June 7, 2016
Exclusive: The mainstream media has run out screaming
headlines and saturation TV coverage on AP’s tally that Hillary Clinton has
nailed down the Democratic nomination, but the claims are misleading, reports
Joe Lauria.
By Joe Lauria
Hillary Clinton needs to win 613 of the remaining 775
pledged delegates to clinch the Democratic Party nomination for president.
That’s the math, though not what you’ve been seeing in the corporate media’s
headlines.
With Clinton neck-and-neck with Sen. Bernie Sanders in the
opinion polls for Tuesday’s California primary, where 475 pledged delegates are
at stake, it’s very unlikely she’ll have the required 2,383 pledged delegates
going into the Philadelphia convention next month. That means Clinton will need
the votes of super-delegates, those unelected, pre-selected, party insiders
chosen specifically to prevent a grass-roots insurgent candidate like Sanders.
By a large margin, Clinton leads Sanders in super-delegates
who have indicated how they intend to vote. But unlike pledged delegates, bound
by the will of the voters, the super-delegates can change their minds right up
to the convention night when they must cast their ballot.
That is not what the Associated Press misleadingly reported
on Tuesday however. It has prematurely declared Clinton the Democratic nominee,
even though she’s short of the required pledged delegates. AP and other
corporate media are making a huge assumption that the super-delegates will
stick with her until Philadelphia.
But Sanders has several strong arguments to get them to
change their minds. First, he does much better against Republican nominee
Donald Trump than Clinton does in every poll. Second, Clinton could still be
indicted by the Justice Department before the convention for her mishandling of
classified information on her private email server.
Third, at this point in the 2008 Democratic race, Clinton
also trailed Barack Obama by a large number of pledged delegates, yet she
refused to leave the race. She even floated the possibility that Obama could be
assassinated, invoking the June 1968 slaying of Robert F. Kennedy on the night he’d
won the California primary. There’s probably more chance of Clinton’s
indictment than there was of Obama’s assassination.
Fourth, Sanders has very little baggage. There are
virtually no scandals in his past. There is little that Trump’s opposition research
can dig up on him compared to the library full of dirt they will get on
Clinton.
Fifth, in a year of anti-Establishment fervor on both left
and right it seems very risky for the Democrats to put up a quintessential
Establishment figure like Clinton to face the populist Trump.
Given these facts, Sanders would be foolish not to lobby
the super-delegates until that night in Philadelphia. And that’s why he’s
staying in the race. Not because he’s bitter. Not because he wants to damage
Clinton. But because he thinks he can still win.
You wouldn’t know it from corporate media, however. It
smears Sanders with both news and opinion pieces that portray him as an angry,
old egomaniac who stubbornly is staying in the race only because he wants to
hurt Clinton out of vindictiveness, and thus help Trump. And it tries to
portray all his supporters as angry and violent, ready to strike respectable
people at anytime.
Even if he suffers a blowout loss in California – possibly
made more likely by the AP’s report on Clinton clinching the nomination –
Sanders has several strong arguments with the super-delegates that Democrats
would have a much better chance with him in November. But his biggest obstacle
may be something even more important to the Democratic establishment than
winning the White House: protecting their privilege.
Sanders has stirred up masses of people who pose a threat
to those privileges. His proposed policy changes could cut into the Democratic
establishment’s entrenched interests. Trump’s rhetoric on the right has made
similar appeals to suffering workers and formerly middle-class Americans. But
Trump is a demagogue exploiting that sentiment, while Sanders may genuinely try
to make reforms that could challenge the moneyed elite.
Sanders is a greater threat to elite Democrat’s class
privilege than the billionaire Trump is. Trump is a better bet not to mess with
the status quo and may even push for more government concessions to the rich.
Therefore it is unlikely, short of a Clinton indictment,
that the super-delegates will listen to Sanders. And if she is indicted,
there’s Establishment talk of inserting Joe Biden or John Kerry as the
last-minute nominee.
And that could bring a self-fulfilling prophecy by
establishment Democrats of a violent reaction in Philadelphia.
Joe Lauria is a veteran foreign-affairs journalist based at
the U.N. since 1990. He has written for the Boston Globe, the London Daily
Telegraph, the Johannesburg Star, the Montreal Gazette, the Wall Street Journal
and other newspapers. He can be reached at joelauria@gmail.com and
followed on Twitter at @unjoe.
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