QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
What Sanders and Trump Understood

By speaking to the discontents of neglected groups of voters, the two men—who share little else in common—have both found political success.

The most important message from this year’s tumultuous presidential primaries may be that: millions of voters in both parties have grown sufficiently disenchanted with conventional political options to vote for candidates who not long ago would have been considered beyond the pale of viable choices.

20 or even 10 years ago, both Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders might have struggled to advance beyond the margins of their parties. Yet after this week’s five primaries, Trump has drawn just over 10 million votes and Sanders 9.3 million. Both have built followings that are not only large but also more impassioned than those attracted by their more traditional rivals, from Ted Cruz to Hillary Clinton.

Each man’s support has displayed limits. Sanders’s four losses on Tuesday leave him confronting the grim math of Clinton’s virtually inevitable nomination. And while Trump’s emphatic five-state sweep solidified him as the clear front-runner for the GOP nomination, polls consistently show him trailing Clinton in a prospective general election.

But whether or not either man ultimately claims the White House, their rise still signals a searing vote of no-confidence in the results produced by the nation’s political leadership.

Though they embody very different political impulses, Trump and Sanders have been propelled by a common torrent of discontent that more conventional leaders will ignore at their peril. “People feel like the way things have been running for the last couple of years, if not decades, has not been working out for them,” the Republican pollster Kristen Soltis Anderson said. “They have been using traditional remedies to address an illness and it’s not really working so all of a sudden the experimental treatment with all the crazy side effects starts looking a lot more appealing.”

That’s particularly true among the groups central to each man’s coalition: working-class whites for Trump, and members of the Millennial generation for Sanders. Trump has now won whites without a college education in 21 of the 25 states with exit polls, often by imposing margins; even when the GOP field was more crowded, he routinely carried about half or more of them, and those numbers soared to around two-thirds on Tuesday in Connecticut, Maryland, and Pennsylvania.

Sanders has also shown a surprising appeal to the smaller number of blue-collar whites who still participate in Democratic primaries. But his coalition is centered on the massive Millennial generation, which this year will roughly equal the baby boom as a share of eligible voters. In 23 of the 25 exit-polled states, Sanders has carried voters younger than 30. One cumulative analysis of all exit polls found that through the New York primary he had won 70 percent of those younger voters, a substantially higher percentage than even President Obama carried against Clinton in 2008. Sanders posted even larger numbers among young people in this week’s contests.

The right question may not be why so many blue-collar whites and Millennials are flocking to such nontraditional candidates, but why it has taken them so long to find these alternatives.

On many measures, both groups are among the nation’s most economically strained.


  • Meanwhile, since 2000, as the EPI noted recently, inflation-adjusted wages have remained stagnant for young college graduates, and declined slightly for young workers with only a high-school degree. Slow wage growth, combined with mounting educational costs, has left this generation struggling to cross the key mileposts of adult life: As the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis has reported, “college-educated young adults in 2013 had higher debt burdens, lower total asset holdings, and lower net worth than their counterparts had in 1989.”
Trump and Sanders are far more different than alike. Yet their responses to this widespread distress share some similar impulses. Both are skeptical of free trade. Both portray the political system as hopelessly infected by special interests. Both explain their supporters’ distress by pointing to shadowy culprits: for Sanders, “the billionaire class” and for Trump, undocumented immigrants, foreign manufacturers, and Muslims.

Both are also offering solutions that have little prospect of success in today’s closely divided political environment.
  • Trump’s call for mass deportation of undocumented immigrants, a temporary ban on Muslim migration, and huge tariffs on foreign imports would face formidable resistance even in a Republican-controlled Congress.
  • Likewise, even many congressional Democrats would recoil from a Sanders agenda that would push government spending to its highest level (as a share of the economy) since World War II to fund government-run single-payer health care, universal free public college, and widespread student-debt forgiveness, among other things.

It’s easy to find the flaws in these ideas, and also to deride the toxic racial signaling in Trump’s campaign. The harder challenge is to find politically plausible responses to the anxieties swelling the audience for Trump and Sanders alike.

More traditional voices in both parties are still most likely to set Washington’s 2017 agenda. But in the streaking comet of these two campaigns, they should see a clear warning that continued partisan stalemate and inaction will ensure the volatile emergence of more voices determined not to renew the existing political order, but to raze it.


READ MORE HERE: http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/04/marginal-no-more/480234/


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QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
The Beginning of the End for Bernie 2016?

“Hundreds of staff members” will reportedly be laid off by the
campaign in the wake of recent primary-contest defeats.


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Jim Young / Reuters

The Atlantic
April 27, 2016

Things are looking grim for Bernie Sanders. The Democratic presidential candidate told TheNew York Times on Wednesday that his campaign plans to lay off “hundreds of staff members” as the campaign shifts resources to California, which holds its primary contest in June.

