Democrats need to seriously
and pragmatically assess their strategy for defeating Trump. A Clinton run
would be disastrous; Bernie Sanders is their only hope.
With Donald Trump
looking increasingly likely
to actually be the Republican nominee for President, it’s long past time for
the Democrats to start working on a pragmatic strategy to defeat him. Months of
complacent, wishful insistences that Trump will disappear have proven false,
and with a firm commanding lead
in polls and several major primary victories, predictions are
increasingly favoring Trump to win the nomination.
If Democrats honestly believe,
as they say they do, that Trump poses a serious threat to
the wellbeing of the country and the lives of minority citizens, that means
doing everything possible to keep him out of office. To do that will require
them to very quickly unite around a single goal, albeit a counterintuitive one:
they must make absolutely sure that Bernie Sanders is the Democratic nominee
for President.
The electability question
should be at the center of the Democratic primary. After all, elections are
about winning, and high-minded liberal principles mean nothing if one has no
chance of actually triumphing in a general election. Hillary Clinton has been right
to emphasize that the pragmatic achievement of goals should be the central
concern of a presidential candidate, and that Bernie Sanders’s supporters often
behave as if this is immaterial.
Instinctively, Hillary Clinton
has long seemed by far the more electable of the two Democratic candidates. She
is, after all, an experienced, pragmatic moderate, whereas Sanders is a raving,
arm-flapping elderly Jewish socialist from Vermont. Clinton is simply closer to
the American mainstream, thus she is more attractive to a broader swath of
voters. Sanders campaigners have grown used to hearing the heavy-hearted lament
“I like Bernie, I just don’t think he can win.” And in typical previous
American elections, this would be perfectly accurate.
But this is far from a typical
previous American election. And recently, everything about the electability
calculus has changed, due to one simple fact: Donald Trump is likely to be
the Republican nominee for President. Given this reality, every Democratic
strategic question must operate not on the basis of abstract electability
against a hypothetical candidate, but specific electability against the actual
Republican nominee, Donald Trump.
Here, a Clinton match-up is
highly likely to be an unmitigated electoral disaster, whereas a Sanders
candidacy stands a far better chance. Every one of Clinton’s (considerable)
weaknesses plays to every one of Trump’s strengths, whereas every one of
Trump’s (few) weaknesses plays to every one of Sanders’s strengths. From a
purely pragmatic standpoint, running Clinton against Trump is a disastrous,
suicidal proposition.
Sanders supporters have lately
been arguing that their candidate is more electable than people think, and they
have some support from the available polling. In a number of
hypotheticals, Sanders
does better than Clinton at beating Trump, and his “unfavorable” ratings
among voters are a
good deal lower than Clinton’s. In response to this, however, Clinton
supporters insist that polling at this stage means very little, and since
Bernie is not well known and there has not been a national attack campaign
directed at him from the right yet, his supporters do not account for the drop
in support that will occur when voters realize he is on the fringes. Imagine,
they say, how viciously the right will attack Sanders’s liberal record.
Clinton’s people are right to
point out that these polls mean very little; after all, Sanders’s entire
campaign success is a caution against placing too much weight on early polling.
And they are especially right to emphasize that we should visualize how the
campaign by conservatives will realistically play out, rather than attempting
to divine the future from highly fallible polling numbers. But it’s precisely
when we try to envision how the real dynamics of the campaign will transpire
that we see just how disastrous a Clinton-Trump fight will be for Clinton.
Her supporters insist that she
has already been “tried and tested” against all the attacks that can be thrown
at her. But this is not the case; she has never been subjected to the full
brunt of attacks that come in a general presidential election. Bernie
Sanders has ignored most tabloid dirt, treating it as a sensationalist
distraction from real issues (“Enough with the damned emails!”) But for Donald
Trump, sensationalist distractions are the whole game. He will attempt to
crucify her. And it is very, very likely that he will succeed.
Trump’s political
dominance is highly dependent on his idiosyncratic, audacious method of
campaigning. He deals almost entirely in amusing, outrageous, below-the-belt
personal attacks, and is skilled at turning public discussions away from the
issues and toward personalities (He/she’s a “loser,”
“phony,” “nervous,” “hypocrite,” “incompetent.”) If Trump does have
to speak about the issues, he makes himself sound foolish, because he doesn’t
know very much. Thus he requires
the media not to ask him difficult questions, and depends on his opponents’
having personal weaknesses and scandals that he can merrily, mercilessly
exploit.
