RSN Fundraising Banner
FB Share
Email This Page
add comment
Politics
How Emory's Student Activists Are Fueling Trumpism Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=6030"><span class="small">Conor Friedersdorf, The Atlantic</span></a>   
Monday, 28 March 2016 08:33

Friedersdorf writes: "After someone wrote 'Trump 2016' in colored chalk around campus, several dozen student demonstrators objected that the banal campaign message scared, upset, or offended them, and administrators responded by going Orwellian."


"Vote Trump" written in chalk at Emory University. (photo: Inside Higher Ed)


How Emory's Student Activists Are Fueling Trumpism

By Conor Friedersdorf, The Atlantic

28 March 16

 

The billionaire candidate couldn’t have created more perfect foils for a candidacy built on resentment.

ad Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign for the White House somehow infiltrated the ranks of Emory's student activists and blackmailed the university’s President James W. Wagner, it could scarcely have orchestrated a spectacle more helpful to Trump’s prospects, or damaging to the values that protect vulnerable groups, than what they accomplished on their own this week. After someone wrote “Trump 2016” in colored chalk around campus, several dozen student demonstrators objected that the banal campaign message scared, upset, or offended them, and administrators responded by going Orwellian.

The Emory Wheel reports that Wagner will review footage from campus security cameras to uncover who made the chalkings. “He added that if they’re students, they will go through the conduct violation process,” the newspaper stated, “while if they are from outside of the University, trespassing charges will be pressed.” Ponder the precedent. An academic authority figure will use surveillance to track down and punish someone for urging support for a political candidate. If possible, he will marshal criminal law to do so. As Jesse Singal wrote at New York, that is “extremely creepy, and a sign that something has gone seriously wrong.”

Can you imagine how campus progressives would have reacted if a university president threatened to have someone punished or charged with trespassing for chalking “Obama 2012” or “Bernie 2016” on campus sidewalks? But these students see no need for viewpoint-neutral standards about politicking in presidential elections.

The shortsightedness of all involved is staggering. Set aside the brazen illiberalism of their actions and briefly consider this from a consequentialist perspective.

For starters, leftist activists are far more likely than anyone else to use sidewalk chalk and should be pushing to dispense with existing, rarely enforced campus regulations. The medium is unusually suited to the powerless, too: It is cheap, easy to use, and very hard to suppress. Yet they’re signing on to surveillance and punishment for chalk-wielding activism, as if it hasn’t even occurred to them that their allies stand to lose the most from future crackdowns, whereas Donald Trump 2016 could foreswear sidewalk chalk forever without suffering from it at all. I don’t know whether these students have an incoherent theory of how power works, or haven’t thought the matter through, but future leftist activists may rue their behavior.

What’s more, if the sidewalk-chalker is unmasked and punished, the effect will be to fuel the popularity of Trump 2016, not to undermine it. This is so obvious to everyone outside the bubble of campus leftism that I begin to wonder if activists at Emory don’t understand that, or just don’t actually care about outcomes beyond their bubble.

At ages 18 to 22, many of us were less able to see the world through the eyes of others than in earlier or later years. I find it easy to forgive college students, whether activists or otherwise, when they display that quality. It doesn’t make them bad people. Still, good people can harm important causes. I wish the ideological cohort that makes privilege so central to their analysis would expend more effort reflecting on this fact: Those on track to earn degrees from prestigious universities are unusual in their ability to indulge rhetoric and actions without reflecting on how they will be perceived by fellow citizens or undermine the rights of the powerless.

Put more simply: Please stop undermining #NeverTrump and the culture of free speech that will be especially vital if the billionaire with authoritarian tendencies is elected president.

Off campus, these students have managed to generate lots of incredulous coverage—and some open mockery—from the Washington Post, ABC News, Gawker, People Magazine, the Associated Press, CBS, The Week, The Atlanta-Journal Constitution, The Daily Beast, and beyond. Has there ever been a more self-evidently counterproductive course willingly taken by activists than the one presently unfolding? Outsiders can only hope Emory's president doesn’t succeed in finding whoever wrote the messages and making a martyr out of a Trump supporter in media outlets that would in almost no other circumstances regard his partisans as victims of unfair treatment.  

