JUN 11, 2016
Cenk Uygur of the online news
show "The Young Turks" sees progressive Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s
decision to endorse Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination after
abstaining from endorsing her natural ally, fellow progressive Bernie Sanders,
as an unfortunate miscalculation based on a misunderstanding of the tactics of
power.
Clinton all but has the
Democratic nomination with 2,203 pledged delegates to Bernie Sanders' 1,828
after voters went to the polls in six states, including California, on Tuesday.
Many progressives suspect
Warren didn’t endorse Sanders because she believed that if Clinton ended up
winning, Warren would be in a worse position to pursue a progressive agenda,
either in cooperation with a Clinton administration or as part of one. But that’s
wrong, said Uygur (whom
Guardian contributor Joe Sandler Clark earlier this year called "one of
the sharpest and most thoughtful political commentators in the United States”)
in a segment of "The Young Turks" on Saturday.
“If she had endorsed Bernie
Sanders early on, it wouldn’t have given her less power with the Hillary
Clinton campaign, it actually would have given her more power. The reason is
[that] the Clinton campaign respects power. So if you bow to them, you lose
that power, rather than gain that power.”
“So if [Warren] had said, ‘I’m
for Bernie Sanders! We’re progressive and we’re gonna go out there and fight!”
and at the end, said, ‘OK. All right Hillary. OK, I’ll endorse you’ [...] then
Hillary would have said -- meaning after the fight is over [...] ‘OK. I’ll give
you VP if you endorse me. I’ll make sure, Elizabeth, that progressives have a
real voice in my administration as long as you switch over at the end and come
to my side.’ "
"That would have been the
better, more practical way," Uygur suggested, "because then, Bernie
Sanders might have won. And then, even if he didn’t, she actually would have
had more power, not less power.”
Uygur also acknowledged that
Warren might have turned the race in Sanders’ favor had she endorsed him early
on, and he addressed the question of whether her endorsement of Clinton makes
her less of a progressive -- something many progressives feel strongly.
First off, for reasons that are
borne out by her history, both outside of government and inside government, I
do believe that she is a progressive at heart, a real progressive and not just
a politician scheming for her own personal gain.
I believe that she genuinely
thought that the best way to keep progressive ideals alive was to make sure
there was a voice for progressives in the very likely event that Hillary
Clinton won. That is a calculation that she made.
Now, you could say hey, I’m
being overly generous to her or I’m being naive about it, and that is possible,
but that’s my sincere belief.
On the other hand… boy she
could have made a big difference. So, Bernie Sanders lost Massachusetts by 1.2
percent. I think any objective political analyst looks at that and says if
Elizabeth Warren would have endorsed him, he would have won. Now he wouldn’t
have won Massachusetts by 20 points, but maybe he wins by one point or two
points. But as a matter of optics, it mattered on that night. Massachusetts was
a big, big state there, and when he lost Massachusetts, people were like ‘Oh,
he can’t even win Massachusetts, and that’s in the northeast and that’s close
to Vermont. Oh, he’s done, right?’ Iowa, he only lost by a point too, that was
the first one.
Could a powerful, progressive,
female senator on his side made him win Iowa by a point or two? And then every
headline has to be he wins Iowa, rather than loses Iowa? Boy it would have made
a big difference.
So I actually think, giving
her the benefit of the doubt, which I genuinely believe, I think she
miscalculated. And I don’t mind a practical calculation. Look, we do a lot of
practical calculations at Wolf-Pac, and we support people and we have carrots
and we have sticks and we go after people. And there’s a lot of practical
decisions that need to be made, but in that practical consideration she thought
he wasn’t gonna win. A lot of the progressive senators thought, ‘He’s not gonna
win. I’m not gonna put my neck out there, again, not for just personal reasons,
but I gotta protect…’ But the reality is, if you all backed him, he might have
won! He was really close. He might have won. Even before the California vote,
it was still 54 to 46 in terms of the pledged delegates! Damnit it was close!
And you could have made a difference.
If Uygur is right, then Warren
is not a self-interested traitor to the public, but -- in this instance and for
the time being, at least -- merely an ineffectual or, if you prefer, inadequate
politician.
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