2016 Postmortem
Related: About this forumHorsey: President Sanders? Bernie would have beaten Trump
President Sanders? Bernie would have beaten TrumpDavid Horsey
Los Angeles Times
Trump won the election by prevailing in the Rust Belt states of Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania that, together, gave him 46 electoral votes. In Michigan, he edged Hillary Clinton by just three-tenths of a percent. In Wisconsin, the margin was eight-tenths. In Pennsylvania there was a slightly larger gap of 1.2%.
All three of those states usually lean toward the Democratic candidate. This time around, most working-class white voters many of whom voted for Barack Obama in the last two elections saw Clinton as the incarnation of a political establishment that was indifferent to their struggles. They were won over by Trumps boasts that he would protect American jobs and challenge the influence of Wall Street. Who else in the 2016 campaign made similar promises, with far more conviction? Bernie Sanders, of course.
With Bernie, there would have been no Bill and no email controversy, no Benghazi brouhaha and no last-minute letter from the FBI director. Also, no misogyny a disturbing but real factor in Clintons loss.
Finally, there was an enthusiasm gap among younger voters who were a key demographic in Obamas victories. They would not have stayed home on election day or wasted their vote on the Green Party candidate if Sanders had been the Democratic Party nominee. Despite his white hair and stooped shoulders, Sanders was adored by a legion of millennials who respected his ideological consistency and responded to his challenge to become part of a movement for change.
no_hypocrisy
(48,687 posts)democratic nominee? That Russia wanted her to suffer a greater humiliation of losing the General Election instead of the nomination?
karynnj
(59,924 posts)The reality was that the party and the media was pretty much set on HRC as the Democratic nominee since at least November 2012. Her numbers were prohibitive and were a major deterent to anyone getting into the race -- until the email story broke in March 2015 and Clinton handled it badly. Her book tour the preceding summer had not gone all that well -- and there were missteps, but her favorables were still quite good.
I suspect O'Malley might have entered hoping to gain name recognition or even a VP slot. Bernie entered but even in Vermont most people thought it was to push HRC left in the debates. It was the fact that HRC looked to have such a solid lock on the nomination that likely deterred more mainstream opponents. Biden seemed ready to reluctantly commit only after she stumbled on the email issue.
The email issue at this point is complicated. Everything from the undefensible Comey letters to the exaggeration of the classified email/national security issue cloud the REAL issue. The real issue is that her work email should have been archived and available to the SD for FOIA requests and Congressional inquiries. These requests started before she left the SD. She had to know they would continue. Even if it wanted to, the Obama administration could not have stonewalled on the requested email for 4 years without it becoming a negative story.
At the point that HRC left, she knew there was no scandal in anything she did as Secretary of State that was in any work email. Had she left the SD all the messages on a thumb drive, they could have responded much more quickly to all these requests. The Republicans and paritsan news organizations would have been dissappointed because nothing that would have been released that matched what they asked for would have been the least bit scandalous. Many Benghazi hearings were pushed forward waiting for emails. That whole issue would have been wrapped up probably even in 2013. There almost certainly would not have been any email scandal.
Even at least one HRC inner circle person would have agreed with this. In the leaked Podesta email, there was a comment, I think from slightly after March 2015 that speaking of the Clinton email problems spoke in very negative terms that someone should have gotten these things to the SD a year and a half earlier - she spoke very negatively and viciously of anyone who might have recommended Clinton doing what she did.
I would suggest that three things made HRC the nominee. One was that many in 2008 really were excited to have both her and Obama as potential nominees. (I phone banked for Obama in teh primary in NJ and the question I most dreaded in calls was when some eagarly said thatthey wanted both -- and suggested that Clinton/Obama was more likely than Obama/Clinton. ) Even many who supported Obama in 2008, noted that she had worked hard for Obama as SoS and he was behind her. There was a very strong case to be made for her as a nominee. The second was that it was pretty clear that the party - up to Obama - was putting their thumbs on the scale for her -- likely detering more mainstream opponents including early on Biden, who as VP might have claimed that role. The third - which was briefly seen when Biden's name was mentioned was that any Democrats KNEW they would face long knifes if they challenged Clinton.