Already, other damage has been done. Earlier this week, I noted that a black student at UC Davis suffered a hate crime near campus. Three men were later arrested for the assault. Previously, I’ve highlighted the horrifying affects of NYPD spying on innocent Muslim students and the UC Berkeley riot police that turned batons on students. There is sometimes good reason for college students to be concerned about their physical safety on campus, and there are incidents of racism that do not threaten physical safety but are nevertheless abhorrent and understandably upsetting. When students react like this to the mere appearance of the name of a leading candidate in the middle of a presidential-election year, treating the most commonplace political advocacy as if it makes them unsafe, they create perverse incentives for invoking victimhood and deflate the currency of claimed trauma and offense.

* * *

After much searching, the most thoughtful defense of Emory’s student activists I could find came from Osita Nwanevu, a recent graduate of the University of Chicago and editor of the South Side Weekly. By way of background, he recently published a provocative Harper’s essay that casts today’s leftist campus protesters as intellectual inheritors of William F. Buckley and concluded that isn’t actually a bad thing.

About Emory, he said this:

Those Tweets gesture at a perceived contradiction: Lots of public intellectuals and journalists at outlets from Gawker to National Review regard Trump as a genuinely dangerous figure. Yet they mock students who feel frightened by support for the candidate.

For like-minded observers who perceive an inconsistency, let me try to explain why, even apart from consequentialist concerns, I don’t think the widespread backlash to Emory activists is contradictory, even among those who fear a Trump administration.

It is grounded in these premises:

  1. All Emory University students have been aware for months that they live amid lots of Donald Trump supporters. He is the leading contender for the Republican nomination. He easily won the GOP primary in the state of Georgia. The fact that one or two Trump supporters with access to chalk live close enough to Emory to write “Trump 2016” on their sidewalks is not new information. For that reason, most observers find it difficult to believe that these students are fearful or traumatized because they’re newly aware of living near Trump supporters and have concluded they’re not physically safe anymore.

  2. While the students are not literally afraid of chalk, they have given most observers the impression that they are more upset by the fact that someone in their community is speaking out in favor of Trump than the underlying reality of his base. That’s because they—not their critics—have made the chalking the subject of their activism. Doing so has reinforced the notion that college students are irrationally focused on policing what people say at the expense of confronting and grappling with whatever it is that people believe. As the editor of the student newspaper at Emory aptly countered, “Institutionally prohibiting an ignorant, hurtful or violent idea does not destroy it; it allows the idea to grow and worsen in the shadows, far from the moderating effects of public scrutiny. The best way to destroy an idea is to confront it.”

  3. Indeed, if it really had taken these chalk messages to awaken some Emory students to the fact that Trump may win the presidency and enjoys substantial support among Georgia residents, their appearance would have been salutary, insofar as they would’ve helped these students to confront an ugly reality while there is still time to organize and prevent Trump from winning.

  4. Meanwhile, most observers—even those, like myself, who fully see the vile racism and xenophobia that have characterized Trump’s campaign— understand that supporting Trump 2016 does not automatically make someone a racist or a xenophobe, never mind a threat to the safety of those around them. The seeming inability of students to understand that what it would mean for them to support Trump is not what many others mean by supporting Trump—that Americans support politicians for all sorts of complicated, irrational, contradictory, quirky, unexpected, or sui generis reasons—is a major failing on the part of the students themselves and their educators.

  5. This failure dramatically weakens the ability of these students to understand, engage with, and persuade Trump supporters in the upcoming election, and to participate more broadly in a civic system that depends, at some level, on overcoming the typical-mind fallacy. There are surely actual Trump voters on Emory’s campus. If the campus climate were different, perhaps they could be persuaded, in the course of discussion, to see the error of their ways. Do you think they’ll out themselves to fellow students now?

