Inside Bernie-world's war on Beto O'Rourke

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The Sanders 2020 Primary Strategy
Marcus H. JohnsonDec 24
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Since his convincing primary loss to Hillary Clinton in 2016, Senator Bernie Sanders has been planning for 2020. His closest campaign advisors teamed up to create Our Revolution, an organization which operates as an extension of his political will. Sanders allies also created The Sanders Institute, which acts as a sort of jobs program for a few loyalists and family members. These institutions serve two purposes — to help build a political coalition loyal to Sanders, and to provide organizational and logistical support for 2020. Their political performance is largely irrelevant; it is about building an infrastructure for the next big Sanders run. However, Our Revolution, along with scattered 2020 polling, did provide us with some important information that will be pertinent to the next primary election:

1. Our Revolution (and the associated Justice Democrats) did not flip a single House seat from red to blue.

2. Sanders’ base of support has shrunk considerably

3. Young voters are increasingly looking at other candidates

The first point is critical because it cuts to the heart of one of Sanders’ biggest arguments — that his brand of populism will flip the white working class. If the narrative was correct, one would expect a number of Sanders-backed candidates to beat Republicans using his platform. That didn’t happen, and it means the argument about whether Sanders can expand the Electoral College map is largely over. The second point refers to Sanders own base of support. He claimed around 40% of the popular vote in 2016. Many supporters and pundits thought that his support was solid, and that this number would only increase as more people heard his message. Instead, the opposite has happened. 2020 polling has consistently found Sanders’ 2020 support in the teens. That means his base from 2016 has essentially been cut in half, at best. Not exactly what a supposed front runner wants to see. The third point is about Sanders’ strongest demographic the last time around — young voters. Sanders knows that losing these voters would spell the end of any run, as he won nearly 70 percent of the under 30 vote in several states. This time around, polling has Joe Biden slightly outperforming Sanders with voters aged 18–34. Texas Congressman Beto O’Rourke helped to increase early voting from Texans under the age of 30 by over 500 percent, and a potential Presidential run would likely see him siphon off even more young voters from the Sanders camp.

Putting 2016 In Context

To understand the 2020 environment, we also need to put Sanders’ 2016 performance in context. Sanders’ performance in 2016 was bolstered by several factors:

1. He did extremely well with young voters

2. He won big with independents

3. He dominated in whiter caucus states

4. He won white voters overall

Each one of those factors shifts significantly in a hypothetical 2020 contest where the field is crowded and Sanders is no longer the unknown anti-establishment outsider. The youth voter seems to be fine choosing Biden over Sanders, and the number of caucus states will shrink considerably for the next primary race. The party becomes less white each year too. Even if Sanders won independents at a similar rate, it wouldn’t be nearly enough to win with other factors in the political environment shifting against his favor.

To me, all of this suggests that, despite the media narrative of the past several years, Sanders’ rise has not been about a large ideological shift in the Democratic Party. Instead, he over performed in the 2016 primary mainly because he was the sole opposition candidate. This allowed him to consolidate support as the “outsider.” This played to his advantage with white conservative Democrats in place like West Virginia and in the mountain west states, because Sanders was viewed as someone outside of the multiracial, urban, and suburban coalition that now dominates the party. It also played to his advantage with young voters who are always looking for the next inspiring, charismatic, “outsider” candidate. However, his 2016 performance has not led to a shift in the views of the white working class. One of Sanders’ (and allies) biggest talking points in 2016 was his supposed ability to improve the Democrats’ performance with the white working class. His populist vision was supposed to be more tempting than what Republicans were offering. 2018 put that argument to rest, as Sanders remains underwater with white voters personally and his political organizations were unable to flip any red districts at the Congressional level. I could talk about Black voters, and how a UMass poll has Biden nearly doubling Sanders’ support among that demographic (he’s also behind Warren there). I could talk about how the increasingly Black Democratic primaries in the southern states decided the last two primary contests, and how they are likely to do the same for the foreseeable future. But that would be too easy, and it is something that I’ve talked about at length for the past 18 months. So instead I’ll get to the point.