The news arrives less than 24 hours after Sanders suffered a series of defeats against Hillary Clinton in Northeastern primary contests. Any path to the nomination now looks highly implausible. As Sanders faces an ever more difficult fight, his fundraising may also start to dry up. In his interview with The Times, however, he said his campaign’s fundraising is not suffering. “We are doing well, and it continues to be very strong,” he said.

Sanders pointed out in the interview that a majority of states have already held primary contests, offering that as rationale for the layoffs. He also emphasized that the campaign plans to compete in remaining contests. “We want to win as many delegates as we can, so we do not need workers now in states around the country,” Sanders said. “We don’t need people right now in Connecticut. That election is over. We don’t need them in Maryland. So what we are going to do is allocate our resources to the 14 contests that remain, and that means that we are going to be cutting back on staff.”

In the wake of Tuesday’s primary losses, the Sanders campaign signaled a shift in strategy. The senator vowed to stay in the race “until the last vote is cast” in a statement late Tuesday evening, but added that he will “fight for a progressive party platform” at the Democratic National Convention this summer. This seemed to suggest that Sanders’s best shot at changing American politics is now pressuring the party to adopt his priorities, rather than winning the White House.


MORE: http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/04/bernie-sanders-staff-lay-off/480255/



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Camille

Kitchen Wench #TeamQuaid
Staff member
DKos diary...

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2016/...ages-of-violations-by-Bernie-Sanders-campaign

The Federal Elections Commission released a letter to the Bernie Sanders campaign detailing campaign finance issues they have with his campaign with the latest forms Bernie 2016 filed. Now to be fair to Bernie, his campaign has refunded some of the people who donated more than $2,700 back in December and January, however there have been no listed refunds since then. To note this paperwork requires a response by 6/14/16 which just happens to be the day of the final primary so IF Bernie responds it will be as DC is filling out the last votes of the primary.

Some highlights include:

  • Actor/Bernie Supporter Mark Ruffalo continuing to donate after reaching his $2,700 limit and the campaign not refunding the excess money
  • Ahmed Abdelmeguid (highlighting him because he is first on the list) donating $12,604.05 from Jan 1st to March 31st
  • Someone named Scott Walker (and I highly doubt it’s the Wisconsin governor but I find it funny) donating $2,825.31
Attachment page 1 through the top of 595 are all donations that are above the $2,700.00 limit that have yet to be refunded. A lot of this is people making multiple donations and they may not realize they hit the $2,700 limit, though in the case of people like Mark Ruffalo who received a refund for reaching the limit and continuing to donate there is known deceit by the donator in my opinion

Now the fun part comes from pages 595 through 638 which are all foreign donations to the campaign and the last page is refunds that have no corresponding donation, just Bernie 2016 giving money to people randomly for no reason (which is probably the most innocent of the bunch since it is 100% possible that with all the donations there was a mistake in filing)

Just so everyone’s aware this is not just a problem with Bernie’s March filings, he also had a problem back with his February filing as well. In February he had a 264 page attachment with all his campaigns illegal donations received. That attachment has pages 1-241 have illegal donations over $2,700 that were not refunded and pages 241-263 of illegal donations and again the last page was money returned without an itemized reason.

By the way these are problems that Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump do not have at all. This is a uniquely Bernie Sanders problem, one that brings questions about his understanding of campaign finance laws, his team’s understanding of those same laws and whether or not there is a knowing plan to deceive the FEC in order to raise funds. This is why a Bernie Sanders campaign is dangerous because he and his team are making such rookie mistakes that it brings into question things that should not be questions. How can Bernie rally against Wall Street when it is clear he and his team have no clue how to follow existing laws. How can Bernie complain about money in politics when it’s obvious he and his team have no clue how to follow those existing laws. Or is Bernie saying money in politics, through any means necessary, is good for him but not for anyone else which is a similar stance from his campaign on superdelegates. Also while Bernie complains about what the Hillary Victory Fund and SuperPACs do with their money, he is actively violating campaign finance laws and the only question that remains here is is he doing it willing, is a member of his team doing it willingly and which person will fall on the sword when it comes time to answer questions about how much fraud is going on in the Bernie 2016 campaign.
 

Camille

Kitchen Wench #TeamQuaid
Staff member
http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/bern...cy-injunction-calif-primary/story?id=39419096

Attorneys representing a group of Bernie Sanders supporters informed San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera Thursday night that they plan to file an "emergency request" with U.S. District Court Judge William Alsup in the city today "for a preliminary injunction" in California's June 7 presidential primary," Herrera's office said.

"I think it's unfortunate -- and selfish, frankly -- that these plaintiffs would inject confusion and uncertainty into an election that has been underway for weeks," Herrera said in a statement Thursday night. "San Francisco's Department of Elections and its employees have been doing an exemplary job, and I'm equally confident that our co-defendants are also meeting or exceeding their legal duties. This lawsuit is without merit, and there is no basis for an emergency injunction. I intend to fight it aggressively."