  6. And look at this passage in Wagner’s response to this controversey: “After meeting with these students, I cannot dismiss their expression of feelings and concern as motivated only by political preference or over-sensitivity. Instead, the students with whom I spoke heard a message, not about political process or candidate choice, but instead about values regarding diversity and respect that clash with Emory’s own.” In his formulation, the fact that they “heard a message” about “values regarding diversity” is somehow offered as if it proves that they aren’t motivated by “over-sensitivity.” But if someone were acting out of “over-sensivity” wouldn’t it logically be because they heard a message that wasn’t, in fact, there?  Wagner hasn’t yet put together a coherent explanation of his own thought process.

In a subsequent Tweet, Nwanevu wrote this:

Actually, the more cynical critics of progressive campus activists believe precisely that they are motivated by the relative power they now hold, not by truly feeling unsafe—in this telling, they are using their ideological clout on college campuses to punish speech they don’t like from people with less power in that space, and if the same ideological cohort ever attains power outside campus, it will try to suppress speech there, too. Lots of Trump supporters are motivated precisely by the belief that, without a guy like Trump to represent their tribe, their own speech will be suppressed.

But there is an even more direct rejoinder to Nwanevu’s claim: Emory activists who believe that they are being effective within the bubble of their campus are wrong.  The student newspaper editor, Zak Hudak, expressed his own aversion to Trump while pointing out the obvious unacceptability of suppressing “Trump 2016” advocacy.

On Yik Yak, a social media app popular among college students in large part because it permits anonymous speech, the Emory student reaction to the chalk controversy wasn’t mixed, as often happens when one views that platform during a campus controversy. It was clearly, overwhelmingly antagonistic to the student activists. Keep in mind that the content that follows, which went on for scroll after scroll, dominating the platform, was all posted within 1.5 miles of Emory’s campus:




Knowing that is the reaction in an enclave wildly more progressive than America as a whole, you’d think that the activists at Emory might change their approach.

In activist circles, being “a bad ally” is a serious charge.

And right now, Emory’s chalk-focused activists and its president are the worst allies imaginable for anti-Trumpism. They’re not just ineffective, they’re doing all harm and no good. They’re focused on how Trump supporters make them feel rather than opposing his rise as effectively as possible. And their abandonment of liberal values bolsters the false belief of Trump supporters that such values are only ever invoked cynically.

That is fuel for more illiberalism. And insofar as America becomes a zero-sum game to see who can do the most to suppress the speech of whom, the campus left will not win. Why aren’t more tenured faculty members who understand that speaking up?

Everyone who wants to see Trump and the pernicious trends he represents defeated in American life, or who doesn’t want to see future activists identified by surveillance footage and punished, should look to Emory for a case study in what not to do.

The liberal coalition can’t afford any more such self-indulgence.

This is an election season. If you live in a state that Trump could possibly win in a primary or general election, you can buy some chalk yourself. You can learn how to canvas and go door to door; volunteer at a phone bank; or pick a civil-liberties organization that protects the sorts of people that you regard as most vulnerable and see if you can volunteer on their behalf. There are dozens of things that would help weaken Trumpism. Fighting to persuade a university president to denounce and punish Trump supporters is not one of them.


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
North Carolina Governor Swears in Historic First Class of Bathroom-Enforcement Cadets Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=9160"><span class="small">Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker</span></a>   
Sunday, 27 March 2016 14:08

Borowitz writes: "In a historic ceremony at the state capitol, on Friday, North Carolina Governor Pat McCrory swore in a thousand officers charged with enforcing the state's new public-bathroom regulations."

North Carolina Governor Pat McCrory. (photo: Getty Images)
North Carolina Governor Pat McCrory. (photo: Getty Images)


North Carolina Governor Swears in Historic First Class of Bathroom-Enforcement Cadets

By Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker

27 March 16

 

The article below is satire. Andy Borowitz is an American comedian and New York Times-bestselling author who satirizes the news for his column, "The Borowitz Report."

n a historic ceremony at the state capitol, on Friday, North Carolina Governor Pat McCrory swore in a thousand officers charged with enforcing the state’s new public-bathroom regulations.

Speaking to the newly graduated bathroom-enforcement cadets, McCrory impressed upon them the gravity of their responsibility. “You are the thin blue line charged with protecting the gender sanctity of North Carolina’s bathrooms,” he said. “Be careful out there.”