The Sanders 2020 Primary Strategy

The Sanders team might have an exaggerated view of Sanders’ political stature and his importance in the party. They very well may believe that they can defeat the rest of the field. Their actions show that they are not stupid, they can read the polls and the political moment. They understand that many of the factors that boosted Sanders in 2016 (youth voters, caucuses, etc.) are now moving against him. That is why they have engaged in an all-out war against any candidate that is viewed as a political threat. The tactics are the same regardless of the political enemy; brand them as a corporate traitor who hates the poor. The tactics that have become famous for being deployed against Beto O’Rourke have previously been used against Kamala Harris, Cory Booker, Joe Biden, Elizabeth Warren, Kirsten Gillibrand, and even Oprah Winfrey. Their record doesn’t matter, and any supposed misdeed is sufficient because, well, they’re not Bernie. The overall strategy is essentially this:

1. Drive up the negatives of Sanders’ biggest political threats by a variety of means

2. Stay close to the top in a crowded primary race

3. Go to a brokered convention and demand the super delegates vote for Sanders

We’ve already seen the first point, and we should expect it to get much worse as the primary season nears. Any candidate who can win Black voters or young voters will be viciously attacked and called a neoliberal, corporatist, shill…blah blah you’ve heard it before. The second point is to remain close to the top of the primary race. If Sanders has rock solid support of 25 percent or something, this might seem like a possibility. However, the Democratic primaries are proportional, not winner-take-all like on the Republican side. In addition, the race will not remain crowded for long, and by South Carolina there will likely only be two to three viable candidates. Sanders’ level of support is probably closer to 15 than 25, which means that as candidates drop out, that percentage of support will not be sufficient to be a plurality in a primary. For the sake of the argument, let’s assume that this works and he can make it to a brokered convention where the super delegates are forced to decide. The majority of the delegates remain party loyalists who will have seen this entire strategy play out. Many hold disdain for Sanders after 2016, and this strategy will only deepen their emotion and their resolve to see him fail. How will he convince these people to swing a close election in his favor? We’ve already established that he doesn’t expand the Electoral College map and that his pull on the youth vote is waning. Why would these party loyalists vote against their conscious and potentially even damage their standing with the Democratic loyalist base to throw the election to someone who they don’t even like, and who has been working to (in their eyes) damage the party?

The Sanders’ strategy is something like walking a tightrope on the windiest day of the year. There are so many variables going against you that it probably is going to end badly. There’s no evidence that going negative this early works at all, as Joe Biden’s favorables have surpassed Sanders fairly easily. There’s also no guarantee he can stay close to the top of the race as the primary thins out even if he has a solid 15%, as he clearly hasn’t been able to expand his base of support in the past two years and his name ID is near universal. The superdelegate stuff was silly in 2016 and it will look even worse in 2020 (Especially after all of his complaining about them, to the point of a rule change in his favor!). This isn’t even talking about Sanders biggest weakness and the most important region in the primary, Black voters in the southern states. The strategy itself is beyond a long shot, but if Sanders’ allies are going down this road now it means they don’t believe they can win a conventional race. It’s like the less talented basketball team who tries to win by being physical and slowing down the game. It is particularly dangerous for him as well because it only makes party loyalists and core Democratic voters harden their opposition to him personally over time. There’s a reason why you can’t remember the last Democratic President who went nuclear on all their opposition during the primary. It’s because, even for politicians far more talented than Bernie Sanders, it doesn’t work.
 

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so?

employees can donate
If that posts said Marco Rubio you'd be screaming your lungs off at his corruption. However, since it's a democrat now it's "so?"

Y'all have to make up your minds. Do donations from fossil fuel corporations corrupt politicians or not? If the answer is no then let's drop all arguments directed at Republicans for being in the pocket of fossil fuels, the NRA, etc
 

88m3

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How many people support Medicare 4 all?

I'd imagine tens of millions, perhaps a hundred million maybe more? I don't know. I support it. I think Americans deserve access to the best medical care in the world.

Is that because of Bernie?
 

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I'd imagine tens of millions, perhaps a hundred million maybe more? I don't know. I support it.

Is that because of Bernie?

Arguably, yes. I don't remember Democrats pushing it and certainly wasn't Republicans who put that idea forward and pushed it.
 

88m3

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Arguably, yes. I don't remember Democrats pushing it and certainly wasn't Republicans who put that idea forward and pushed it.

That's pretty weird. You seem like one of those Ivory Tower types who think people are too stupid to think for themselves though.


All of the people struggling with healthcare and insurance in this country and see the benefits of medicare in their day to day lives directly, through family, and friends...

Seems a bit forced, Friend.
 

88m3

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It's quite literally his bill:



idk man that seems like a bit of a leap


I'm happy he's putting the idea out there again but it isn't really some new idea and it has broad support. Isn't Bernie just attaching himself to something that is already popular? I'm trying not to be cynical
 

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idk man that seems like a bit of a leap


I'm happy he's putting the idea out there again but it isn't really some new idea and it has broad support. Isn't Bernie just attaching himself to something that is already popular? I'm trying not to be cynical
No, you're not understanding what I'm saying. The actual Medicare 4 all legislation is quite literally his. The idea isn't new because Medicare 4 all is a version of single payer. But the actual nuts and bolts (financing, cost containment, market levers etc) is the product of the Sanders team.