Another factor was timing. The email problem and her reaction were directly responsible for her favorables falling and negative perceptions on her honesty gaining. The first hint of the private server was in March 2015. I would guess that Obama and others gave a signal that she should be given time and space to get past this and that they underestimated how this problem resonated more as it confirmed existing memes about Clinton being secretive and hiding stuff (see Rose Law Firm) Bernie entered the race in May 2015, but was considered to be a "Kuchinich like" candidate.
By summer 2015 was still an overwhelming favorite. Then and in Fall 2015, it would have taken a candidate with extremely high name recognition and few if any negatives. That messiah did not exist. Not to diminish Sanders, in teh pprimaries - especially the early ones, he became the way to vote "not Clinton". I suspect that many were stunned when Sanders got 46% of the pledged delegates. This has led many to suggest that a more mainstream version of Bernie could have won.
The fact is that Warren or anyone else who could have been the better Bernie (for lack of any other phrase) did not relish what in late 2014 and early 2015 when they could have started to gain the needed support looked like a tough fight that they would ultimately lose. (This includes even Biden at that point.) Jumping in mid 2015, after the emails, would have looked like a vote of no confidence in Clinton -- while she was still the most likely to get the nomination. (Not for nothing did many speak of Kennedy primarying Carter in 1980, blaming Kennedy for the Carter lose even though it was Carter's low approval that motivated Kennedy.) Biden, dealing with the death of his beloved son, opted not to jump in. Remember Clinton was the favorite not just for the nomination, but the Presidency at that point.
Note that NOTHING here suggests anything else other than the Democarts nominating an obvious candidate with many positives, who also had negatives she could not erase. Throw in, the country was looking for change and rejected not just Clinton, but the obvious republican nominee, Bush. Remember when many bemoaned that the election could be Bush Clinton again?
Jim Lane
(11,175 posts)Hillary Clinton should have learned the lesson of Watergate -- that the coverup is often the biggest problem. That's even more true here where, as far as I know, she had nothing significant to cover up. The public had no right to see personal emails about yoga classes or the like. Nevertheless, she should have recognized that, once she made FOIA compliance dependent upon material on a private server, her mistake cost her some of her privacy.
If Clinton had handled the email issue the way you suggest, I think she would today be President-Elect, regardless of anything Putin could do.
Of course, hindsight is 20-20 -- but the Watergate lesson about the coverup was being drawn before email was even invented.
JHan
(10,173 posts)The email "Scandal" is part of why the Media failed.
That our candidates must always be perfect in their judgments - to prevent RW attacks against them - is dehumanizing and not realistic in my view.
Our politicians will make mistakes, they will mess up. It's for us to judge the serious mess ups from the trivial, the minor nonsense from the major, bearing in mind that Politicians today face unprecedented levels of scrutiny.
The Political Media lost its mind and the country along with it.
A congressional arm of the government abused its power in the Benghazi Witch Hunt- that is the real outrage. And this abuse has set a precedent.
And a non-scandal was turned into a scandal to destroy a candidate.
I think if it wasn't Benghazi and Emails, it would be something else.
dionysus
(26,467 posts)They released embarrassing emails and a lot of bullshit propaganda... i don't see what they'd have done to directly change votes.
jfern
(5,204 posts)LOL, that wouldn't hurt Bernie.
NWCorona
(8,541 posts)Until election night.
The truth is we will never know what would have happened... And it's time to hang that hat up.
asuhornets
(2,425 posts)SidDithers
(44,249 posts)but keep trying.
Bernie Sanders Would Have Lost the Election in a Landslide
Sid
BeyondGeography
(40,003 posts)which would have raised everyone's taxes except poor families. Even though the increases were 2 percent on the low end, it was an increase. A lot of people wouldn't have liked that at all, even if it was designed to pay for HC and education benefits...down the road, pending congressional approval, when the Republicans magically get out of the way, as in, yeah, ok. All many would hear was tax hike.
Congress is a problem. That's why Bernie always mentioned the need for a political revolution along with his promises. That played fine in the primaries, but in the GE, with Trump mocking him in ways that would have surely gotten under his skin by the way, he would have been tested on the big stage in ways that HRC didn't, because she wanted his voters.
