Hillary Clinton
Related: About this forumSlate: "Bernie Blew It"
Still, it was a risky move. Whatever influence or leverage Sanders had was tied to his voters. As long as they stuck with himand didnt move to Clintonhe could make demands and win concessions on items like the Democratic Partys platform, a key object of his rhetoric over the past month. But if his voters moved without his endorsement, either pushed by fear of Trump or support from other Democrats, then the value of his support would fall accordingly.
Which is what happened. In his nonconcession speech, Sanders told supporters their major political task was to make certain that Donald Trump is defeated and defeated badly. It turns out that was the message that landed.
In the most recent poll from ABC News and the Washington Post, Clinton leads Trump 51 percent to 39 percent, expanding her previous lead by 5 points, as Trump has seen a complete collapse in his support. And whats driving the move toward Clinton? Democrats and independents who supported Bernie Sanders. In May, 20 percent of Sanders supporters said they would back Trump over Clinton in the general election. In June, that number is down to 8 percent. Overall, 81 percent of Sanders backers have rallied to Clinton, surpassing the 74 percent of Clinton supporters in 2008 who fell in behind Barack Obama. By any measure, the Democratic Party is unified.
http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/politics/2016/06/bernie_sanders_blew_it.html
Cha
(305,406 posts)Mahalo, SunSeeker~
Jitter65
(3,089 posts)SunSeeker
(53,656 posts)Thanks, Cha!
Cha
(305,406 posts)for me!
http://www.democraticunderground.com/1107171459
You're,
beachbum bob
(10,437 posts)so called "revolution"....he could have been on stage with hillary in Cincinnati.....instead he chooses to fade into nothingness....
KitSileya
(4,035 posts)If Clinton wins, people will think him ridiculous. A grown man refusing to accept he was beaten by a woman is laughable. - and contemptible. If Trump wins (God forbid), he'll get much of the blame. He'll be compared to Clinton'08, and his pettiness will not do him any favors.
Haveadream
(1,630 posts)Walk away
(9,494 posts)LiberalFighter
(53,467 posts)His experience was limited to Vermont that involved a small state and more importantly very little competition. Also, guided by advisors that had no experience or involved in failed national campaigns. The experience he gained from this campaign will be lost because he will not be a national candidate in 2020 or after.
Politicub
(12,287 posts)Bernie only had bare majorities in caucus states. While he could draw a crowd, it wasn't enough to win the nomination.
I am grateful he introduced some important topics into the national dialogue. And I agree with this article that he held out too long on conceding. But that's armchair quarterbacking. Who really knows. He could have conceded after Calif. and still fizzled out.