Voting by mail began in California May 9.

A news release from the Office of the City Attorney, noted, "San Francisco, Alameda County, and state elections officials were sued last week by an unincorporated association of Sanders backers called the 'Voting Rights Defense Project,' who together with the American Independence Party and two San Francisco voters leveled an array of allegations in their May 20 civil complaint that Herrera calls wholly baseless."

The release continued, "The activists are seeking sweeping injunctive relief in their suit, including provisions to force 58 counties to segregate ballots already cast by unaffiliated voters; to allow "re-votes" by those voters for presidential primary candidates; and to extend the state's voter registration deadline -- which passed on May 23 for eligibility to vote in the June 7 primary -- until election day itself."

Bill Simpich, one of the San Francisco-based lawyers representing the group, said, "The main relief we are asking for is for the independent voters -- non-party preference or NPP -- to be able to vote for president on June 7 without tying up the voting lines and avoiding a situation of mass confusion.”

“We are asking the judge for an order that the poll workers be trained to inform voters that NPP voters have a separate presidential ballot rather than the voter having to ask for one, and that PSAs be sent out to all voters about how to vote NPP given the incorrect mandatory notices mailed out by government officials across the state, and to ensure that there are enough ballots for everyone to vote,” he told ABC News.

"We believe the City Attorney is confused about what the problems are: 50 percent of the NPP voters want to vote Democratic. As of May 24, only 14 percent of them have received their ballots. Half to 2/3 of the whole state votes by mail. Hundreds of thousands of votes at stake. The deadline to have the elections officials mail your ballot to you is May 31."

Sanders has not issued a statement on the matter.
 

Camille

Kitchen Wench #TeamQuaid
Staff member
Can anyone shed any light on this for me? I absolutely abhor Chuck Todd, so whenever he comes on I change the channel, unless it's a panel discussion where there are other guests I like. I've tuned out mostly since our state had it's primary, since most coverage is Trump 24/7 anyway and mostly I've only be keeping up with events that get major traction. Has he been acting as a surrogate for Bernie or something?

 

MASTERBAKER

༺ S❤️PER❤️ ᗰOD ༻
Super Moderator

Streamed live 1 hour ago
Tune in to The Tim Black At Night Show Thursday 6/2 at 9PM Est. The fantastic, incomparable Senator Nina Turner joins the Tim Black Show.

Expect at least 4 things from this show:

1)Clear up media misconceptions surrounding Bernie Sanders campaign,
2) Crystallize the importance of the remaining primary states and
3) Drop strategy and inspiration to ensure Bernie Sanders Supporters stay in the fight!
4) Get out the way and let Senator Turner be Senator Turner.

Don't miss it. Please RSVP.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
I'd like to see inspirationals like this running year-round, and not necessarily as a "political/campaign ad."
 

Camille

Kitchen Wench #TeamQuaid
Staff member
Not my title...

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...ale-reporters/?wprss=rss_the-fix&tid=sm_tw_pp


If there is a trophy for bad behavior, Bernie Sanders's supporters appear hellbent on taking it from Donald Trump's.

The latest ugly episode involves threatening phone calls to New York Times reporter Amy Chozick and at least one harassing, profanity-laced message directed at NPR's Tamara Keith on Tuesday.



BernieBros.jpg





This comes two weeks after Daily Beast columnist and WNYC radio host Keli Goff chronicled some of the racist mail she receives from Sanders backers. Here at The Fix, our own Janell Ross has written about her experience with racist, sexist messages from so-called "Bernie Bros."

[Bernie Sanders’s most vitriolic supporters really test the meaning of the word ‘progressive’]

They use a variety of curse words and insults typically reserved for women. More than one has suggested that I deserve to become the victim of a sex crime. They critique the "objectivity" of what is clearly political analysis based on polling data and other facts; they insist that black voters are dumb or that I have a personal obligation to help black voters see the error of their Clinton-voting ways. It is vile. And it stands in sharp contrast to the claim that no portion of Sanders supporters are angry people who sometimes engage in or embrace bigotry.

It's no surprise that Sanders supporters would be in a foul mood on Tuesday. The Associated Press declared Hillary Clinton the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee the night before, based on newly documented commitments by unbound convention delegates.

But it's impossible to ignore another notable moment from Monday. Sanders himself got into a testy exchange with a female Times reporter, Yamiche Alcindor, who posed the following question during a news conference: "What do you say to women who say that you staying in the race is sexist because you're standing in the way of what could be the first female president?"

Sanders initially cut off Alcindor before she could complete her question and tried to move on to CNN's Jeff Zeleny. When Zeleny deferred, allowing Alcindor to finish, Sanders's offered an incredulous response: "Is that a serious question?"

We can't assume that Alcindor's gender was a factor here. It's possible that Sanders is simply sick and tired of questions — from anyone — that suggest he is stubbornly clinging to a shot at the nomination that doesn't really exist.