Anyway, this article is a very superficial treatment.
radical noodle
(8,491 posts)who perhaps had already paid for their kids to go to college and are now on Medicare.
OKNancy
(41,832 posts)The GOP didn't touch Sanders, but they would have. They had a dossier ready to use against him.
Back to his rape fantasies and so much more
Dr Hobbitstein
(6,568 posts)R B Garr
(17,377 posts)deception. We're talking about 70,000 voters spread over 3 states who decided this election, and by looking at the actual results, they were Bernie or Bust holdouts and 3rd party voters. End of story.
Response to R B Garr (Reply #8)
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R B Garr
(17,377 posts)You should be the one to quit it already. No one is going to pussyfoot around with Bernie and call him anything but a socialist, despite what he wants to call himself. How naïve of you, and how very gullible.
Response to R B Garr (Reply #11)
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R B Garr
(17,377 posts)And who hasn't heard his empty, repetitive spiel for a whole year during a very divisive primary. The Midwest isn't going to vote for a socialist. which is what he calls himself.
And you might want to try reality for a change. The 70,000-something people who decided this election chose the Wall Street BILLIONAIRE.
Bernie lost the primary, too. His message lost. Quit spamming old irrelevant propaganda.
Response to R B Garr (Reply #24)
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Plucketeer
(12,882 posts)I'd like to see if what they say about ignorance being blissful is really true.
R B Garr
(17,377 posts)Bernie won the primary. Good times, eh? And the Midwest just loves socialists. U betcha. Lol.
Plucketeer
(12,882 posts)What decade of the 20th century are you caught in?
R B Garr
(17,377 posts)DrDan
(20,411 posts)you can argue the variants, but those words would have been played over and over and over . . . and they would have resonated throughout the country - particularly the SE and MW.
Response to DrDan (Reply #16)
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DrDan
(20,411 posts)Lonusca
(202 posts)WI and MI in the primary - how much worse would he have done than HRC in the election in those states?
R B Garr
(17,377 posts)going on to upset Hillary from the GOP and the Sanders' crowds. I just saw a post that reminded me of the open primaries and all the nonsense that accompanied them. Plus, Michigan ran out of ballots early in the day in a heavy Clinton county, and they continued to show election problems in the General.
But Donald promised folks he would bring their grandfather' jobs back, and some people will believe anything.
Lonusca
(202 posts)he beat her in an open primary, which is more like a general election.
She still doesn't win the general with MI and WI, so Sanders would need to win a state she didn't. But, do people really think it is impossible Sanders would win a state HRC didn't?
lapucelle
(19,530 posts)
"Clinton did do better than Sanders in closed primaries, winning 17 to his 9, but she also won more open primaries than he did, 13 to 10."
And this argument also assumes that Sanders would have won all the voting blocs that Hillary Clinton carried.
Given the fact that the Republicans already had detailed plans to paint Sanders as an "environmental racist", it isn't bloody likely that all of Clinton's constituencies would have been on board for Sanders.
https://www.thenation.com/article/the-democratic-primary-wasnt-rigged/
Lonusca
(202 posts)would have won all the voting blocs that Hillary Clinton carried."
What bloc do you think he would not have carried that Clinton did?
And we will really never know about Sanders. All we know is he beat Clinton in 2 of the critical states she needed.
Where would Sanders have lost that she won?
lapucelle
(19,530 posts)people here feel about him. The upstaters he won in the primary wound up solidly with Trump. And Sanders, even before any opposition research campaigns, struggled with woman, Blacks, and Latinos.
And, of course, this was even before the press and Republicans gave him a close look. I can only imagine how damaged he would have been by the "environmental racist" campaign that the Republicans were planning to wage against him. Jill Stein would have worked as hard against him as she did against Clinton.
There are also some questions as to exactly what Roger Stone and Wikileaks were holding against him. His unwillingness to leave a race that it was impossible for him to win, the purchase of a luxe vacation home (outside of his home state) after the convention, and his absence from the general election campaign were all signs that he may have been being manipulated by outside operatives.
