the Democrats managed to lose the house, senate, and presidency over the next 8 years.
You hit the nail on the head. It probably shouldn't have been either Bernie or Clinton.





