Two hours before the Democratic presidential debate in Charleston, South Carolina, on Sunday night, Sen. Bernie Sanders (D-VT) released a detailed plan explaining how he'd pay for federally run, single-payer health insurance for all Americans — "Medicare for all," as he calls it. You can read the plan here: Bernie Sanders has released his Medicare-for-all plan. Here’s how he pays for it.

The plan follows a week of attacks from Hillary Clinton's campaign against Sanders's health care thinking, assailing Sanders for not explaining how he'd pay for the idea, and for seeming to renege on a promise to release the plan before the Iowa caucuses. The release responds to both those criticisms.

It also addressed fears raised by Clinton and her team about the American Health Security Act of 2013, an earlier single-payer endorsed by Sanders before his presidential run in which the federal government would facilitate the creation of state-administered programs. Clinton and her allies alleged that this opened up the plan to interference from Republican governors, like the many who've refused to expand Medicaid or open exchanges under the Affordable Care Act. By making his latest proposal federally administered, Sanders makes it invulnerable to this particular objection.

The senate bill is here and has 17 co-sponsors:
17 Senators Introduce Medicare for All Act

Jon Conyers is the only other person in congress who has been pushing single payer as hard. Here is a bit on the house version of a single payer bill:
That plan has now gained the backing of 60 percent of House Democrats, the most support a single-payer plan has ever enjoyed in Congress, and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) is planning a national campaign for a similar proposal in early September.

But by its author’s own admission, the House single-payer plan — Rep. John Conyers’s (D-MI) HR 676 — may not be ready for legislative primetime. For instance, it contains only a skeletal outline of how to raise the trillions of dollars needed to achieve the universal, free coverage it wants to give every American.

But the bill is the sudden rage among the Democratic base and its congressional officials, aligning the party with a piece of legislation whose scope and speed would likely be unrivaled by any recent law in the Western world, according to four health care experts.

Calling it “Medicare-for-all” actually undersells the ambitions of the Conyers bill. Medicare involves significant cost sharing, wherein the patient covers deductibles and premiums; Conyers’s bill would give everyone Medicare, but in doing so also transform Medicare into something much closer to Medicaid.

“Many people refer to single-payer as ‘Medicare-for-all,’ but it doesn’t actually operate like Medicare,” said Larry Levitt of the Kaiser Foundation. “Medicare is the part of our health care system that is single-payer-like, so it’s how people understand it.”
What Rep. John Conyers’s sweeping single-payer health care bill would actually do

This is the entire reason he ran the race and people still do not get this. If there was no Bernie campaign there would be no Medicare 4 all plan, because there would be nobody on a national level raising awareness. If what I'm saying still doesn't make sense look at the issue Ro Khanna is having right now.
 

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If that posts said Marco Rubio you'd be screaming your lungs off at his corruption. However, since it's a democrat now it's "so?"

Y'all have to make up your minds. Do donations from fossil fuel corporations corrupt politicians or not? If the answer is no then let's drop all arguments directed at Republicans for being in the pocket of fossil fuels, the NRA, etc
the type of donor matters, and you don't really know that.

Beto is in El Paso.

Bernie is in Vermont.

Some times yall are going to have to sit back and really ask yourself how this stuff works before you move forward.

I don't even support Beto like that, but Sanders and his fans have to address his literal technical flaws and stop lionizing him to the point of obsession at the feet of every contender who could step in the ring.

Oh, and Beto is a democrat.

Bernie will have had, in 2020, SIX years to join the party.

SIX.
 

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No, you're not understanding what I'm saying. The actual Medicare 4 all legislation is quite literally his. The idea isn't new because Medicare 4 all is a version of single payer. But the actual nuts and bolts (financing, cost containment, market levers etc) is the product of the Sanders team.



The senate bill is here and has 17 co-sponsors:
17 Senators Introduce Medicare for All Act

Jon Conyers is the only other person in congress who has been pushing single payer as hard. Here is a bit on the house version of a single payer bill:


This is the entire reason he ran the race and people still do not get this. If there was no Bernie campaign there would be no Medicare 4 all plan, because there would be nobody on a national level raising awareness. If what I'm saying still doesn't make sense look at the issue Ro Khanna is having right now.
No it's not.

Bernie loves doing shyt for show and for clout.

Warren is the type to actually propose bills that get passed.

But doing work isn't Bernie's style, which is why he appears to be popular.

People act like Bernie's bills are actually approved laws, and its striking how little work he achieves on a technical and literal basis.

Acting like Bernie is the reason for Medicare for All is stupid. Obama literally wants universal health care...but wanting something isn't the same as GETTING something. You have to do the legislative work to get things done. Its more than just waving a banner.

Trump controlled congress for two years and couldn't even get all the shyt he wanted done. In fact, his control of Congress was greater than Obama's was because the filibuster rules changed.

Bernie is a senator and should act like it if he wants things to actually get done.
 
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