You're also assuming that any untoward circumstance that affected Hillary would not have also affected Sanders as well. There were no early voting sites on or near any college campus in Wisconsin. Many PA voters found themselves purged from the voting rolls due to new laws concerning inactivity. (I spent weekends in September and October helping to re-register some of those people.) And, of course, the Detroit mess would have hurt our side no matter who was on the ticket.
http://patch.com/michigan/detroit/michigan-vote-recount-half-detroit-ballots-may-not-qualify
Lonusca
(202 posts)would have lost Clinton's entire 21% margin of victory in New York? That's a stretch
I'm not assuming anything. EC votes are what matter in the election. Sanders conceivably beats Trump in WI and MI.
If he doesn't lose any states she won, he needs 12 EC votes to win. Does he get the 4th one in ME? Probably.
So then he needs 11. Is he able to get 11 more? I don't know, but it is not out of the question.
lapucelle
(19,530 posts)Had Sanders won the nomination, I'm sure Democrats would have been behind him; I was a Hillary supporter and volunteer in 2008, so I know how these things generally work from both a winning and a losing perspective. Hillary had our hearts, but Obama had our volunteer hours and our votes.
Had the half-hearted attempts to install Sanders as the nominee (counter to the voice of the voters) succeeded, he would have had definite problems with the party faithful.
Turn out for Sanders would not have matched that for Clinton in several important constituencies. While Sanders may have been more successful in Wisconsin, the real problem there was the deliberate unavailability of early voting sites in traditionally Democratic communities, including college and university towns. This would have impacted Sanders in the same way it did Clinton. Similarly, the problems with the optical scan voting machines in Detroit would have hurt Sanders as badly as they hurt Hillary.
Sanders would not have won Virginia, and he may not have won Nevada, especially given the "environmental racist" campaign that the Republicans were ready to wage against him based on the Sierra Blanca scheme for the removal of white Vermont's toxic waste to brown neighborhoods in Texas. The fact that Jane Sanders draws a paycheck from Sierra Blanca would not have helped the situation.
Even if Sanders had won Wisconsin, Michigan, Virginia, and Nevada, he would have still come up short. Could he have beaten Trump in the general in states that he had lost to Clinton in the primaries? Highly doubtful.
I was on the ground in PA most weekends in September and October re-registering voters and canvassing for Democratic candidates. I got a close up look at exactly how difficult it is for some demographics to cast a vote on election day.
Third party spoilers and the narcissists who weren't sufficiently wooed and courted to be persuaded to show up on election day deserve every measure of contempt and approbation that they are facing. Voters who are truly disenfranchised by the system were counting on them to make up the shortfall. The damage they have done is immeasurable.
R B Garr
(17,377 posts)influence who their GE candidate would be. That's been a well-known GOP tactic for awhile, even advertised by one of their biggest trolls, Rush Limbaugh.
I don't think anyone was saying that Bernie wouldn't win a state...
Response to R B Garr (Reply #8)
jack_krass This message was self-deleted by its author.
La Lioness Priyanka
(53,866 posts)liquid diamond
(1,917 posts)Megahurtz
(7,046 posts)ismnotwasm
(42,443 posts)We would know, now wouldn't we. He didn't
SFnomad
(3,473 posts)We'd now be talking about how if Clinton had won the Primary, she could have beat tRump, instead of us getting a President tRump.
Paladin
(28,739 posts)mtnsnake
(22,236 posts)is because just about ANYONE, including the local dog catcher, would have beaten Trump as long as they weren't carrying tons of baggage.
Hillary, as capable as she was, was the only person who could have possibly lost to Trump because of her baggage and because there were too many voters who had already made up their minds not to vote for her long before this election took place.
boston bean
(36,472 posts)have a bridge I would like to sell you that leads to no where.
mtnsnake
(22,236 posts)If you don't think Hillary had more baggage than any other Democratic candidate out there, then it is no small wonder that you own a bridge that leads to no where. No, I'm not interested in buying it from you, thank you.
boston bean
(36,472 posts)It's all made up bs.
mtnsnake
(22,236 posts)telling me that I'm believing rw bs when you know fucking well I don't believe any of that shit they made up about her. The fact of the matter is that so many OTHER voters DID believe the rw bullshit that was pounded into their heads for 30 years. If you don't think the pre-election hatred of Hillary mattered then it wouldn't surprise me one bit if you're pulling for Hillary to run again in 2020.
boston bean
(36,472 posts)To help you frame it.
mtnsnake
(22,236 posts)but of course I don't believe a single like the right wing invented about her or Bill over the past few decades. The fact that so much of her baggage is a result of right wing lies doesn't mean that she doesn't carry that baggage.
treestar
(82,383 posts)is good enough; we should fight that premise.