McCrory told reporters that the thousand officers are only “the first wave” of a bathroom-patrol force that will eventually swell to over fifty thousand. “This is job creation at its finest,” he said.

In addition to “making North Carolina proud of its bathrooms again,” McCrory said, the state’s new law should boost tourism, as visitors from around the world clamor to watch North Carolina’s unique bathroom-enforcement program in action.

“Ever since we passed this law, my phone has been ringing off the hook,” the governor said. “People can’t believe what we’re doing in North Carolina.”


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
LGBT Rights: Why Republicans and Big Corporations Are on Different Sides Print
Sunday, 27 March 2016 14:04

Jonsson writes: "The rushed passage of a bill in North Carolina that includes barring towns and cities from allowing transgender women to use the ladies' room pushes the boundaries of state-sanctioned bigotry, several US corporations, including the National Basketball Association, complained this week."

People protest outside the North Carolina Executive Mansion in Raleigh, N.C., on Thursday. (photo: Emery P. Dalesio/AP)
People protest outside the North Carolina Executive Mansion in Raleigh, N.C., on Thursday. (photo: Emery P. Dalesio/AP)


LGBT Rights: Why Republicans and Big Corporations Are on Different Sides

By Patrik Jonsson, Christian Science Monitor

27 March 16

 

North Carolina has taken the most aggressive stance so far against the expansion of gender rights. But major corporations are objecting at Republican efforts to curb LGBT rights.

he rushed passage of a bill in North Carolina that includes barring towns and cities from allowing transgender women to use the ladies’ room pushes the boundaries of state-sanctioned bigotry, several US corporations, including the National Basketball Association, complained this week.

For his part, North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory said the Republican-led legislature called a special session to gut an anti-discrimination ordinance in Charlotte because the local ordinance was dangerous and “defied common sense.”

The moves in conservative states to take a stand against blossoming LGBT rights are in many cases heartfelt and morality-bound, and for many Americans supersede the arguments about impacts on economic development. In other words, if the NBA yanks next year’s All-Star game from Charlotte, as it has suggested it might, it’s a worthy sacrifice in the eyes of North Carolina lawmakers.

In some ways, as the costly backlash to an Indiana religious liberty bill a year ago suggested, taking a stand for religious values in the public square puts the Republican party on an increasingly high-stakes collision course with a core constituency – US corporations, including major sports leagues.

In the past two decades, many US companies have gone from historically cautious to outright activist on social issues in order to appeal to shoppers, especially Millennials, who increasingly buy products that align with their values. And 18 states and 200 towns and cities have added specific LGBT non-discrimination protections. 

With the Wednesday vote, North Carolina has now taken what is widely seen as the most aggressive stance so far against the expansion of gender rights. Meanwhile, Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal has until May 3 to decide whether to sign a religious liberty bill that’s been decried as discriminatory by the NFL, Disney, and other corporations. Seven other states are now looking at joining Arkansas, Tennessee and North Carolina in making sure that any transgender person who uses a bathroom not assigned to their sex at birth is punished.

Writing about the building tension, Emory University law professor Tim Holbrook noted on CNN this week that “both Georgia and North Carolina have marketed themselves as being good for business. Indiana apparently was not a big enough canary in the coal mine.”

The producers of the popular AMC channel TV show “Walking Dead” have threatened to pull up stakes in Georgia if Governor Deal signs a bill protecting people with "sincere religious beliefs" from denying services to gay people.  Disney stated it will “take our business elsewhere” if “discriminatory practices [are] signed into law.”

Companies ranging from Biogen to Dow Chemicals raised objections to the North Carolina law. Facebook, Google and Apple have objected and each run massive data-processing complexes in western North Carolina, but have not threatened to pull out of the state.

In Missouri, PETCO is among a slew of businesses asking lawmakers to abandon a similar religious liberty bill.

In Georgia, Mr. Deal stands between rural conservatives pushing for the religious liberty legislation and business groups in Atlanta that say the bill could undo years of hard work in drawing major corporations to the hub of the South.