This campaigning style makes
Hillary Clinton Donald Trump’s dream opponent. She gives him an endless amount
to work with. The emails, Benghazi, Whitewater, Iraq, the Lewinsky
scandal, Chinagate, Travelgate,
the missing
law firm records, Jeffrey
Epstein, Kissinger, Marc
Rich, Haiti, Clinton
Foundation tax errors, Clinton
Foundation conflicts of interest, “We
were broke when we left the White House,” Goldman
Sachs…
There is enough material in
Hillary Clinton’s background for Donald Trump to run with six times over.
The defense offered by Clinton
supporters is that none
of these issues actually amount to anything once you look at them
carefully. But this is completely irrelevant; all that matters is the fodder
they would provide for the Trump machine. Who is going to be looking carefully?
In the time you spend trying to clear up the basic facts of Whitewater, Trump
will have made five more allegations.
Even a skilled campaigner
would have a very difficult time parrying such endless attacks by Trump. Even
the best campaigner would find it impossible to draw attention back
to actual substantive policy issues, and would spend their every moment on the
defensive. But Hillary Clinton is neither the best campaigner nor even a
skilled one. In fact, she is a dreadful campaigner. She may be a skilled
policymaker, but on the campaign trail she makes constant missteps and never
realizes things have gone wrong until it’s too late.
Everyone knows this. Even
among Democratic party operatives, she’s acknowledged as
“awkward and uninspiring on the stump,” carrying “Bill’s baggage with none of
Bill’s warmth.” New York magazine described
her “failing to demonstrate the most elementary political skills, much
less those learned at Toastmasters or Dale Carnegie.” Last year the White House
was panicking at
her levels of electoral incompetence, her questionable decisionmaking, and her
inclination for taking sleazy shortcuts. More recently, noting Sanders’s
catch-up in the polls, The Washington Post’s Jennifer Rubin said that
she was a “rotten candidate” whose attacks on Sanders made no sense, and that
“at some point, you cannot blame the national mood or a poor staff or a
brilliant opponent for Hillary Clinton’s campaign woes.” Yet in a race against
Trump, Hillary will be handicapped not only by her feeble campaigning skills,
but the fact that she will have a sour national mood, a poor staff,
and a brilliant opponent.
Every Democrat should take
some time to fairly, dispassionately examine Clinton’s track record as a
campaigner. Study how
the ‘08 campaign was handled, and how this one has
gone. Assess her strengths and weaknesses with as little bias or prejudice
as possible. Then picture the race against Trump, and think about how it will
unfold.
It’s easy to see that Trump
has every single advantage. Because the Republican primary will be over, he can
come at her from both right and left as he pleases. As the candidate who thundered
against the Iraq War at the Republican debate, he can taunt Clinton
over her support for it. He will paint her as a member of the corrupt political
establishment, and will even offer proof: “Well, I know you can buy
politicians, because I bought Senator Clinton. I
gave her money, she came to my wedding.” He can make it appear that Hillary
Clinton can be bought, that he can’t, and that he is in charge. It’s also hard
to defend against, because it appears to be partly true. Any denial looks like
a lie, thus making Hillary’s situation look even worse. And then, when she
stumbles, he will mock her as incompetent.
Charges of misogyny against
Trump won’t work. He is going to fill
the press with the rape
and harassment allegations against Bill Clinton and Hillary’s role in
discrediting the victims (something that made even
Lena Dunham deeply queasy.) He can always remind people that Hillary
Clinton referred to Monica Lewinsky as a “narcissistic
loony toon.” Furthermore, since Trump is not
an anti-Planned Parenthood zealot (being the only one willing to stick
up for women’s health in a room full of Republicans), it will be hard for
Clinton to paint him as the usual anti-feminist right-winger.
Trump will capitalize on his
reputation as a truth-teller, and be vicious about both Clinton’s sudden
changes of position (e.g. the switch
on gay marriage, plus the affected economic populism of her run against
Sanders) and her perceived dishonesty. One can already imagine the monologue:
“She lies so much. Everything
she says is a lie. I’ve never seen someone who lies so much in my life. Let me
tell you three lies she’s told. She made
up a story about how she was ducking sniper fire! There was no sniper
fire. She made it up! How do you forget a thing like that? She said
she was named after Sir Edmund Hillary, the guy who climbed Mount
Everest. He hadn’t even climbed it when she was born! Total lie! She lied about
the emails, of course, as we all know, and is probably going to be
indicted. You know she said there were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq! It
was a lie!
Thousands of American soldiers
are dead because of her. Not only does she lie, her lies kill people. That’s
four lies, I said I’d give you three. You can’t even count them. You want to go
on PolitiFact, see how many
lies she has? It takes you an hour to read them all! In fact, they ask
her, she doesn’t even say she hasn’t lied. They asked
her straight up, she says she usually tries to tell the truth! Ooooh, she
tries! Come on! This is a person, every single word out of her mouth is a lie.
