Civics
Gov-Politics

Bernie Would Have Won. Seriously.

Trump keeps winning because the Democratic Party refuses to be the party of the working class. They refuse to listen to the advice from Bernie Sanders.

Every Democratic Loss now triggers a new round of debate over one of the most well-worn questions of contemporary electoral politics: Would Bernie Sanders have won?

The original debate, of course, was literal: Immediately following Hillary Clinton’s shocking loss in 2016 to Donald Trump, the insurgent left insisted that their favored Democratic primary candidate would have clinched a general election victory where the nominee herself could not.

The argument went something like this: Trump’s anti-establishment, anti-neoliberalism, and anti-status quo orientation easily catapulted him to the top of the Republican Party and popular appeal in the swing states that determine the American presidency.

However dubious his credibility as a working-class hero (and you may recall he’s a billionaire real-estate titan whose penthouse has a golden elevator), Clinton was a walking avatar for the exact elite political class that Trump so effectively demonized.

Bernie Sanders, on the other hand, had spent his entire career making arguments against the ruling class that precisely mirrored Trump’s: Where Donald blamed immigrants and demanded mass deportation for American woes, Sanders rightfully lambasted the rich and powerful for causing working-class discontent and demanded social welfare as a response.

Sanders’s narrative — “yes, the system IS fucked, you ARE getting screwed, now let’s take on the fat cats who are doing it and get everyone what they deserve” — offers an answer, and a positive alternative, to Trump’s pitch.

Clinton’s narrative was something closer to, “no, the system IS NOT fucked, you AREN’T getting screwed, now please vote for the fat cats’ favorite politician.”

There’s no way to beat Trumpism without class struggle and a promise of change for working people.

Eight years later, Kamala Harris’s loss to Trump has resurrected another back and forth between camps pinning Democratic Party decline on class issues versus cultural ones: Did racism and bigotry deliver a crushing Trump victory, or did “economic anxiety”?

Setting aside the obvious problems with presuming only one can be at play or that they’re wholly distinct, these discussions miss all that “Bernie would’ve won” really means: There’s no way to beat Trumpism without class struggle and a promise of change for working people, and waging it requires multiracial working-class solidarity and a party that represents that coalition’s interests.

Until those things happen, both within and outside of electoral politics, get ready for Trump after Trump after Trump.

Let’s start with what skeptics of class-based politics get right: Trump and his allies across the broader right have often stoked racism, misogyny, homophobia, and xenophobia as a political strategy, which resonates with voters in ways that can be downright appalling to watch.

The right-wing digital media ecosystem has gotten rapidly uglier in its rhetoric since 2016, and broad swaths of Trumpland will proudly brag that “triggering the libs” is their political lodestar.

Backlash against movements like Black Lives Matter, #MeToo, or fights for reproductive justice or trans rights has coalesced around a politics of nostalgia for ultratraditional patriarchs.

And while Biden’s presidency did deliver some working-class gains, Democrats were still unable to credibly acknowledge or respond to voters’ pain when inflation offset those incremental improvements.

Continue reading on The Intercept

Natalie Shure is a writer and researcher in Boston. Her work focuses on history, health, and politics.

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