“Georgia has worked so hard to be a great place for business to come and relocate – it’s mind-boggling that they would jeopardize all that,” Dan Rafter, who works with the gay rights group Freedom for All Americans, told MSNBC this week.

Both bills go further than the religious freedom law signed by Indiana Gov. Mike Pence last spring, which ended up costing the state at least $60 million in convention and tourism revenue, even after it was narrowed to include more protections for LGBT people.

North Carolina Attorney General, Roy Cooper – who is running against Mr. McCrory for governor - said that "we should not be putting our economy in jeopardy."

The NFL has warned Georgia, which is helping the Atlanta Falcons build a new downtown stadium, that it may be out of the running for hosting the Super Bowl in 2019, an event that by some estimates had a nearly $800 million boost on the Arizona economy last year.

While Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer didn’t cite it specifically, warnings from the NFL and other corporations likely played at least some role in her vetoing a religious liberty legislation in 2014. She said such a law would have created “unintended and negative consequences.” 

"What's interesting there is that companies or brands are becoming so essential to people's lives that they're playing a role in these big social debates," Deborah Small, a marketing professor at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, told NBC News.

Whether corporations like Disney, PayPal or American Airlines will actually take action based on anti-LGBT rules is a gamble that North Carolina, at least, has shown it’s willing to take.

Economic losses in Indiana also didn’t keep the Indiana legislature in January from rejecting a bill that would have extended non-discrimination protections to transgender people. In Indiana today, a person's sexual orientation or gender identity can be cited as a legal reason to turn someone away from housing or a place of business.

And overall, the $60 million in tourism losses hardly made a dent in the state’s $4.5 billion tourist industry. Gov Pence’s office said in January that Indiana remained a “welcoming” state that had seen many organizations expand their event. One of those events include the NFL scouting combine.

Indeed, what remains uncertain as states like North Carolina push back against gender rights is how far corporations are willing to go in protest of such laws.

After all, the NFL is still holding next year’s Super Bowl in Houston, which late last year rejected a civil rights ordinance aimed at protecting LGBT citizens. “How much heavy lifting are [corporations like the NFL] willing to do?” asked Outsports editor Cyd Ziegler in an interview with MSNBC.


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
FOCUS: The Republican Civil War Has Begun Print
Sunday, 27 March 2016 12:08

Maiello writes: "The conservative intelligentsia - the collection of free traders, tax cutters and government shrinkers who have dictated the Republican Party's agenda since the Eighties - have had it with the losers of globalization who make up a significant portion of the party's base: the white males of modest education who have been most full-throated in their support of Donald Trump."

The conservative intelligentsia have found themselves at odds with a significant portion of the Republican Party's base. (photo: Scott Audette/Reuters)
The conservative intelligentsia have found themselves at odds with a significant portion of the Republican Party's base. (photo: Scott Audette/Reuters)


The Republican Civil War Has Begun

By Michael Maiello, Rolling Stone

27 March 16

 

You can't build a small-government movement on the backs of people you think are welfare cheats

he white American underclass is in thrall to a vicious, selfish culture whose main products are misery and used heroin needles," Kevin D. Williamson wrote recently in The National Review, the stalwart voice of the right for more than 60 years.

The conservative intelligentsia — the collection of free traders, tax cutters and government shrinkers who have dictated the Republican Party's agenda since the Eighties — have had it with the losers of globalization who make up a significant portion of the party's base: the white males of modest education who have been most full-throated in their support of Donald Trump.

In the mainstream organs like the op-ed pages of The New York Times or the editorials of The Wall Street Journal, right-wing columnists might support using the Republican convention process to deny Trump the nomination, but they discuss it in language that offers some respect to the legitimate anger of Trump's supporters. Last week, David Brooks tried to play nice, writing, "Well, some respect is in order. Trump voters are a coalition of the dispossessed. They have suffered lost jobs, lost wages, lost dreams."

