Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
2016 Postmortem
In reply to the discussion: Lots of traditionally alienated and disengaged people turned out for Sanders in the primaries [View all]There is plenty of evidence that Bernie could have fared better in the general election. He would still likely lose Florida but win all of the rust belt states. Russia may not have gotten invloved. Putin had a personal vendetta against Hillary. Sanders like Trump is for weakening NATO but he is also non-interventionalist - Putin loves it.
More importantly in this particular election, Bernie rallied young people around him. They run social media and have enormous power. After Hillary won primary, they lost interest in this election. I personally do not know of a single young Bernie supporter who voted for Clinton. They left the ballot blank for president - thankfully it's in Cali so didn't matter. Bernie or bust was extemely powerful!
Edit history
Please sign in to view edit histories.
133 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
RecommendedHighlight replies with 5 or more recommendations
Lots of traditionally alienated and disengaged people turned out for Sanders in the primaries [View all]
YoungDemCA
Dec 2016
OP
Yes, the election is over. And yet, judging by many of the threads and posts here
YoungDemCA
Dec 2016
#3
Sanctimonious (self righteousness) isn't welcome, but I still think...
Buckeye_Democrat
Dec 2016
#10
His framing is inherently moral, though, as he focuses on hungry children and people working 2-3
JudyM
Dec 2016
#84
Help me understand this... if we need to have stronger moral grounding, what would be an example?
JudyM
Dec 2016
#87
I don't think many people see income inequality as a problem in itself.
Buckeye_Democrat
Dec 2016
#92
Ok, so the morality argument is that corporations are getting the benefit of education that they are
JudyM
Dec 2016
#94
It wasn't going to be paid by taxpayers... but by a new tax on Wall St speculating.
JudyM
Dec 2016
#100
Well, yeah, especially since that short term speculating isn't great for our economy.
JudyM
Dec 2016
#105
Cool, the guy gets beat up around here by a lot of folks who IMO misunderstand the heart depth
JudyM
Dec 2016
#107
Sanders, in one very rare reference to his religious background did say that his values were what
karynnj
Jan 2017
#133
in the end they preferred the republican by staying home. now that is "f***ing impressive"
msongs
Dec 2016
#5
"what used to be mainstream Democratic core beliefs." YES. This can't be said enough.
dionysus
Dec 2016
#91
Yeah, I remember this young woman in the convention who was yelling and screaming
lunamagica
Dec 2016
#67
Whoever Thought That The People That Went To Those HUUUUUUUge Rallys For Sanders
OldYallow
Dec 2016
#40
Get real. Russia wanted the oligarch -- no way would they have sat on their hands
pnwmom
Dec 2016
#83
Sanders was and still is very impressive. After the primary, he worked hard with Clinton campaign.
Sunlei
Dec 2016
#27
I begged, 'emailed into the void'. I think he was considered as VP for a couple days.
Sunlei
Dec 2016
#58
No one said that. But your first sentence in the second paragraph was confirmed as true.
George II
Dec 2016
#50
How well would Obama have done without all the white votes that he got that Clinton didn't?
YoungDemCA
Dec 2016
#70
It should be about which candidate best represents our values and has the best chance of winning the
JudyM
Dec 2016
#62
I'm sure those Clinton voters would have shown up for Bernie if they had thrown him the nomination..
SaschaHM
Dec 2016
#85
yeah they would have voted for him, if nothing else because of the Supreme Court, but
still_one
Dec 2016
#101
Your post ignores the fact that most voters turned out and voted for Hillary Clinton..
asuhornets
Dec 2016
#115
The "sanctimonious moralizing" isn't a bug, it's a feature, for some folks.
Warren DeMontague
Dec 2016
#121
If you say "you're an idiot if you don't vote for me," you are unlikely to win over those who aren't
yurbud
Dec 2016
#124
I wonder if corporate Democrats ever take that approach with Wall St. or Hollywood donors
yurbud
Dec 2016
#125
Okay the kinder, gentler answer is, don't believe the horseshit you hear on CNN.
ucrdem
Dec 2016
#128
Maybe next time Sanders will run a halfway intelligent campaign and actually win?
Blue_Tires
Jan 2017
#129