Nobody trusts her.
Check the polls, nobody trusts
her. Yuge liar.”
Where does she even begin to
respond to this? Some of it’s true, some of it isn’t, but the more she tries to
defensively parse it (“There’s been no suggestion I’m going to be indicted! And
I didn’t say I usually tried to tell the truth, I said I always tried
and usually succeeded”) the deeper she sinks into the hole.
Trump will bob, weave, jab,
and hook. He won’t let up. And because Clinton actually has lied, and
actually did vote for the Iraq War, and actually is hyper-cosy
with Wall Street, and actually does change her positions based on
expediency, all she can do is issue further implausible denials, which will
further embolden Trump. Nor does she have a single offensive weapon at her
disposal, since every legitimate criticism of Trump’s background (inconsistent
political positions, shady financial dealings, pattern of deception) is equally
applicable to Clinton, and he knows how to make such things slide off him,
whereas she does not.
The whole Clinton campaign has
been unraveling from its inception. It fell apart completely in 2008, and has
barely held together against the longest of long shot candidates. No matter how
likely she may be to win the primary, things do not bode well for a general
election, whomever the nominee may be.
As H.A. Goodman put
it in Salon:
Please name the last person to
win the presidency alongside an ongoing FBI investigation, negative
favorability ratings, questions about character linked to continual flip-flops,
a dubious money trail of donors, and the genuine contempt of the rival
political party.
The “contempt” bit of this is
obviously silly; we all know levels of contempt have reached their
world-historic high point in the Republican attitude toward Obama. But the rest
is true: it’s incredibly hard to run somebody very few people like and expect
to win. With the jocular, shrewd Donald Trump as an opponent, that holds true a
million times over.
Nor are the demographics going
to be as favorable to Clinton as she thinks. Trump’s populism will
have huge resonance among the white working class in both red and blue
states; he might even peel away
her black support. And Trump has already proven
false the prediction that he would alienate Evangelicals through his
vulgarity and his self-deification. Democrats are insistently repeating their
belief that a Trump nomination will mobilize liberals to head to the polls like
never before, but with nobody particularly enthusiastic for Clinton’s
candidacy, it’s not implausible that a large number of people will find both
options so unappealing that they stay home.
A Clinton/Trump match should
therefore not just worry Democrats. It should terrify them. They should be
doing everything possible to avoid it. A Trump/Sanders contest, however,
looks very different indeed.
Trump’s various unique methods
of attack would instantly be made far less useful in a run against Sanders. All
of the most personal charges (untrustworthiness, corruption, rank hypocrisy)
are much more difficult to make stick. The rich history of dubious business
dealings is nonexistent.
None of the sleaze in which
Trump traffics can be found clinging to Bernie. Trump’s standup routine just
has much less obvious personal material to work with. Sanders is a fairly
transparent guy; he likes the social safety net, he doesn’t like oligarchy, he’s
a workaholic who sometimes takes a break to play
basketball, and that’s pretty much all there is to it. Contrast that with
the above-noted list of juicy Clinton tidbits.
Trump can’t clown around
nearly as much at a debate with Sanders, for the simple reason that Sanders is
dead set on keeping every conversation about the plight of America’s poor under
the present economic system. If Trump tells jokes and goofs off here, he looks
as if he’s belittling poor people, not a magnificent idea for an Ivy League
trust fund billionaire running against a working class public servant and
veteran of the Civil Rights movement. Instead, Trump will be forced to do
what Hillary Clinton has been forced to do during the primary, namely to make
himself sound as much like Bernie Sanders as possible. For Trump, having to get
serious and take the Trump Show off the air will be devastating to his unique
charismatic appeal.
Against Trump, Bernie can play
the same “experience” card that Hillary plays. After all, while Sanders may
look like a policy amateur next to Clinton, next to Trump he looks positively
statesmanlike. Sanders can point to his successful
mayoralty and long history as Congress’s “Amendment
King” as evidence of his administrative bona fides. And Sanders’s lack of
foreign policy knowledge won’t hurt him when facing someone with even
less. Sanders will be enough of an outsider for Trump’s populist
anti-Washington appeal to be powerless, but enough of an insider to appear an
experienced hand at governance.
