MrDollarBills wrote:Hello Brooklyn wrote:Can we please stop spreading the myth that the DNC rigged the primary against Bernie?
He lost by 12% of the vote and had a complete inability to connect with African American or Hispanic voters.
And can anyone point to anything the DNC did to actually make him lose?
He was a one issue candidate that only connected with young people and rural white voters. That's why he lost. Not because of the DNC.
I'm a black voter who voted for Sanders in the primary, I would have also voted for Sanders in the general election without hesitation because while some of his platform i thought was a bit idealistic and i did not really like his tax policies because I'd get hit in my pockets, I believed that he was genuine in his message and would work for the greater good of everyone, and not just the wealthy elite, he was the only candidate that was interested in the general welfare of everyone in America.
The problem (in my opinion) wasn't his message or Sanders himself, because he connected with me as a black voter in his 30s just fine, but the problem was with the urban and rural voters themselves who don't pay attention to politics until it's election season and that the baby boomer/generation X black voters have this really odd love affair with the Clinton family when they were responsible for irreparable damage to the black american population with their policies.
Calling him a one issue candidate...I'm not really clear on what you mean especially when Clinton really wasn't saying much of anything aside from lame pandering. He addressed many issues, especially ones that directly impacted minorities including the prison for profit system. Regarding the DNC, well them getting hacked exposed the pro Clinton agenda of that see you next tuesday Debbie Wasserman Schultz and her cronies, and also the whole super delegate nonsense which basically ensures the corporate establishment's candidate will have an advantage. I think that's where the problem is. Me personally, I think that a lot of minority democrat voters were just going with who they knew, or were voting for Clinton based on gender reasons.
I don't think that's true at all.
Sanders may have connected with you, but he didn't connect with the vast majority of African American voters. Sanders didn't talk about racism in his economic plans. He didn't talk about racial justice either.
These were central components of Clinton's platform. He started talking about it later on after he started doing so poorly in the early states. But it was never a central part of his message.
Furthermore, I think it's wrong to say Gen X/Baby Boomer African American voters don't know what's going on, while older rural voters do.
In actuality, I think uneducated white voters in states like West Virginia and Kentucky (where Sanders did well) know less of what's going on.
Amongst educated voters in place like New York, California, Texas, Clinton killed Sanders. And these are the people who pay the most attention to politics.
Sanders was a one issue candidate because he only talked about income inequality. He didn't understand foreign policy very well, his Health Care plan was completely unrealistic, and whenever he veered off of economics he didn't seem to know what he was talking about.
Obviously DWS was pro-Clinton. Bernie Sanders didn't even become a Democrat until he decided he wanted to run for President. It's only natural for the Democratic establishment to prefer Clinton over someone they feel was using them to run for higher office. That doesn't mean they did anything to actually tip the election in Clinton's favor. In reality, Bernie did make it much closer than everyone expected. But at no point did he actually have any chance of beating Clinton.
He did horribly among Hispanic and African American voters every time. The only states he did well in were more conservative 90%+ white states.
I don't understand why you think minorities "just voted for who they knew" and poor white voters took the time to get to know the candidates.
In the same way that Sanders spoke to young people and rural white voters, Clinton's message appealed to educated whites and minorities.