But as the Vermont senator's undeniably impressive campaign nears its inevitable end, his frustration appears to be rubbing off on supporters. In the past month, Sanders backers have defaced the state headquarters of the Nevada Democratic Party, sent threatening messages to Nevada Democratic chairwoman Roberta Lange, and participated in attacks on Trump rally-goers in California.

Sanders has tried to discourage such hooliganism. On CNN's "State of the Union" Sunday, he pleaded with supporters to cut it out.

"Any person who is a Bernie Sanders supporter, please, do not in any way, shape or form engage in violence," he said.

Still, there appears to be a pattern. When Sanders complains about party leaders or gripes about the media, some of his supporters go too far. It happened again to female journalists on Tuesday.
 

Camille

Kitchen Wench #TeamQuaid
Staff member
I had also posted this in a different thread earlier:

Smh... all she did was report the news...

 

MASTERBAKER

༺ S❤️PER❤️ ᗰOD ༻
Super Moderator
Joy Behar posts sexually tinged message to Bernie Sanders on Twitter begging him to exit race
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Supporters relieved Sanders will continue to fight
KCRA - Sacramento, CA
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ADAM EDELMAN
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Thursday, June 9, 2016, 9:56 AM

Wrap it up, Bernie.

Joy Behar took to Twitter Thursday to say that even his most passionate fans, including herself, want him to get out of the presidential race.

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Bernie Sanders has insisted on staying in the presidential race even though Hillary Clinton has won enough delegates to clinch the Democratic nomination.
(JONATHAN ALCORN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES)
"I'm sexually attracted to Bernie, and I even I want him to pull out!" she posted, alongside an old photo of her appearing with the Vermont senator.

Bernie Sanders: No concession even as campaign rapidly dwindles

View image on Twitter
Ckg1jNEWsAAq2jS.jpg:small

Follow
Joy Behar@JoyVBehar

I'm sexually attracted to Bernie, and even I want him to pull out!#TBT:fucking::roflmao::roflmao2::roflmao3:

9:39 AM - 9 Jun 2016
Sanders has insisted on staying in the presidential race even though Hillary Clinton has won enough delegates to clinch the Democratic nomination.

The Vermont senator was blown out in the California primary Tuesday despite campaigning heavily in the state for weeks.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
One word.

COMPROMISE.


The parties now need to come together and work a reasonable COMPROMISE.
Neither side ever gets all it wants. Each side must be reasonable, understanding
what is at stake and understanding the pluses and minuses of their positions.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Bernie Sanders Could Destroy His Own Revolution

The longer he waits to endorse Clinton, the more he helps Trump


For a 74-year-old, Bernie Sanders is damn good at limbo. Sanders is no longer actively running against Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination—and yet he isn’t not running either. He’s just, well, in limbo. He clearly wants to continue to push his ideas for the Democratic Party platform and process, but what’s unclear is whether he still wants to push his candidacy—or now help Clinton get elected instead.

Here’s what Sanders said last week: “The major political task that we face in the next five months is to make certain that Donald Trump is defeated and defeated badly. And I personally intend to begin my role in that process in a very short period of time.”

Just not yet, apparently.

Days after primary defeats in California and New Jersey, Sanders started laying off at least half of his campaign staff while calling himself an “active candidate” and pledging to “take our campaign for transforming the Democratic Party into the convention.”

His decision to not concede the nomination makes some sense if you think about the full arc of Sanders’ campaign—which no one ever really expected to seriously contest the nomination but instead to have an impact in making the party and its eventual nominee more progressive. Still, as the primary slogged on, and Sanders became an actual electoral threat, the campaign became a real fight.

In the beginning of January, Clinton posted favorability ratings among Democrats in Gallup polling at 58% to 61% versus Sanders hovering consistently 10 points lower. By April, their positions had switched, and Sanders had about a 16 point favorability spread over Clinton with Democrats—with Clinton dropping to 43% favorability and, as of June, just 39%. In other words, it’s reasonable to argue that the campaign between Sanders and Clinton made Clinton less popular among the Democratic base—maybe because voters simply had an alternative to prefer or because Sanders actively undermined perceptions of Clinton. Either way, the damage was done and now needs to be repaired to help Clinton win in November. And among a certain swath of often vehemently anti-Clinton progressives, Sanders is perhaps the only one who can lead that healing.

Instead, Sanders has chosen to send mixed messages about his candidacy which, the longer he waits, in effect sends increasingly mixed messages about Clinton. Clinton will be the Democratic nominee for President of the United States. And the longer Sanders waits to endorse her, the more reluctant and thus tepid that endorsement will seem. Plus, it only creates space for his most ardently anti-Clinton supporters to fume and foment.

