For many years, corporate media outlets said it couldnāt be done. Now, they say it must not be. To the nationās punditocracy — tacitly or overtly aligned with the nationās oligarchy — nominating Bernie Sanders as the Democratic presidential candidate would be catastrophic.
But the 17,000 people who jammed into the Los Angeles Convention Center to hear Sanders speak on Sunday night are part of a progressive populist upsurge that shows no sign of abating. What I saw at the rally was a multiracial, multigenerational coalition with dimensions that no other candidate can come near matching.
With scant support from people of color, the media-pumped campaign of Pete Buttigieg has ended and Amy Klobucharās candidacy is about to collapse. Tom Steyerās self-financed escapade has folded. Despite his win in South Carolina, Joe Bidenās campaign is hollow with āback to the futureā rhetoric. Mike Bloomberg — the quintessential āNot Us. Me.ā candidate — might soon discover that he canāt buy elections no matter how much money he plows into advertisements, endorsements and consultants.
As for Elizabeth Warren: after impressive seasons of articulating a challenge to corporate power last year, she has recently diluted her appeal with murky messages of āunityā while gratuitously sniping at Sanders. Looking ahead, itās unclear whether Warren will renew her focus on denouncing the political leverage of wealth. Top Democratic Party power brokers donāt want her to. Before the end of spring, weāll know whether ānevertheless, she persisted.ā
Meanwhile, media coverage remains saturated by the Sanders-canāt-beat-Trump mantra, but that claim is eroding. The New York Times — which, like other major outlets, has racked up a long record of thinly veiled hostility toward Sanders and has been amplifying the panicked alarms from top Democrats — recently published two cogent opinion pieces, āThe Case for Bernie Sandersā and āBernie Sanders Can Beat Trump. Hereās the Math.ā
Even the Times news department, a bastion of hidebound corporate centrism, acknowledged days ago that Sanders āappeared to be making headway in persuading Democratic voters that he can win the general election. A Fox News poll released on Thursday showed about two-thirds of Democrats believe that Mr. Sanders could beat President Trump, the highest share of any candidate in the field.ā
But make no mistake about it: The bulk of powerful corporate media and entrenched corporate Democrats will do all they can to prevent the nominee from being Sanders. (I actively support him, while not affiliated with the official campaign.) More than ever, the current historic moment calls for a commensurate response: All left hands on deck.
A chant that filled the big hall in Los Angeles where Sanders spoke on Sunday night — āSĆ,Ā seĀ puedeā — came from a crowd that was perhaps half Latino. A coalition has emerged on the ground to topple longstanding political barriers of race, ethnicity, language and culture, with shared enthusiasm for the Bernie 2020 campaign that is stunning, deep and transcendent.
āLook around,ā said Marisa Franco, co-founder of the Latinx and Chicanx activist hub Mijente, during her powerful speech that introduced Sanders at the LA rally. āWe are perched at the edge of history. There is so much at stake in the 2020 election. The world around us is bursting with problems and bursting with possibilities. And thatās making some people very very nervous. You know why? Because weāre winning.ā
Franco added: āBernie Sanders presents the clearest alternative to Trump. He is willing to name the problems, whatās causing them, and proposes the bold solutions that we need to solve them. . . . We want — and we demand — elected officials who are going to fight like hell for us.ā
Norman Solomon is co-founder and national coordinator of RootsAction.org. He was a Bernie Sanders delegate from California to the 2016 Democratic National Convention. Solomon is the author of a dozen books including War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death.
ZNetwork is funded solely through the generosity of its readers.
Donate