In the end game of the Progressive-Democratic Party’s Presidential primary contest—and, yes, at this stage, Party is down to three contestants, with Party’s elite choosing to freeze Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard (D, HI) out of the contest, she being too willing to speak freely and honestly and too far behind for her axis of approach to counter Senator Bernie Sanders’ (I, VT), the end game is on us—the question arises whether Joe Biden, front runner, can win over Sanders’ supporters, who are every bit as ardent and critically large in number as the NLMSM makes them out to be. Those supporters, after all, will be critical in the general election if Biden is to be electable in the general election.
Here are a couple of critical considerations for that question.
Mr Biden’s agenda is indistinguishable from Mrs Clinton’s and thus anathema to the left Democratic base.
And
he [Biden] has to…persuade them that he’ll bring them to the table and push for a substantial part of their agenda.
This explicit promise, especially, illustrates how strongly Biden stands foursquare against everything that Sanders and his supporters stand for:
Mr Biden recently told MSNBC that he would veto a Medicare for All bill if it crossed his desk.
He can’t, though, move to bring Sanders’ supporters across that gaping chasm. If he makes a credible push for the Left’s agenda, for Sanders’ agenda, he’ll betray his own supporters. That betrayal will demonstrate to both his own supporters and Sanders’ that he cannot be trusted. More broadly, that betrayal will demonstrate to all voters in the general election that he cannot be trusted: he’ll just change his policy positions according to what benefits him personally in the moment.
That stands in sharp contrast with Sanders who, regardless of what anyone might think of his positions and policies, has remained steadfast in those positions and policies, regardless of any fickle political winds.
We’ll get a clue, maybe, in tomorrow’s Progressive-Democratic Party debate in DC.