'..Black Voters Don't Like Bernie Sanders'

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
It’s Time to End the Myth That Black Voters Don’t Like Bernie Sanders

Last month, just days after the tragedy in Charlottesville, the Rev. Wendell Anthony of Fellowship Chapel in Detroit gave a fiery introduction at a town hall led by Rep. John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.) and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.). It may have been a Tuesday, but watching it felt like Sunday service.

In his speech, Anthony praised Sanders’s effort to “take down the tributes to racism and division” through his work standing up for universal health care, jobs for everybody, a higher minimum wage, tuition-free education, and fair treatment and respect from law enforcement. Anthony called the senator someone who “stands up, speaks up, and keeps his eyes on the prize of freedom and justice and equity.”

You probably didn’t see his speech, because it doesn’t fit the narrative persistently pushed by the senator’s opponents: that black Democrats tend to be more socially conservative and “pragmatic” and thus don’t like Bernie Sanders. Last year saw a slew of such articles looking to explain “why black voters don’t feel the Bern” and what his “real problem with black and Hispanic voters” was. The trend is still going strong: This summer, Terrell Starr explored “Bernie Sanders’ black women problem” in the Root.

My biggest regret from the time I spent on the Sanders campaign as his national press secretary is the fact that we allowed this false narrative to fester and did not effectively combat claims that the senator’s economic message somehow didn’t speak to people of color. Jobs and the economy are “everybody” issues. As Democrats work to craft our message to voters for upcoming elections, we cannot allow this narrative to continue unchallenged.

Last spring, a Harvard-Harris poll found Sanders to be the most popular active politician in the country. African Americans gave the senator the highest favorables at 73 percent — vs. 68 percent among Latinos, 62 percent among Asian Americans and 52 percent among white voters. It wasn’t a fluke: This August, black voters again reported a 73 percent favorability rating for Sanders. Critics, such as Starr, continue to point to the senator’s 2016 primary numbers among older African American voters to claim that his message somehow doesn’t resonate with people of color as a whole — and continue to ignore that, according to GenForward, Sanders won the black millennial vote in the primaries.

So why does the myth that black voters don’t like Sanders persist? It certainly isn’t because black voters can’t relate to his focus on the working class. According to the Economic Policy Institute, people of color will form the majority of the American working class by 2032. In other words, the white working class does not have a monopoly on economic marginalization.

Folks in McDowell County, W.Va., and inner-city St. Louis are encountering many of the same challenges. So, an economic message that includes advancing policies that will close the wage gap, raise the minimum wage, ensure equal pay for equal work, create jobs, make education affordable and ensure health care as a human right is a message that cuts across demographics.

Thus Democrats should be careful not to continue the false association of working class issues strictly with the white working class — a major fixation after last year’s election and an assumption of many criticisms of Sanders’s message. As someone who traveled across the country with Sanders during his campaign, I know firsthand that the narrative of working-class politics as exclusively white erases the stories of so many of the people who believed in and fought for a political revolution — and a government that works for all of us, not just a wealthy or connected few.

The senator’s message still resonates — perhaps now more than ever. Just look at the fight to expand health care: Poll after poll shows that Americans across the board are ready for “Medicare for all” — something the senator championed when it wasn’t politically popular to do so. Indeed, Pew polling found this year that 85 percent of blacks and 84 percent of Hispanics support single-payer health care — while whites are split on the issue roughly 50-50. Now, Medicare for all has the support of legislators such as rising star Sen. Kamala D. Harris (D-Calif.), who recently announced she will co-sponsor Sanders’s upcoming single-payer bill. As Harris said, “It’s just the right thing to do.”

