Guinevere wrote:It sounds good on its face, and its a movement that is perhaps wide, but rather shallow. What I mean is that the average Bernie voter is not middle and working class, his message is clearly not resonating with that demographic (which is why HRC is ahead nationally). Instead, Bernie is the voice for the college kids and (generally) the educated middle and upper middle class (who may have their own vision of improving life for the middle and working classes). A lot of them are definitely "ABH" in what I've seen them post on social media and heard them say in the press. Far more anti-HRC than HRC folks are anti-Bernie. I also noticed that as a group, they were apoplectic that HRC got such good post-debate press. It was kind of amusing, they blamed it all on the corporate ownership of the media. Maybe that's true, but they never complained when so much of that same media (especially the NY Times) was kissing Bernie's backside (and trying to kick HRC's) all summer . . . . . .Sue U wrote:I don't think it's so much "anybody but Hillary" as it is Sanders' message resonating with many in a disaffected electorate, reflecting the very reason for their disaffection: "For whose benefit is this government being operated? Why aren't the middle and working classes getting a fair share of the economic recovery, while those who are already super-rich profit in outsized proportion? Why are we always told we can't afford what every other industrialized nation has and takes for granted?" While Hillary pledges to work the system to "get things done," Sanders is raising these questions as a direct challenge to the system itself. That's why he talks about a political revolution, and why he draws so much support. He taps into the same vein of frustration with "politics as usual" that Trump does.
I don't think they are anti-HRC so much as they are defensive about their own choice and inclined to overreact to any slight. I think both camps are symmetrical about how 'anti' the other they are, which is not very.
Bernie's economic program is very differentiated from hers and those with a strong emotional investment in that exact solution are going to be more reactive and less able to accept conciliation than the experienced compromisers in HRCs camp.
I'm not saying its a bad thing.
yrs,
rubato


