A central premise of
conventional media wisdom has collapsed. On Thursday, both the New York
Times and Politico published major articles reporting that
Bernie Sanders really could win the Democratic presidential nomination. Such
acknowledgments will add to the momentum of the Bernie 2020 campaign as the new
year begins—but they foreshadow a massive escalation of anti-Sanders
misinformation and invective.
Throughout 2019, corporate
media routinely asserted that the Sanders campaign had little chance of winning
the nomination. As is so often the case, journalists were echoing each other
more than paying attention to grassroots realities. But now, polling numbers
and other indicators on
the ground are finally sparking very different headlines from the media
establishment.
From the Times: “Why
Bernie Sanders Is Tough to Beat.” From Politico: “Democratic
Insiders: Bernie Could Win the Nomination.”
Those stories, and others
likely to follow in copycat news outlets, will heighten the energies of Sanders
supporters and draw in many wavering voters. But the shift in media narratives
about the Bernie campaign’s chances will surely boost the decibels of alarm
bells in elite circles where dousing the fires of progressive populism is a top
priority.
For corporate Democrats and
their profuse media allies, the approach of disparaging and
minimizing Bernie Sanders in 2019 didn’t work. In 2020, the next step will be
to trash him with a vast array of full-bore attacks.
Along the way, the corporate
media will occasionally give voice to some Sanders defenders and supporters. A
few establishment Democrats will decide to make nice with him early in the
year. But the overwhelming bulk of Sanders media coverage—synced up with the
likes of such prominent corporate flunkies as Rahm Emanuel and Neera Tanden as
well as Wall Street Democrats accustomed to ruling the roost in the party—will
range from condescending to savage.
When the Bernie campaign wasn’t
being ignored by
corporate media during 2019, innuendos and mud often flew in his direction. But
we ain’t seen nothing yet.
With so much at
stake—including the presidency and the top leadership of the Democratic
Party—no holds will be barred. For the forces of corporate greed and the
military-industrial complex, it’ll be all-out propaganda war on the Bernie
campaign.
While reasons for pessimism
are abundant, so are ample reasons to understand that a Sanders
presidency is a real possibility. The last places we should look for
political realism are corporate media outlets that distort options and
encourage passivity.
Bernie is fond of quoting a
statement from Nelson Mandela: “It always seems impossible until it is done.”
From the grassroots, as 2020
gets underway, the solution should be clear: All left hands on deck.
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