Blue_Tires
(55,545 posts)mtnsnake
(22,236 posts)who hadn't been subjected to decades of abuse via the right wing as Hillary had been. There were too many voters out there who didn't really know what a scumbag Trump was, but many of those same voters were taught to hate Hillary for decades.
Blue_Tires
(55,545 posts)dionysus
(26,467 posts)mtnsnake
(22,236 posts)Axolotls
(21 posts)He was the counterpart to Trump. This was the year for the outsiders. I just do not get how so many don't get that. This was a change election for lots of people on both sides and in the middle--proof of that is Bernie on the left (though unfortunately he was held back by the establishment) and Trump on the right (but he was able to break through). Bernie had none of Hillary's baggage and scandals, the lack of trust and integrity, the fear and loathing from the gop. Running a deeply flawed and unlikable, status quo, insider candidate was a big tone-deaf blunder.
stevenleser
(32,886 posts)Blue_Tires
(55,545 posts)Wake me up when you're willing to let this go and realize Trump is your goddamned enemy, not Hillary Rodham Clinton...
Charles Bukowski
(1,132 posts)votes seems to escape the writers of these crummy articles. This idea that the Democrats "picked" the wrong candidate is idiotic
bravenak
(34,648 posts)There are millions of votes that would be left on the table if he had run against Donald. Donald got less than ten percent of the black vote, but if Hillary were not running, I don't think as many of us would have bothered. He lacks a relationship and an understanding of our culture
KittyWampus
(55,894 posts)treestar
(82,383 posts)Possibly something more damaging.
And the email scandal is made up as it is. They would have found something to make up and fluffed it up just as well. It might have been more interesting and juicier.
It's something that can never be proven. It's not going to make the primary caucus voters who made Hillary the nominee see the light and say Oh we should have picked Bernie. So the point seems just to gloat and that isn't pleasant given it's showing some satisfaction the Orange Menace got the office.
And she still got the popular vote.
BOBers and Stein voters have to live with themselves. Why they think they are more important than other voters is a mystery.
PatsFan87
(368 posts)Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa, and Maine's second district. The only state Hillary won where I think he could possibly lose is Virginia. Overall though, he had less baggage and his favorability and trustworthy numbers were much higher than Clinton's. He did well in the primary with the rural voters Hillary got destroyed with in the general. In open primary exit polling, he consistently beat Hillary among independents 2-1. He gets the vote, volunteering, and enthusiasm of young voters. He was also seen as a change of pace in a change election. Hillary, while being extremely knowledgeable and policy wonkish, had too many things working against her. It was like trying to fit a square peg in a circular hole.
seaglass
(8,176 posts)post election day-late-dollar-short tweets and pronouncements are not growing his influence. He has no grace, no kindness and he is turning people off.
Starry Messenger
(32,375 posts)lapucelle
(19,530 posts)HassleCat
(6,409 posts)No grace. Who the fuck cares?
Arazi
(6,894 posts)HopeAgain
(4,407 posts)I'm thinking Warren can please the establishment left without coming across as an entitled establishment elite like Hillary, and will not come across like a throw-back socialist like Bernie.
Even better, she can deal with the new reality of rough and tumble politics. The only great thing I have heard on the left since the Election was when Warren said "President-elect Trump promised to rebuild our economy for working people, and I offer to put aside our differences and work with him on that task." THAT's what Americans, as a whole, want to hear.
Neither Bernie or Hillary were the right candidates, and the fact we now have the most unfit President-Elect in history stands as proof.