There’s been speculation that some of Sanders delegates could try to deny Clinton the nomination during the Democratic National Convention. That would flaunt the democratic process and damage the party at the moment it most needs to unify. But every moment that Sanders’ refuses to formally concede gives comfort to such plots. It’s time for Sanders to emphatically and enthusiastically support Clinton’s candidacy and send a clear message that anyone who tries to attack or undermine Clinton’s candidacy will be going against Sanders and the spirit of his campaign.

I believe in the mission and message of Sanders and his candidacy. I firmly believe we need a revolution in the Democratic Party and nationwide that finally makes America work for the 99% and not just the establishment elite. I want to see the energy and excitement behind his vision carry forward, animated by a bold new movement of engaged progressives willing to challenge the Democratic Party and the political system—raising up a truly transformative agenda and holding all of our leaders accountable.

We can do that AND support Hillary Clinton—emphasizing the 90% of issues with which progressives agree with Clinton while continuing to push her to evolve on the rest and taking her to task when she doesn’t. I’m not saying this is an easy needle to thread, arguably the left failed to do this for the first four years of Obama’s presidency. But this is the task ahead, the way to raise up our vision and defeat the greatest threat to that vision, Donald Trump. We progressives can thread that needle with the right leadership. These are the moves Sanders should be making—instead of playing limbo.


SOURCE: http://time.com/4376440/bernie-sanders-limbo/?xid=homepage


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QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator

Sanders national press secretary leaving campaign



90

Symone Sanders joined Bernie Sanders' campaign in August 2015. | AP Photo


Sen. Bernie Sanders' national press secretary has decided to leave the campaign, she confirmed on Sunday night.

Symone D. Sanders (no relation to the senator) said she was departing the campaign amicably. [QueEx: one would expect that the departure
is amicable -- so if you have to say it is, is it ?]

"I believe my time at the campaign has come to an end," she told POLITICO. "I'm very proud of the work we have done and am now looking forward to helping elect down-ballot Democrats and do all I can to ensure a Democrat is the 45th president of the United States."

Symone Sanders said she gave notice last week.

"The senator, Jeff and I are all in a good place," she said, referring to campaign manager Jeff Weaver.

Sanders also said she did not have a specific job lined up yet.

"But there is so much work to be done and too much at stake in November for me to sit on the sidelines, she said.

The move is another sign that Sanders' campaign is winding down. Symone Sanders had been with the senator's campaign since August 2015. She was previously with the Washington, D.C.-based Coalition for Juvenile Justice.



Read more: http://www.politico.com/story/2016/06/bernie-sanders-national-press-secretary-224821#ixzz4CkEVeGhM


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muckraker10021

Superstar *****
BGOL Investor

June 30, 2016


June_30_2016_Bernie.jpg


June 30, 2016

Sanders On Endorsing Clinton




________________________________________________________

What is important to note about the article below is that all the facts and statistics cited are all 1000% unimpeachable. No one has ever called Bernie Sanders a liar when he talks about the "rigged economic system" — they can't; he's telling the truth. The once vaunted American middle class is disappearing; individual wages have been declining for 30 years. The 99% have been surviving by forming "households" of two, three, four, — and by taking on massive consumer debt, sometimes at rates as high as 29%, or even as high as 300% in so-called "pay-day" loans. Hillary who is almost certain to be the Democratic Party nominee for POTUS, has offered NO answers or solutions to the inconvenient truths about the 99% that Bernie incessantly talks about. She and the corporate "owned" Democratic establishment want Bernie to just shut-up and do a photo-op with Hillary holding her hand in the air, as she regurgitates vacuous homilies about her "fighting for us" and "stronger together".





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Bernie Sanders: Democrats Need to Wake Up


by Bernie Sanders | June 28, 2016 |http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/29/o...bernie-sanders-democrats-need-to-wake-up.html


Surprise, surprise. Workers in Britain, many of whom have seen a decline in their standard of living while the very rich in their country have become much richer, have turned their backs on the European Union and a globalized economy that is failing them and their children.

And it’s not just the British who are suffering. That increasingly globalized economy, established and maintained by the world’s economic elite, is failing people everywhere. Incredibly, the wealthiest 62 people on this planet own as much wealth as the bottom half of the world’s population — around 3.6 billion people. The top 1 percent now owns more wealth than the whole of the bottom 99 percent. The very, very rich enjoy unimaginable luxury while billions of people endure abject poverty, unemployment, and inadequate health care, education, housing and drinking water.

Could this rejection of the current form of the global economy happen in the United States? You bet it could.

During my campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination, I’ve visited 46 states. What I saw and heard on too many occasions were painful realities that the political and media establishment fail even to recognize.

In the last 15 years, nearly 60,000 factories in this country have closed, and more than 4.8 million well-paid manufacturing jobs have disappeared. Much of this is related to disastrous trade agreements that encourage corporations to move to low-wage countries.

Despite major increases in productivity, the median male worker in America today is making $726 dollars less than he did in 1973, while the median female worker is making $1,154 less than she did in 2007, after adjusting for inflation.

