Walpurgisnacht—Night of the Witches—is what it felt
like to Bernie Sanders supporters in
these parts as intense thunderstorms,
lighting, hail, and possible twisters
rolled through Illinois as the word came that the best hopes of a devastating
evening fell tantalizingly short. After
a string of lop-sided victories for Hillary Clinton in Florida, North Carolina,
and most surprisingly Ohio, she held
off strong and valiant efforts in Illinois and Missouri to eke out razor
thin victories and make a sweep of Mini Super Tuesday.
The
loss in Illinois by less than 2% was a tribute to a massive grass roots
effort. In fact Sanders carried the
majority of Illinois counties doing
well in the outer collar counties, downstate, counties with major universities, and in St. Louis Metro East. In fact here in McHenry County where Sanders supporters became self-organized last summer and have conducted a steady and
increasingly sophisticated operation
employing creative use of social media,
rallies for visibility, shoe leather
canvasing, phone banking, and a comprehensive Get-Out-the-Vote (GOTV) campaign, Bernie swamped Hillary 60.62% to 38.84%. But it was not enough to overcome huge leads for Clinton coming out of Chicago, suburban Cook County, and Lake
County, home of more than half of Democratic voters state wide.
Clinton
was able to retain deep loyalty in
the Black community, which turned
out in large numbers. This loyalty
largely held up despite Clinton’s endorsement
by Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel whose
support in the Black Community—and among many other Chicago voters—has evaporated. Sanders clearly
understood that and in the last week directly
attacked Emanuel and declared that he never wanted his support. But despite a few key endorsements by Black progressives
and by former Mayoral challenger
Chuy Garcia who carried the flag for many minorities in the last election, and the tidal wave of reaction against State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez that
gave Kim Foxx a landslide victory, Sanders was not able to translate that
alienation into support. Not that some
supporters weren’t trying—like those who had faux Hillary/Rohm in ’16 signs printed up and plunked into some Black
neighborhoods. Clinton, for her part,
was careful to distance herself from
the Mayor who laid low and made no campaign appearances or statements on her behalf for
weeks. And there is no way that she will
endanger her Black support in the future by considering Emanuel for Vice President or any other senior position in her campaign or
possible administration.
Clinton
also did very well among mature women voters,
a particularly important constituency in
the older suburbs of Cook County where they have traditionally voted in large
numbers. The feminist generation gap may have been evident there where younger women breaking for Sanders are largely priced out of a lot of housing.
Finally,
never underestimate the numbers of
Democratic voters, even quite liberal ones sympathetic
to Sanders’ positions, who have become increasingly terrified of a Trump
presidency, and accepted the conventional wisdom that Clinton is the best
chance to beat him in November. Those kinds
of voters alone could have amounted to the two or three percent swing at the last minute that gave
Clinton wins in Illinois and Missouri.
Clinton basking in Tuesday's victories. |
In
the heady days since Sanders’s surprise win in Michigan, his supporters became swept up in the tantalizing possibilities, that common campaign fever that translates what-might-be and best-case scenarios into imagined accomplished facts. I may have fallen into the same trap myself. Folks even imagined winning or coming close
in Florida where large numbers of retirees and Black voters skewed the
electorate right into Clinton’s wheelhouse and in North Carolina where the Black vote is all important. Instead, unsurprising
on sober reflection, she breezed to victory in those state.
More
disappointing was Ohio. After Michigan
and knowing how strong they were running in Illinois and Missouri, the Sanders
campaign and his supporters thought that they could duplicate the upset in
another Rust Belt Northern
State. The state was flooded with idealistic volunteers and phone banks were conducted all over the
country. Sanders and his surrogates spoke to large and enthusiastic crowds, far outstripping Clinton
gatherings. Sanders’ small donor fundraising was successful
enough for him to compete on TV with
a series of high quality spots with
Clinton advertizing blitzes. And it seemed to be paying off. Antidotal evidence and trend polling seemed to show Sanders
rapidly gaining ground in the closing days of the campaign in the Buckeye State.
So
what happened? How did it all go south so quickly at the last minute with Clinton able to
register as solid 56.5% to 42.7% win?
Some will credit the muscle of
organized Labor. Most International
Unions endorsed Clinton, although some of their locals were in rebellion about
it and many rank and file members less
inclined to fall in line. And the Black vote in Ohio’s many old
industrial cities mirrored the loyalty of Blacks nationwide.
But
I think much of the blame has to go
on a minority of loose cannon Sanders supporters who
have flooded the social media with virulent
attacks on Clinton—many of them cribbed
directly from decades of right-wing
smears. Others have attacked her as
an international war monger, a complete stooge of Wall Street, and an insincere opportunist. All sorts of self-righteous pledges never to vote for her in November come hell or high water flooded Facebook,
Twitter, Tublr, Instagram, etc.
along with sneering put downs of
anyone supporting Clinton. Many women
found more than ample evidence of raging sexism and even misogyny in the attacks and Blacks have
resented the White paternalism evidenced by posters who imply that they are too stupid to recognize their own best interests and allies. Guess what? Far from being moved by the poster’s assumed brilliance people have been deeply offended. Offended people are not likely to change
at the whim of the offender. They are
more likely to dig in their heels. And many folks who were wavering in the final
days between the two candidates were also offended by the arrogant viciousness of these kinds of attacks and cast their lot with Clinton out of sympathy or solidarity.
