Some moderate Democrats worry that Bernie Sanders as the presidential nominee would mean four more years of Trump and a Republican takeover of Congress.
RICHMOND – Over the weekend, Bernie Sanders unveiled a multi-billion-dollar plan to provide universal child care, promised to legalize marijuana nationwide, slammed a prominent pro-Israel advocacy group for promoting"bigotry," and praised some aspects of Fidel Castro’s reign in Cuba because he provided health care and education.
But that success has more moderate Democrats wondering: Can Sanders can build on that momentum as the political calendar pivots to primaries in states with larger shares of moderate and conservative voters, starting with South Carolina Saturday and, three days later, the 14 Super Tuesday states including North Carolina, Oklahoma and Tennessee?
"The Bernie progressives would argue this isn’t ’72. This is 2020," Kidd said."And to win in 2020, you have to have a base that is going to turn out for you. And they would argue that moderates are going to be more willing to stomach a Bernie Sanders candidacy than a second term for Donald Trump and that moderates are ultimately going to come home."
Ed Davis, a former Boston City police commissioner who supports former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg, said he would not pull the lever for Sanders in a head-to-head match-up with Trump because of policies such as Medicare for All he finds far too left-wing. And over the past 20 years, the share of Democratic and Democratic-leaning registered voters who describe themselves as “liberal” or “very liberal” has increased from 27% in 2000 to 47% in 2019, according to the Pew Research Center. The rest describe themselves as moderate or conservative .
Economic populism strikes a chordSanders' populist platform calling for universal health care, higher pay for teachers and free public college has some moderates questioning how a country already saddled with more than $23 trillion in debt could afford to cover the cost of massive government expansion.
“This time around I’m pretty sold on him,” said Amy Roberts, 42, of Glen Allen, Va., said as she stood to get into the rally. "I did the right thing. I went to college, went to grad school, came back home," she said."And no opportunities."
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