Nearly 47 million Americans live in poverty. An estimated 28 million have no health insurance, while many others are underinsured. Millions of people are struggling with outrageous levels of student debt. For perhaps the first time in modern history, our younger generation will probably have a lower standard of living than their parents. Frighteningly, millions of poorly educated Americans will have a shorter life span than the previous generation as they succumb to despair, drugs and alcohol.

Meanwhile, in our country the top one-tenth of 1 percent now owns almost as much wealth as the bottom 90 percent. Fifty-eight percent of all new income is going to the top 1 percent. Wall Street and billionaires, through their “super PACs,” are able to buy elections.

On my campaign, I’ve talked to workers unable to make it on $8 or $9 an hour; retirees struggling to purchase the medicine they need on $9,000 a year of Social Security; young people unable to afford college. I also visited the American citizens of Puerto Rico, where some 58 percent of the children live in poverty and only a little more than 40 percent of the adult population has a job or is seeking one.

Let’s be clear. The global economy is not working for the majority of people in our country and the world. This is an economic model developed by the economic elite to benefit the economic elite. We need real change.

But we do not need change based on the demagogy, bigotry and anti-immigrant sentiment that punctuated so much of the Leave campaign’s rhetoric — and is central to Donald J. Trump’s message.

We need a president who will vigorously support international cooperation that brings the people of the world closer together, reduces hypernationalism and decreases the possibility of war. We also need a president who respects the democratic rights of the people, and who will fight for an economy that protects the interests of working people, not just Wall Street, the drug companies and other powerful special interests.

We need to fundamentally reject our “free trade” policies and move to fair trade. Americans should not have to compete against workers in low-wage countries who earn pennies an hour. We must defeat the Trans-Pacific Partnership. We must help poor countries develop sustainable economic models.

We need to end the international scandal in which large corporations and the wealthy avoid paying trillions of dollars in taxes to their national governments.

We need to create tens of millions of jobs worldwide by combating global climate change and by transforming the world’s energy system away from fossil fuels.

We need international efforts to cut military spending around the globe and address the causes of war: poverty, hatred, hopelessness and ignorance.

The notion that Donald Trump could benefit from the same forces that gave the Leave proponents a majority in Britain should sound an alarm for the Democratic Party in the United States. Millions of American voters, like the Leave supporters, are understandably angry and frustrated by the economic forces that are destroying the middle class.

In this pivotal moment, the Democratic Party and a new Democratic president need to make clear that we stand with those who are struggling and who have been left behind. We must create national and global economies that work for all, not just a handful of billionaires.

 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
[SANDERS]: "In this pivotal moment, the Democratic Party and a new Democratic president need to make clear that we stand with those who are struggling and who have been left behind. We must create national and global economies that work for all, not just a handful of billionaires."

So, given all that he wrote ante the quote above, is Bernie saying that he is no longer urging that he himself be the "new Democratic president" -- but that the "presumed-nominee" and the Party need urgently to adopt the 5 "We needs" as the message moving forward ???
 

muckraker10021

Superstar *****
BGOL Investor
common_dreams_01.jpg


Embracing Sanders' Higher-Ed Call,
Clinton Expands Debt-Free College Plan

Clinton's new proposals on college affordability are "a result of the work of both campaigns"

sanders_22.jpg


"The persistence of the political coalition around Bernie Sanders has nudged Hillary Clinton toward a more progressive position on ensuring that working-class students can attend college debt-free," wrote columnist Isaiah Poole.

by Deirdre Fulton | July 6th 2016 |
http://www.commondreams.org/news/20...d-call-clinton-expands-debt-free-college-plan


Hillary Clinton's newly revised college affordability plan, unveiled Wednesday, clearly bears the stamp of Bernie Sanders and his youth-powered movement—so much so that the senator from Vermont publicly praised it as "very bold initiative" that will "revolutionize the funding of higher education in America."

With the addition of three new proposals, Clinton's higher education plan now calls for:

    • the elimination of tuition at in-state colleges and universities for 83 percent of U.S. families;
    • a three-month moratorium on the repayment of federal student loans in order to facilitate debt restructuring; and
    • restoration of year-round Pell Grants, which would help students get funding for summer classes.

According to the Huffington Post, "Clinton's new proposals move her beyond previous statements that she would try to make college 'as debt-free as possible' and toward making 'debt-free college available to all.'"

While the plan stops short of Sanders' call for universal free tuition, the senator himself said Wednesday that it "combines some of the strongest ideas she fought for during the campaign with some of the principles that I fought for. The final product is a result of the work of both campaigns."

As such, observers were swift to credit Sanders and his supporters for catapulting this issue to the forefront of the campaign. "The persistence of the political coalition around Bernie Sanders has nudged Hillary Clinton toward a more progressive position on ensuring that working-class students can attend college debt-free," wrote columnist Isaiah Poole at the Campaign for America's Future blog.