There is no doubt we on Sanders’s 2016 campaign could have better communicated how the senator’s fight against a rigged economy held in place by a corrupt system of campaign finance specifically affected different communities. But let’s not pretend there isn’t broad-based support for the policies he’s fighting for. Instead of attacking Bernie, folks should follow his journey and witness the work. Whether it’s been standing with black union workers in Mississippi, standing with Conyers and Anthony in Detroit, or putting himself on the front lines of the fight to save the Affordable Care Act, the senator is using his voice and the weight of his popularity to fight for the policies that will benefit us all. And the polls show that people get it.

https://www.commondreams.org/views/2017/09/12/its-time-end-myth-black-voters-dont-bernie-sanders
 
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Chezus

Well-Known Member

londonfog

Well-Known Member
I don't dislike Bernie. I in fact donated to his campaign twice. I dislike his nutty as a fruit cake supporters, who were willing to let Trump win the general because Bernard did not win the primary. stupid shit like that. What confuses me even more about one of these weirdos is that they did not even vote for Bernard Sanders when it was time to do so. talk about CraZy
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
I don't dislike Bernie. I in fact donated to his campaign twice. I dislike his nutty as a fruit cake supporters, who were willing to let Trump win the general because Bernard did not win the primary. stupid shit like that. What confuses me even more about one of these weirdos is that they did not even vote for Bernard Sanders when it was time to do so. talk about CraZy
that's why it's called voter suppression. witness this. the best argument for federally mandated same day voter registration.
 

st0wandgrow

Well-Known Member
I don't dislike Bernie. I in fact donated to his campaign twice. I dislike his nutty as a fruit cake supporters, who were willing to let Trump win the general because Bernard did not win the primary. stupid shit like that. What confuses me even more about one of these weirdos is that they did not even vote for Bernard Sanders when it was time to do so. talk about CraZy
What’s even crazier is that 25% of Hillary voters refused to vote for Obama in 08 and voted for McCain instead, compared to only 12% of Bernie voters who did not vote for Hillary in 16 and opted for Trump. Clearly the Hillary voters in 08 were racist.

Obama was a good candidate though, and found a way to win (in resounding fashion) so we didn’t hear much whining from the Obama supporters about the lack of Hillary supporters support...unlike all of the sniveling and crying from the Hillary camp this time around.

Hillary supporters sound like the fruit cakes to me.
 

Justin-case

Well-Known Member
What’s even crazier is that 25% of Hillary voters refused to vote for Obama in 08 and voted for McCain instead, compared to only 12% of Bernie voters who did not vote for Hillary in 16 and opted for Trump. Clearly the Hillary voters in 08 were racist.

Obama was a good candidate though, and found a way to win (in resounding fashion) so we didn’t hear much whining from the Obama supporters about the lack of Hillary supporters support...unlike all of the sniveling and crying from the Hillary camp this time around.

Hillary supporters sound like the fruit cakes to me.

This speaks less of Hillary's voters in 08' than it does of the dangers of a trump presidency, something you failed to realize.
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
What’s even crazier is that 25% of Hillary voters refused to vote for Obama in 08 and voted for McCain instead.
not exactly true.

recall the massive movement to sabotage dems in 2008, where republicans were encouraged to register as dems to vote in our primaries to prolong the battle.

only an idiot would go on repeating your talking point without remembering basic historical facts first.
 

st0wandgrow

Well-Known Member
not exactly true.

recall the massive movement to sabotage dems in 2008, where republicans were encouraged to register as dems to vote in our primaries to prolong the battle.

only an idiot would go on repeating your talking point without remembering basic historical facts first.
You do realize that the same could be said for 2016 as well, right?

“Massive movement”. lol
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
not exactly true.

recall the massive movement to sabotage dems in 2008, where republicans were encouraged to register as dems to vote in our primaries to prolong the battle.

only an idiot would go on repeating your talking point without remembering basic historical facts first.
I'll keep that in mind the next time you try to convince us that Israel isn't an apartheid State.
 

abandonconflict

Well-Known Member
If you and those who liked your post think that derision is the appropriate response to someone who fights for you as much as Bernie does, then maybe you deserve 4 more years of the Chump.

Just something to think about.
He had antiwar protesters arrested in his district. Also thanks for the quote.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
You do realize that the same could be said for 2016 as well, right?

“Massive movement”. lol
Are you ignorant or lying? What you said about the Democratic primary in 2016 was false. Sanders lost to Clinton by a whopping large margin. Sanders endorsed Clinton afterward. Pretty much the end of the chapter right there.

You have said recently that in retrospect, now that you know your vote for Stein wasn't in your best interest, you regret or would reconsider your decision to vote against Clinton. I don't understand your complaint.
 
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