Trump is an attention-craving
parasite, and such creatures are powerful only when indulged and paid attention
to. Clinton will be forced to pay attention to Trump because of his constant
evocation of her scandals. She will attempt to go
after him. She will, in other words, feed the troll. Sanders, by
contrast, will almost certainly behave as if Trump isn’t even there. He is
unlikely to rise to Trump’s bait, because Sanders doesn’t even care to listen to
anything that’s not about saving social security or the disappearing middle
class. He will almost certainly seem as if he barely knows who Trump
is. Sanders’s commercials will be similar to those he has run in the
primary, featuring uplifting
images of America, aspirational sentiments about what we can be together,
and moving testimonies from
ordinary Americans. Putting such genuine dignity and good feeling against
Trump’s race-baiting clownishness will be like finally pouring water on the
Wicked Witch. Hillary Clinton cannot do this; with her, the campaign will
inevitably descend into the gutter, and the unstoppable bloated Trump menace
will continue to grow ever larger.
Sanders is thus an almost
perfect secret weapon against Trump. He can pull off the only maneuver that is
capable of neutralizing Trump: ignoring him and actually keeping the focus on
the issues. Further, Sanders will have the advantage of an enthusiastic
army of young volunteers, who will be strongly dedicated to the
mission of stalling Trump’s quest for the presidency. The Sanders team is
extremely technically skilled; everything from their television commercials to
their rally
organizing to their inspired
teasing is pulled off well. The Sanders team is slick and adaptable,
the Clinton team is ropey and fumbling.
There’s only one real way to
attack Bernie Sanders, and we all know it: he’s a socialist fantasist out
of touch with the Realities of Economics. But Trump is in the worst possible
position to make this criticism. Economists have savaged Trump’s own proposals
as sheer
lunacy, using every word deployed
against Bernie and then some. And while from a D.C. policy veteran like
Clinton, charges of a failure to understand how political decision-making works
may sound reasonable, Sanders is a successful legislator who has run a
city; the host of The Apprentice may have a more difficult time
portraying a long-serving congressman as being unfamiliar with how Washington
works.
Of course, the American people
are still jittery about socialism. But they’re less
jittery than they used to be, and Bernie does a good job portraying
socialism as being about little more than paid
family leave and sick days (a debatable proposition, but one beside
the point.) His policies are popular and
appeal to the prevailing national sentiment. It’s a risk, certainly. But the
Soviet Union bogeyman is long gone, and everyone gets
called a socialist these days no matter what their politics. It’s possible that
swing voters dislike socialism more than they dislike Hillary Clinton, but in a
time of economic discontent one probably shouldn’t bet on it.
One thing that should be noted
is that all of this analysis applies solely to a race against Trump; the
situation changes drastically and unpredictably if Marco Rubio is the nominee
or Michael Bloomberg enters the race. Yet the moment, it doesn’t look like
Marco Rubio will be nominated, but that Donald Trump will be. And in that
case, Clinton is toast.
Some in the media have rushed to
declare Sanders’s campaign moribund in the wake of his recent loss in Nevada.
This is absurd; after all, out of 50 states, only three have voted, one being a
tie, one being a major Sanders win, and one being a small Clinton win. The
media has dishonestly pointed
to Hillary Clinton’s higher superdelegate count as evidence of
her strong lead, despite knowing full well that superdelegates are highly
unlikely to risk tearing the party apart by taking the nomination out of
voters’ hands, and are thus mostly a formality. The press has also crafted a
narrative about Sanders “slipping
behind,” ignoring the fact that Sanders has been behind from the very
start; not for a moment has he been in front.
But even if it was correct to
say that Sanders was “starting to” lose (instead of progressively losing less
and less), this should only motivate all Democrats to work harder to make sure
he is nominated. One’s support for Sanders should increase in direct proportion
to one’s fear of Trump. And if Trump is the nominee, Hillary Clinton should
drop out of the race and throw her every ounce of energy into supporting
Sanders. If this does not occur, the resulting consequences for Muslims and
Mexican immigrants of a Trump presidency will be fully the responsibility of
Clinton and the Democratic Party. To run a candidate who can’t win, or who is a
very high-risk proposition, is to recklessly play with the lives of millions of
people. So much depends on stopping Trump; a principled defeat will mean
nothing to the deported, or to those being roughed
up by Trump’s goon squads or executed with pigs’
blood-dipped bullets.
Donald Trump is one of the
most formidable opponents in the history of American politics. He is sharp,
shameless, and likable. If he is going to be the nominee, Democrats need to
think very seriously about how to defeat him. If they don’t, he will be the
President of the United States, which will have disastrous
repercussions for religious and racial minorities and likely for everyone
else, too. Democrats should consider carefully how a Trump/Clinton matchup
would develop, and how a Trump/Sanders matchup would. For their sake, hopefully
they will realize that the only way to prevent a Trump presidency is the
nomination of Bernie Sanders.
Nathan J. Robinson is
a Social Policy PhD student at Harvard University, as well as an attorney and
children's book author. He is the editor of Current Affairs.
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