If we are to move on, we do need to recreate the entire image of the Democratic Party. Like it or not, Hillary came across to many Americans on both sides of the political spectrum as the Candidate for the Party of the Elite rather than the Party of the People.
zappaman
(20,612 posts)Tarheel_Dem
(31,443 posts)to convince us that BS and his ilk are the new leaders of the "Democratic" party. Not buying it. F-A-K-E!!!!!!
Me.
(35,454 posts)And was alerted on and had the post removed
Tarheel_Dem
(31,443 posts)If we can't have a debate about what appears to be either Sanders promoting himself, or someone very close to him. It's been non-stop since election day. Honestly, I never even knew this poster existed until this crusade began.
Me.
(35,454 posts)It's Ellison
Tarheel_Dem
(31,443 posts)Me.
(35,454 posts)Did see Nina Turner for Ohio gov, but don't know who posted it
mtnsnake
(22,236 posts)Since you are claiming it as being fake, how about enlightening us as to why it is fake news.
stevenleser
(32,886 posts)Omaha Steve
(103,349 posts)I pay for a subscription.
MFM008
(19,998 posts).....
SaschaHM
(2,897 posts)He wouldn't have won anything if his poor showing with them in the primary translated to an even lower turnout among them in the GE. They are still a vital part of the Obama coalition. He definitely wouldn't have gotten a Clinton level turnout/percentage and that would have sunk him as well.
azmom
(5,208 posts)I have such respect for him. Always fighting the good fight.
JudyM
(29,517 posts)challenging the incoming administration.
Orsino
(37,428 posts)...but there's no solid evidence to support this certainty.
Yes, the general would have looked and smelled different, so different that we can't call it one way or the other. I suspect that Sanders' appeal just wouldn't have become as broad as Clinton's already was.
realmirage
(2,117 posts)InAbLuEsTaTe
(24,535 posts)Bernie & Elizabeth 2020!!!
JHan
(10,173 posts)This is as bad as those who say no one would vote for Bernie because he's a socialist jew.
DonCoquixote
(13,702 posts)Taking him as VP would have said "I know some of you ae angry, and I will listen"
InAbLuEsTaTe
(24,535 posts)AnnieBW
(11,235 posts)America isn't ready for a secular Jewish socialist President any more than it is a woman President.
Jakes Progress
(11,177 posts)Warren DeMontague
(80,708 posts)stevenleser
(32,886 posts)In Pennsylvania as well as Virginia, Florida and the rest of the south, Hillary crushed Sanders as if he wasn't even there during the primaries. Of these states, Hillary lost all to Trump but Virginia which was very close but she won.
Hillary crushed Sanders in those states because to be even remotely competitive in those states in the primary or General Election, a Democrat has to have considerable enthusiasm in the African American and Latino demographics. Sanders couldn't compete with Hillary because he didn't have that enthusiasm on his side. It's pretty easy to interpolate that into Sanders losing all of those states against Trump if he had faced him in the General election.
If that is true, and no one has remotely come up with a counterargument to that, Sanders starts off the race giving up over 270 electoral votes to Trump even if we give Sanders Michigan and Wisconsin. But as I have said to other folks, the problems for Sanders would only start there. If you have no way of competing in a state, your opponent can reallocate resources they would have used on that state, time, money, etc., to other states. So Sanders being non-competitive in Georgia, the Carolinas, Florida, Virginia, and Pennsylvania would have meant Trump could reallocate a ton of resources to the rust belt and places like Nevada and other close states meaning Sanders would probably lose additional states that Hillary won beyond Virginia and may have lost one or more of Wisconsin and Michigan as well.
That's all before you get into Eichenwald's description of GOP opposition research and before you factor in that 50% of the country consistently says they will not vote for a self described Socialist.
Wabbajack_
(1,300 posts)But the corporate media would have called him a "commie" and it probably would have worked. The map would be a little different but for every voter he picked up he'd probably lose 1 from the upper middle class suburbs where Hillary Clinton did very well against Trump.
CajunBlazer
(5,648 posts)The only thing stranger than Trump in the White House would be a socialist in the White House.
Sanders couldn't even win the Democratic nomination. He never received a majority of Democratic party members in any primary.
And he is still an independent.