Hai GAF,
I'm a liberal and a registered dem. I will be voting left no matter who gets the nom. For those of you that see Bernie as the superior candidate (which is fine, but off topic, so let's not get into that here please), what do you see as his path to the presidency after the nomination? I ask because I can't see a clear path, even without knowing who the eventual GOP nom will be. Here is how I see it, but I really want to hear from you:
Sanders has momentum in white, liberal regions like New England. But he has met with slow movement in the south. Nevada and North Carolina have Hilary with a large lead. I read somewhere that any republican candidate will need 40% of the Latino vote to win. HilIary has much better minority polling and more name recognition. Nothing against Sanders, but I can't see him pulling this off without making a massive turnaround with minority outreach soon.
Sanders needs a much larger number of delegates than The one or two he has now. Hilary has 440 I think. Bernie needs to make inroads with the establishment, as little as his supporters want to hear that. He MUST gain delegates at a more rapid pace to get over 2,000 by spring.
Sanders doesn't need to worry about being a socialist for the nomination. But once he is in the general election he will be dragged through the mud for it by whomever the GOP nominates. It's not his fault, but socialism doesn't poll well. It's got like, 61% negativity ratings in America. Regardless of whether the American people favor socialist policies without knowing it, (they do) using the word socialist is going to conjure a lot of distrust for Sanders. How does he deal with this without compromising his values?
This last one may be small, but I still see it as a hurdle nonetheless. Having the first female candidate with a shot at winning would probably excite the (mostly democratic) female voter base. how will sanders excite the same demographic and if he cannot, how will he win?
Again, I want the best candidate to win. That might be Bernie, but it's irrelevant to my question. So please tell me GAF, how does Bernie overcome these obstacles and rise to the highest office? Thanks, please stay on topic.
I'm a liberal and a registered dem. I will be voting left no matter who gets the nom. For those of you that see Bernie as the superior candidate (which is fine, but off topic, so let's not get into that here please), what do you see as his path to the presidency after the nomination? I ask because I can't see a clear path, even without knowing who the eventual GOP nom will be. Here is how I see it, but I really want to hear from you:
Sanders has momentum in white, liberal regions like New England. But he has met with slow movement in the south. Nevada and North Carolina have Hilary with a large lead. I read somewhere that any republican candidate will need 40% of the Latino vote to win. HilIary has much better minority polling and more name recognition. Nothing against Sanders, but I can't see him pulling this off without making a massive turnaround with minority outreach soon.
Sanders needs a much larger number of delegates than The one or two he has now. Hilary has 440 I think. Bernie needs to make inroads with the establishment, as little as his supporters want to hear that. He MUST gain delegates at a more rapid pace to get over 2,000 by spring.
Sanders doesn't need to worry about being a socialist for the nomination. But once he is in the general election he will be dragged through the mud for it by whomever the GOP nominates. It's not his fault, but socialism doesn't poll well. It's got like, 61% negativity ratings in America. Regardless of whether the American people favor socialist policies without knowing it, (they do) using the word socialist is going to conjure a lot of distrust for Sanders. How does he deal with this without compromising his values?
This last one may be small, but I still see it as a hurdle nonetheless. Having the first female candidate with a shot at winning would probably excite the (mostly democratic) female voter base. how will sanders excite the same demographic and if he cannot, how will he win?
Again, I want the best candidate to win. That might be Bernie, but it's irrelevant to my question. So please tell me GAF, how does Bernie overcome these obstacles and rise to the highest office? Thanks, please stay on topic.