One of the milder of the anti-Clinton memes circulated by some Sanders supporters. |
To
make this as clear as possible I lay the collapse in Ohio and the narrow
defeats in Illinois and Missouri directly
at the feet of these morons. The many great Sanders supporters and all
of the local, self-organized groups as well as the official campaign has to stop ignoring
their disruptive and counterproductive activity and confronting it. That does not mean that no one can argue
with Clinton over issues or draw contrasts between the candidates. Politics is always a rough game and no place for the faint of heart. But the kind
of childish vindictiveness, pettiness,
and disrespect for the common humanity of those who differ with them is not
helping anyone one except for inflating the sense of self-importance of the trolls.
This
morning many Sanders fans woke up with a kind of hangover. Last night was
rough and a lot of illusions were
battered. Although Sanders continued to pick up delegates in the loosing
states, he clearly now has a harder time coming into the convention with a
majority of elected delegates. The Super Delegates are generally assumed
to be largely in Clinton’s camp even where they are not declared. The hope was that if Sanders could come to
the convention in a strong enough
position, many of them would be loathe
to cross public opinion in their states. That will be increasingly
difficult now.
And
it does not mean that Sanders or his supporters should now fold their tents and slink
quietly into the night. Many of
Sanders’s supposed best states have yet to vote, including next-up Arizona, Wisconsin, the Pacific
Northwest, and delegate rich super-prize
California. Bernie’s home state of New York where Clinton is a popular
sitting Senator will be a tough
contest. So will Pennsylvania which will test whether he
can regain any of that Michigan Rust Belt mojo. Sanders cheerleaders like Robert Reich
and campaign leaders spent much of the morning hyping this line of
possibility. But the fact is he will
have to nearly run the table in
these upcoming contests to stay viable. And he will have to combat some demoralization that is the natural result
of last night.
Some
people are pinning their hopes on
some disaster befalling Clinton,
some new and terrible scandal or
perhaps an indictment in the no-there-there e-mail server brouhaha. Forget it.
There is not going to be an indictment any more than some smoking gun in any other scandal real or manufactured is going to be
found. Clinton has survived decades of
scandal mongering and attacks. The
voters have heard it all before and
except for the confirmed Hillary haters of
the right and left have discounted it, they know who Clinton is
and, if they are not in starry-eyed love
with her, are comfortable with her and
admire her accomplishments.
So
what is the Sanders’ anti-Hillary mob doing
this morning? Why doubling down on the attacks that have shot the campaign in both
feet, of course. New conspiracy theories are popping up like dandelions in a May yard,
many of them concerning nefarious media collusion. In fact when it comes to contempt for and attacks on the media, these folks are a mirror of Donald Trump.
Meanwhile
I noted that Green Party nominee Dr.
Jill Stein and several of her surrogates
have promptly popped up to claim Sanders’ mantle and claim all of
those voters who vow to never support Clinton.
You can hardly blame her. It is a
rare big fat chance to finally move
the Greens into their longed-for status
as the nation’s new left party. But if a quarter of those now swearing to
never be corrupted by voting for Clinton follow through with a switch to the
Greens, or to an imagined Sanders independent
run followed through, it could hand the Presidency to Donald Trump.
Trump has plans.... |
Trump
was not idle last night, sweeping his contests except of John Kasich’s Ohio. Marco
Rubio bleated, rolled over, and finally
dropped out leaving Trump in the race with religious
zealot and the most despised man in
the Senate, and the allegedly
moderate Kasich who now commands only the delegates of his own state. Trump may have never gotten much above a
third of the vote in any Republican Primary, but he has won almost all of them
going away and polls show him leading comfortably in most states going
forward. The Republican establishment, which realizes Trump is unelectable in a General Election and is likely to drag down GOP tickets across the country with him, is becoming forlorn of any hope of any hope of preventing him from reaching the
Convention with the delegates required
to win and are nearly suicidal at
the thought that the only one with any chance of derailing him is the smarmy Ted Cruze. Last night I heard establishment operatives, egged on by cable news questioners, spin
elaborate, but unlikely scenarios in
which Trump arrives this summer in Cleveland
short of the delegates he needs and the convention deadlocks through multiple
ballots which eventually anoint an
acceptable compromise candidate.
Of
course nothing like this has happened in decades. If it did occur, the Republican Party would shatter—it may shatter anyway. The pugnacious
Trump would stomp off and run as
an independent in whatever states he
could buy or muscle his way onto the Ballot, effectively sinking the Republican
nominee and anointing the Democrat, who would probably be fortified by a Democratic Senate and greatly enlarged minority in the House.
I
heard only one Republican strategist suggest
that the party would not come apart without Trump, but would unify behind their
hatred for a presumed Clinton candidacy.
All
in all Trump and the Republican’s are likely losers this November—unless Democrats
beat them in becoming unraveled.
As
for me, I will continue to support Sanders and hope that he can pick up enough
delegates to remain in contention. Even
if he does not make it to the Convention or loses there, his continued presence on the campaign trail is critical to making
the broader political revolution that
he talks about a reality. He is forcing
a re-alignment of the Party
significantly to the left no matter who is the nominee. Should Clinton emerge as the candidate, I
will fully supporter her this fall and encourage every other sane progressive,
socialist, or Democrat to do the same.
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