Indeed, "Clinton's plan is a sign that his vision has triumphed," Libby Nelson declared at Vox:

Until very recently, the consensus in the Democratic Party was that students should pay for part of their own education, even if they needed loans to do so, because they’d reap the lifelong benefits of earning a college degree. The role of the federal government was to help them afford it, through grants to the poorest students and loans to everyone else.

Sanders upended that consensus. Instead of viewing a college degree as something that ultimately benefits individuals, and that the federal government should help to finance, he saw higher education as something that should be free and accessible to everyone — just as K-12 education is today.

As public policy organization Demos noted in its response to the news, "If enacted, this plan would return the U.S. to a system where students could work their way through school again, and it represents a major shift back to the notion of higher education as a public good."

With Sanders still holding out on endorsing Clinton, the move has explicitly political motivations. The New York Times reports:

Mrs. Clinton's team is eager to attract the young supporters that flocked to Mr. Sanders in the nominating fight.

A campaign aide noted that during a meeting last month with Mr. Sanders, the two discussed the merits of their plans to make college more affordable and the importance of featuring the issue prominently in the general election.

And as CNBC put it, the shift "points to a trend of the Democratic party adopting elements of the Vermont Senator's progressive platform, which attracted a groundswell of support."

As Common Dreams reported last week, the Democratic National Committee's draft 2016 platform includes other nods to Sanders, including calls for an end to the death penalty, a $15 minimum wage, the establishment of a postal banking system, broad marijuana law reform, and elimination of tax breaks for Big Oil.

On other issues, like trade and fracking, the party continues to snub progressives.


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QueEx

Rising Star
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Clinton moves to the left and earns Sanders’ endorsement

Clinton has shifted her positions on key issues to accommodate Sanders


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Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and independent Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont wave during a rally in Portsmouth, N.H., on
Tuesday, July 12, 2016, where Sanders endorsed Clinton for president. Andrew Harnik AP


By Anita Kumar


WASHINGTON -- More than a month after she secured the Democratic nomination for president, Hillary Clinton finally got a much-needed, long-sought endorsement Tuesday from her onetime rival Bernie Sanders.

The endorsement came after Clinton and her allies shifted their positions to accommodate Sanders, most recently announcing support for tuition-free enrollment in public in-state colleges, a $15-an-hour federal minimum wage and expansion of the Affordable Care Act.


“This campaign is about the needs of the American people and addressing the very serious crises that we face,” Sanders said at a rally in New Hampshire. “And there is no doubt in my mind that, as we head into November, Hillary Clinton is far and away the best candidate to do that.”

[Get the political buzz of the day, every day from McClatchy]

Sanders and Clinton appeared together – hugging and waving – on a Portsmouth stage adorned with a sign that said “Stronger together” in front of a crowd that was waving both Clinton and Sanders signs.

“We are joining forces to defeat Donald Trump, win in November and, yes, together build a future we can all believe in,” Clinton said.

Her supporters expect the independent senator from Vermont to help push new, younger and more liberal voters to Clinton in a general election against Republican Donald Trump.

The 74-year-old self-described democratic socialist surprised most people, including himself, by tapping into anger brewing in the country to galvanize a new crop of voters as a champion of the underpaid, overworked American. In a year when Clinton was expected to walk away easily with the nomination, Sanders received 12 million votes and won contests in 22 states.

“Sen. Bernie Sanders’ candidacy invigorated our primary and engaged millions of young people to participate in this campaign,” said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

Trump, who has been trying to woo Sanders supporters to his own campaign, criticized the senator’s decision on Twitter and in a flurry of statements.

LinkedIn


WASHINGTON


More than a month after she secured the Democratic nomination for president, Hillary Clinton finally got a much-needed, long-sought endorsement Tuesday from her onetime rival Bernie Sanders.

The endorsement came after Clinton and her allies shifted their positions to accommodate Sanders, most recently announcing support for tuition-free enrollment in public in-state colleges, a $15-an-hour federal minimum wage and expansion of the Affordable Care Act.


“This campaign is about the needs of the American people and addressing the very serious crises that we face,” Sanders said at a rally in New Hampshire. “And there is no doubt in my mind that, as we head into November, Hillary Clinton is far and away the best candidate to do that.”

[Get the political buzz of the day, every day from McClatchy]

Sanders and Clinton appeared together – hugging and waving – on a Portsmouth stage adorned with a sign that said “Stronger together” in front of a crowd that was waving both Clinton and Sanders signs.


“We are joining forces to defeat Donald Trump, win in November and, yes, together build a future we can all believe in,” Clinton said.

Her supporters expect the independent senator from Vermont to help push new, younger and more liberal voters to Clinton in a general election against Republican Donald Trump.

The 74-year-old self-described democratic socialist surprised most people, including himself, by tapping into anger brewing in the country to galvanize a new crop of voters as a champion of the underpaid, overworked American. In a year when Clinton was expected to walk away easily with the nomination, Sanders received 12 million votes and won contests in 22 states.