Brooks' niceties will prove too weak a dam to hold back the anger that conservative intellectuals indulge with every Trump victory. The Trump supporters might register Republican and have been counted on to vote the party's way in past elections (flirting for a while with Pat Buchanan in 1992 and 1996, then voting for George H.W. Bush and Robert Dole against the hated Bill Clinton in the general) but they are, from the point of view of right-leaning think tanks, pretty lousy conservatives.

We saw a hint of this in 2005, when George W. Bush suggested reforming Social Security by partially privatizing the system. Even before the financial crisis, Bush couldn't unite Republican voters behind the idea. Even Republicans like Social Security checks. We got another hint of this during the early Tea Party days when Paul Krugman relayed the story of an angry conservative who told his Congressman "keep your government hands off my Medicare." It may well be that when Mitt Romney made his crack about the dependent 47 percent of Americans who would never vote for him that he was not talking only about liberal Democrats.

It's become a matter of public health record that death rates for middle-aged white Americans are rising, partially due to alcohol addiction, drug addiction and the economic stresses of underemployment. As these lives crumble, marriages are cracking up (or never happening) and communities are falling apart as the tax base can no longer support basic health and education services. In 2008 and 2009, as unemployment benefits reached their limits for many who lost their jobs since the financial crisis, applications for Social Security Disability Insurance spiked, up 8 percent in 2008 and 10 percent the year after. The rate of increase has since reversed, but in the last five years the government has received 16.2 million disability applications.

We know what Republican intellectuals said about the inner cities of the Eighties and Nineties: They called it a crisis of values and lectured black communities about the importance of temperance, hard work and fatherhood while not publishing books like The Bell Curve, which used phony eugenics to imply that black communities had it coming because they're just not as smart as others.

Republicans get testy when their mythos is tested — and in the Republican mythos, people are supposed to react to economic displacement with resourceful pluck and vigor. The National Review is aghast that reasonably able-bodied people on government assistance live in towns like Garbutt, New York, that have been in decline for more than a century, when there are jobs four hours away in the Pennsylvania gas fields. Another National Review writer (they devoted an entire issue of the magazine to beating up Trump supporters), comparing Trump to Buchanan, wrote:

"The Buchanan boys are economically and socially frustrated white men who wish to be economically supported by the federal government without enduring the stigma of welfare dependency."

That's Trump's pitch: His base is great but betrayed and need Trump to protect them and keep those Social Security checks coming. It doesn't seem likely that Trump voters are going to suddenly look inward and discover the causes of their problems. And a bunch of people already convinced that they're being ignored and ill-served by the think-tank elitists are not going to take well to seeing their chosen candidate denied the nomination.

Somebody has to leave the Republican fold because you can't build a small-government movement on the backs of people you think are welfare cheats. The Trumpeters probably aren't going anywhere. As The National Review argues, these people won't even leave destitute Garbutt, New York.


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
FOCUS | Bernie Sanders: "We Are On a Path Toward Victory" Print
Sunday, 27 March 2016 10:27

Galindez writes: "'We are on a path toward victory,' Bernie Sanders told 8,100 cheering supporters who filled an arena at the University of Wisconsin Saturday. 'It is hard for anybody to deny that our campaign has the momentum.'"

Senator Bernie Sanders. (photo: Getty Images)
Senator Bernie Sanders. (photo: Getty Images)


Bernie Sanders: "We Are On a Path Toward Victory"

By Scott Galindez, Reader Supported News

27 March 16

 

e are on a path toward victory,” Bernie Sanders told 8,100 cheering supporters who filled an arena at the University of Wisconsin Saturday.

“It is hard for anybody to deny that our campaign has the momentum.”

“Momentum” was the theme of Sanders’ speech as the results came in from Washington, Alaska, and Hawaii. It was a great day for Bernie Sanders, who swept the three caucuses with over 70% of the vote in each. The large margins are exactly what he needed to cut into Hillary Clinton’s lead in pledged delegates.

Sanders defeated Clinton in Washington by 72% to 27%, Hawaii by 71% to 29%, and Alaska by 82% to 18%.

