SLD
Contributor
At least according to this guy:
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articl...ernie-sanders-is-a-vote-for-donald-trump.html
There's a lot more. He opines that Republican attack ads will not parse the distinction between a "Democratic Socialist" and a Socialist. They will paint him as a Che Guevera type hell bent on establishing concentration camps. He points out that only 3% of people believe that taxes are too low - a majority think they are too high. Bernie is also too dovish on Foreign Policy for the general public. Americans don't support universal health care.
As for Hillary her negatives are already "baked in." This is due to Republican attack ads over 25 years. Nothing new is under the sun with her so she can still win.
I don't know if I agree with him 100%, but I do agree electability is the key issue in the nomination process, and that we cannot afford to nominate someone we like but who will lose just on principle. But that being said, I don't know if all of Hillary's negatives are truly baked in. The email scandal has seriously affected her and continues to drag her down (even though it really shouldn't; it's an extremely minor issue). I also disagree with his point about Universal Health Care - the majority of Americans do support that, or at least have in the past.
He also simplistically attributes Obama's perceived unpopularity to him being too liberal. I don't think so. Obama is unpopular because he doesn't really fight back. That's the right thing for him to do; as President, he should be above it all. But the attacks are barely disguised racism, IMHO. I think in the long run, he will be given far more credit than he is now - and he is 5 times more popular than Congress.
The bottom line is that Sanders cannot appeal to swing voters in swing states: Colorado, Nevada, Iowa, Virginia, Ohio, and Florida.
So what do others think? Forgetting for a moment whether you like him or would vote for him, is Bernie, an atheist socialist, electable?
SLD
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articl...ernie-sanders-is-a-vote-for-donald-trump.html
The point of primary elections is not to select a president; it’s to select a candidate. For that reason, “electability” is not just one among many issues: It is the central issue.
. . .
the reason these polls are meaningless is that most people still have no clear idea of who Bernie Sanders is or what he stands for.
. . .
In a Gallup Poll taken last June, fully 50 percent said they would not vote for a socialist. Some 40 percent said they’d never vote for an atheist, which Bernie also basically is.
There's a lot more. He opines that Republican attack ads will not parse the distinction between a "Democratic Socialist" and a Socialist. They will paint him as a Che Guevera type hell bent on establishing concentration camps. He points out that only 3% of people believe that taxes are too low - a majority think they are too high. Bernie is also too dovish on Foreign Policy for the general public. Americans don't support universal health care.
As for Hillary her negatives are already "baked in." This is due to Republican attack ads over 25 years. Nothing new is under the sun with her so she can still win.
I don't know if I agree with him 100%, but I do agree electability is the key issue in the nomination process, and that we cannot afford to nominate someone we like but who will lose just on principle. But that being said, I don't know if all of Hillary's negatives are truly baked in. The email scandal has seriously affected her and continues to drag her down (even though it really shouldn't; it's an extremely minor issue). I also disagree with his point about Universal Health Care - the majority of Americans do support that, or at least have in the past.
He also simplistically attributes Obama's perceived unpopularity to him being too liberal. I don't think so. Obama is unpopular because he doesn't really fight back. That's the right thing for him to do; as President, he should be above it all. But the attacks are barely disguised racism, IMHO. I think in the long run, he will be given far more credit than he is now - and he is 5 times more popular than Congress.
The bottom line is that Sanders cannot appeal to swing voters in swing states: Colorado, Nevada, Iowa, Virginia, Ohio, and Florida.
So what do others think? Forgetting for a moment whether you like him or would vote for him, is Bernie, an atheist socialist, electable?
SLD