“Sen. Bernie Sanders’ candidacy invigorated our primary and engaged millions of young people to participate in this campaign,” said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

Trump, who has been trying to woo Sanders supporters to his own campaign, criticized the senator’s decision on Twitter and in a flurry of statements.


“Bernie’s endorsement becomes exhibit A in our rigged system: the Democrat party is disenfranchising its voters to benefit the select and privileged few,” said Stephen Miller, Trump’s senior policy adviser.


Sanders had vowed to push for the most liberal agenda, including reining in Wall Street, lowering college costs and raising the minimum wage. Clinton repeatedly moved to the left in her long campaign against him, reversing her positions to oppose the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal and the Keystone XL pipeline.

“With the Democratic Party on track to ratify the most progressive platform in recent history, and Clinton continuing to campaign on progressive ideas, Sanders supporters can feel good that they helped to transform the future of the Democratic Party and America,” said Kait Sweeney, a spokeswoman for the Progressive Change Campaign Committee.


Read more here: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/news/politics-government/article89159582.html#storylink=cpy
 

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Sanders Supporters “Feel The Bern” – Bernie Sells-Out to Clinton Corporate Greed
Sanders Supporters “Feel The Bern” – Bernie Sells-Out to Clinton Corporate Greed
Breaking News By Amy Moreno July 12, 2016
The guy who was supposedly “fighting” corporate greed just did a 360 and endorsed the personification of crony-corruption.

Ouch, that’s gotta bern.

Today Hillary Clinton and Bernie “Sell-out” Sanders declared themselves BFF’s and vowed to “fight the corruption” together.

I couldn’t type that last line with a straight face.

Bernie, who obviously missed a dose or two of medication, spoke to the New Hampshire crowd, saying, “I have come here to make it as clear as possible why I am endorsing Hillary Clinton and why she must become our next president.”

Bernie supporters who truly believed in his “cause” must be gagging up their collective gizzards right about now.

The 74-year-old self-described socialist has been a thorn in Clinton’s corporate-greed-side over the past year.

The animosity from Bernie supporters towards Hillary and everything vile and greedy she stands for gave way to the #NeverHillary movement, which as we speak, remains a significant movement.

However, Sanders has moved on, and is now looking to line his lint-filled-old-man-pockets with all those “corporate political goodies” his new BFF can offer him.

Bernie, Bernie Bernie…..

In a moment of pure unadulterated shame, Sanders pledged his support to his former rival saying, “I intend to do everything I can to make certain she will be the next president of the United States.”

Why, Bernie, why?

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Amy Moreno is a Published Author, Pug Lover & Game of Thrones Nerd. You can follow her on Twitter here.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Democrats sealed their fate by not choosing Bernie






By David Horsey
Los Angeles Times


If Democrats had made a different choice in the primaries last spring, Bernie Sanders would be assembling his Cabinet right now. A reading of voting patterns in the presidential election suggests that the Vermont senator would have beaten Donald Trump.

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 percent.

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 Trump’s 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.

Polls and interviews with voters, both before and after the election, identified a significant overlap between Trump voters and Sanders admirers. Among non-college-educated whites in the old industrial states, many were simply looking for someone to address their concerns and shake things up in Washington. They went with Trump on Nov. 8, but plenty of them would have voted for Sanders if he had been on the ballot.


Would it have been enough to tip Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania? Given the small numbers needed, the answer is very likely yes.

Now, I have a smart friend who is certain the socialist label would have sunk Bernie in the general election. He believes America’s long antipathy toward the Red Menace (the old red, not the new, conservative red) would have been fully exploited by right-wing commentators and the Trump campaign. Certainly, that would have been the central line of attack. But I argue, with the Soviet menace no more than a memory, the potency of that attack would have been largely limited to a constituency on the right that no Democrat could win anyway.


Sanders is not a threatening, alien figure. His “socialism” was most pronounced in his calls to tax the wealthy at a higher rate and provide free college tuition at state universities — two ideas that are hardly radical, given that both were the norm in the America of Dwight Eisenhower and John F. Kennedy.

It is now clear, as well, that Sanders would have had another big advantage: He wasn’t Hillary. It may be grossly unfair, but 30 years of character assassination from the right took its toll. A big share of voters opted for Trump because they loathed Clinton, or at least the predominant caricature of her. Bill Clinton was a drag on her candidacy, as well. When Trump’s lewd comments about women made on video were revealed, the negative reaction was blunted by Trump surrogates who skewed attention toward the sordid past of Hillary’s husband.

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 Clinton’s loss.

Finally, there was an enthusiasm gap among younger voters who were a key demographic in Obama’s 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.


It would not have taken many votes to produce a different result in three key states. Bernie Sanders could have done it. He would now be president-elect and America would be heading in a very different direction.



Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/opinion/article122998619.html#storylink=cpy



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