It’s pretty clear that Hillary Clinton is going to be the Democratic nominee for president of the United States. Bernie Sanders has fought a good, clean fight and in the process has moved the entire Democratic Party leftward. He has also made Hillary a better candidate, forcing her to sharpen her ideas. But Sanders is losing most of the primaries, despite outspending Hillary two to one in some states. The losses in Ohio and Illinois were devastating blows to his campaign. He won’t make up the difference by winning the super-delegates, who overwhelmingly prefer Hillary.
For the past month I’ve been telling friends that I hoped
Hillary would win the nomination by one vote, because that would drive the
Democratic Party as far left as possible at this point in history. Something
resembling that outcome could only come if Bernie stays in the race, as he has
stated is his intention to do. Many pundits and politicos believe that Obama
was a stronger candidate in the fall of 2008 because Hillary didn’t leave the
race until relatively late.
But I’m beginning to doubt the benefit of Bernie fighting to
the convention, mainly because I think there is a much better use for the
enormous campaign chest he has accumulated: supporting the most progressive
Democrats running for Congress, Senate, governor and
other statewide offices across the country.
I’m suggesting that Bernie bow out of the race now and earmark his surplus
campaign funds to these local campaigns, which is his right under campaign
financing laws.
The most likely Republican nominees, Donald Trump and Ted
Cruz, will both send major Republican financial backers running to the exits,
which in this case means the local races. Some leading Republicans such as
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell have already broadly suggested that they
would focus on Senate and Congressional races and pretty much ignore the
national race if Trump is the Republican candidate. The Republican
establishment is painfully aware that a Trump or Cruz disaster would assuredly
lead to the loss of the Senate and may even threaten their gerrymandered
dominance in the House of Representatives.
Let’s look at two of the various possible outcomes in
November: If Hillary is elected with a Democratic majority in both chambers of
Congress, she will be able to move the progressive program forward, which means
higher taxes on the wealthy, more investment in mass transit, roads, bridges,
education and alternative energy and an improved social safety net. If she wins
and the Republicans keep both houses, we will have four more years of
legislative dysfunction. Which will be
better for the country?
The one enormous mistake the Democratic Party has made since
the turn of the century was to underestimate the importance of the 2010
Congressional races. By releasing his
tens of millions of campaign funds to local candidates who pledge to a
progressive, left-looking agenda, Bernie will help the Democratic Party avoid
making that mistake again.
The other reason Bernie should throw in the towel is so he
can have more time to remind his supporters that they should vote for Hillary
and contribute to her campaign. There are indications that some portion of
Bernie’s supporters will either sit out the election or vote for Trump because
they believe the decades of lies about the Clintons spewed out by the
right-wing propaganda machine. On a symbolic level, these are the same people
who sat out 2010, voted for Ralph Nader in 2000 and sat out 1968. Bernie can
help make sure that these people understand that once again a lot is at stake.
Determining whether Trump or Cruz would be worse for the
country reminds me of medieval debates about the number of angels fitting on
the head of a pin. They are both so awful as to be unimaginable. Most people
know how much electing either of these two mendacious autocrats would hurt the
United States. That’s why Hillary will win the election.
It’s time then to start thinking about the type of
legislative help and allies in the states our first woman president is going to
need. For the better part of six months, progressives have been showing Bernie
the love. It’s time for him to give that love back in the form of much needed
dollars to elect progressive and left-leaning Democrats to Congress, the Senate
and statewide offices all over the country.
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