It is still an uphill battle for the senator from Vermont. “We knew from day one we were going to have a hard time politically in the Deep South – that is a conservative part of the country,” Sanders told supporters in Madison, Wisconsin. “But we knew things were going to improve as we head west.”

“We are making significant inroads in Secretary Clinton’s lead,” he said. “We have a path toward victory.”

Clinton’s campaign had acknowledged that Saturday would be a good one for Sanders, and her efforts in Washington were aimed mostly at trying to keep the race relatively close, as delegates are distributed proportionally.

Results from Hawaii didn’t come in until after 3 a.m. on the East Coast. When they did, the Sanders campaign released the following statement from Bernie: “I want to thank the people of Hawaii for their strong support and for turning out in huge numbers for Saturday’s caucuses. Nobody should have any doubt that this campaign has extraordinary momentum and that we have a path toward victory. In state after state, our grassroots effort has taken on the entire political establishment. We have taken on the senators and the governors and the mayors and the members of Congress. Our political revolution is the best chance we have to keep Donald Trump or any other Republican out of the White House.”

Sanders delivered his standard stump speech, but this time he highlighted his campaign’s momentum, making a case for how he plans to win the Democratic Party nomination. Sanders said that momentum was winning several states this week by large margins. Momentum was passing Clinton in two recent national polls. Momentum is consistently polling better against the Republicans than Clinton. All arguments that have to be having some effect on the superdelegates currently supporting Hillary Clinton.

As the results poured in from Washington State, MoveOn was circulating a petition calling for the superdelegates from that state to honor the vote. The establishment media continues to report the super delegate count with the earned pledged delegates. A CNN reporter even falsely claimed that Sanders would need to win 75% of the remaining delegates to win the nomination. The claim would only be true if the 469 superdelegates currently supporting Clinton couldn’t change their mind at any time. The way the media is currently reporting the delegate race is misleading and helps Hillary Clinton sell the narrative that Sanders can’t catch her.

Wisconsin and Beyond

Next up for the Democrats is Wisconsin. Many people have their own theories on the state, but John Nichols, who writes for both The Nation and The Capital Times in Madison predicts a knock-down drag-out battle in the state that he said both Clinton and Sanders have strong ties to. Nichols told MSNBC that both candidates have been to the state often and will be there even more over the next week and a half, fighting for every delegate.

Sanders chose Madison for his victory speech last night and has already held large events in the state. Madison is a hotbed for progressives but Nichols warns that there are a lot of different types of Democrats throughout the state and nobody should try to paint the state with one brush.

Recent polling is a mixed bag: A Marquette University Poll in February had Sanders up by 1 point. A more recent Emerson College poll has Clinton leading Sanders by 6 points, 50% to 44%, with 5% undecided.

Wisconsin’s demographics bode well for Sanders, who has enjoyed his strongest wins in states with a low percentage of minorities and lopsided support for him among young voters. He leads Clinton 67% to 29% in the 18-34 age group and ties her at 48% among voters 35-54. As in other primaries Emerson College has polled, he trails her by large margins with older voters: 63% to 31% (ages 55- 74) and 73% to 19% (ages 75 and up). Less than 10% of the state’s Democratic voters are African American or Latino, groups that have supported Clinton very heavily in other states.

After Wisconsin, Sanders has a lot of work to do. Current polling in key states like New York and Pennsylvania show 20+ point leads for Clinton. There is plenty of time to close the gap in those states, but Sanders needs to do more than catch up – he needs to win handily to make up the current delegate lead that Clinton built up in the South.

It was not a coincidence that “momentum” was the theme of Sanders’ speech in Madison on Saturday. He needs that momentum to continue east after big wins in the West. He needs to win big in Wisconsin, New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland and throughout the Northeast and mid-Atlantic. If he does, he is correct: there is a path to victory.


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
<< Start < Prev 2091 2092 2093 2094 2095 2096 2097 2098 2099 2100 Next > End >>

Page 2097 of 3432

THE NEW STREAMLINED RSN LOGIN PROCESS: Register once, then login and you are ready to comment. All you need is a Username and a Password of your choosing and you are free to comment whenever you like! Welcome to the Reader Supported News community.

RSNRSN