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Democratic Primaries
In reply to the discussion: What Makes Bernie Run? [View all]Gothmog
(159,636 posts)86. How 'Never Bernie' Voters Threw In With Biden and Changed the Primary
sanders was appealing only to 30% of the party and after South Carolina the rest of the party moved to Joe Biden to stop sanders.
Link to tweet
Rarely has political momentum flipped as quickly as it did in the first half of March, as Mr. Sanders lost serious ground to Mr. Biden before the coronavirus slowed their race. There are well-known reasons for the shift: Moderate candidates like Mr. Buttigieg and Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota rallied around Mr. Biden. He enjoyed demographic advantages, particularly with black voters. And turnout among young voters and liberal nonvoters did not surge, failing to reshape the electorate as Mr. Sanders had hoped.
But beyond ideology, race and turnout, a chief reason for Mr. Biden’s success has little to do with his candidacy. He became a vehicle for Democrats like Ms. King who were supporting other candidates but found the prospect of Mr. Sanders and his calls for political revolution so distasteful that they put aside misgivings about Mr. Biden and backed him instead.
In phone interviews, dozens of Democrats, mostly aged 50 and over, who live in key March primary states like Massachusetts, Virginia, Michigan and Florida, said that Mr. Biden’s appeal went beyond his case for beating President Trump. It was his chances of overtaking Mr. Sanders, the only candidate in the vast Democratic field they found objectionable for reasons personal and political.....
These voters’ willingness to unite against Mr. Sanders helped Democratic Party leaders stave off his insurgent campaign and has made Mr. Biden the all-but-certain Democratic nominee. The convergence behind Mr. Biden also highlights a critical difference between this year’s primary and what happened to the Republican Party in 2016. Four years ago, establishment Republicans were openly skeptical of Mr. Trump after his victories in early primary states, but a fractured field and split primary vote allowed him to amass an insurmountable delegate lead, reshaping the party in the process.....
Ahead of Mr. Sanders’s presidential run in 2020, his campaign did not concern itself with smoothing tensions among voters who supported Mrs. Clinton in 2016. He did not seek the endorsements of many party leaders, who were always unlikely to back him, but could have been swayed from being openly antagonistic to ambivalent.
As a result, after a strong finish in Iowa and wins in New Hampshire and Nevada, Mr. Sanders did not benefit from an assumed truth of presidential campaigns: that early-state victories help bring in voters from other factions. Instead, people like Lori Boerner of McLean, Va., said Mr. Sanders’s performance sent them searching for a candidate who could stop his rise, and after the South Carolina primary, they landed on Mr. Biden.
But beyond ideology, race and turnout, a chief reason for Mr. Biden’s success has little to do with his candidacy. He became a vehicle for Democrats like Ms. King who were supporting other candidates but found the prospect of Mr. Sanders and his calls for political revolution so distasteful that they put aside misgivings about Mr. Biden and backed him instead.
In phone interviews, dozens of Democrats, mostly aged 50 and over, who live in key March primary states like Massachusetts, Virginia, Michigan and Florida, said that Mr. Biden’s appeal went beyond his case for beating President Trump. It was his chances of overtaking Mr. Sanders, the only candidate in the vast Democratic field they found objectionable for reasons personal and political.....
These voters’ willingness to unite against Mr. Sanders helped Democratic Party leaders stave off his insurgent campaign and has made Mr. Biden the all-but-certain Democratic nominee. The convergence behind Mr. Biden also highlights a critical difference between this year’s primary and what happened to the Republican Party in 2016. Four years ago, establishment Republicans were openly skeptical of Mr. Trump after his victories in early primary states, but a fractured field and split primary vote allowed him to amass an insurmountable delegate lead, reshaping the party in the process.....
Ahead of Mr. Sanders’s presidential run in 2020, his campaign did not concern itself with smoothing tensions among voters who supported Mrs. Clinton in 2016. He did not seek the endorsements of many party leaders, who were always unlikely to back him, but could have been swayed from being openly antagonistic to ambivalent.
As a result, after a strong finish in Iowa and wins in New Hampshire and Nevada, Mr. Sanders did not benefit from an assumed truth of presidential campaigns: that early-state victories help bring in voters from other factions. Instead, people like Lori Boerner of McLean, Va., said Mr. Sanders’s performance sent them searching for a candidate who could stop his rise, and after the South Carolina primary, they landed on Mr. Biden.
The vast bulk of the party does not like sanders which is why Joe Biden is going to the nominee

primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
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If he's so inspiring, why is he getting his clock cleaned in the primaries?
The Velveteen Ocelot
Mar 2020
#1
I can't deal with OPs like this because I am dealing with a fucking global crisis
still_one
Mar 2020
#3
Trumps approval numbers are up, we have to get to the General...Sanders needs to go...and he
Demsrule86
Mar 2020
#8
And Bernies issues were sound rejected by millions of voters-twice now...16 and 20.
Demsrule86
Mar 2020
#10
As of now, Biden has received 25% more popular votes and 25% more delegates than Sanders.....
George II
Mar 2020
#18
That's absolutely not true. Let's take the minimum wage, for example. There has been....
George II
Mar 2020
#27
Clinton had two years control and so did Obama, but the Senate for only a few months.
betsuni
Mar 2020
#58
It seems that many supporters of a particular candidate are forever explaining to those
ehrnst
Mar 2020
#70
Indeed. "Issues" is something any one of us could run on. We need someone who gets things done. (nt)
ehrnst
Mar 2020
#75
In just one day (yesterday to today) 538's forecast of delegates increased Biden's by 47.8 while...
George II
Mar 2020
#12
when one is used to being a big fish in a small pond the attention is hard to lose nt
msongs
Mar 2020
#30
Americans expect their Senators to be ON THE JOB, doing the work of Senators @$15,000 a month.
George II
Mar 2020
#45
Running for the Democratic nomination has proven very profitable for him and his family.
W_HAMILTON
Mar 2020
#40
I believe the only way Sanders' "movement" can survive and grow is if Trump wins in 2020.
sop
Mar 2020
#54
The same thing that made Trump run: A massive ego and a claim that only he can save the world.
NNadir
Mar 2020
#77