Is America ready to let it Bern?
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- The best thing about Trump’s impeachment trial is that the
Democrats’ complaining about Trump has drowned out their usual whining about
problems that exist only in their own minds and in those of their brainwashed
supporters. But as the Senate impeachment trial wraps up with a fizzle — because
the incompetent Democrats in charge of the impeachment hearings in Congress
didn’t bother securing critical witness testimony and evidence for the Senate
trial — the focus of Democratic hopefuls will now shift to promoting what their
party has to offer voters in November. Watch them blow that, too.
The mere fact of not being Donald Trump should be enough to get any one of the
Democratic presidential hopefuls elected. This isn’t rocket science.
Here’s what they should be telling the American people to get elected: I won’t
send out 140 tweets a day calling opponents names. I won’t treat the U.S.
military like mercenaries by renting them out to rich Arab leaders known for
sponsoring terrorism. I won’t hit up foreign officials for dirt on personal
political opponents in exchange for American foreign aid. I won’t send buddies
to run shadow diplomacy errands that White House allies end up calling “drug
deals”. I won’t use Pentagon funds to build a ridiculous metal fence on the
border that the wind can knock down when drug cartels are using narco-submarines
and burner aircraft. And I won’t rip up successful international agreements
achieved by previous U.S. presidents in the interest of stability and peace for
the sole purpose of replacing them with similar versions in one’s own name.
Other than that, Democrats should assure Americans that they’ll be pragmatic
stewards of the public purse.
There. That’s it. There’s your entire platform, Dems. But that’s not what’s
going to happen, of course.
Not even the candidates who have historically shown signs of pragmatic realism
in their political careers — like Elizabeth Warren and Joe Biden — have been
able to restrain themselves from shoveling leftist rhetoric onto the political
landscape in an attempt to secure their party’s nomination.
It’s like they’re obligated to tick all the acceptable leftist boxes. Man being
able to control the temperature of the entire planet, securing more tax money
from voters? Check. Digging back into every facet of American history to
identify historically victimized groups to receive boatloads of taxpayer cash?
Check. You funding your neighbor’s kid’s degree in underwater basket weaving?
Check…
The Democrats are setting voters up with a choice between Trump’s corrupt manner
and an as-yet-unnamed Democratic opponent’s leftist tax and spend vision for
America. Not a single one of the Democratic frontrunners has shown the courage
to denounce the most leftist aspects of Democratic Party groupthink or provide a
clear alternative to it. It’s a strategic mistake that reduces their candidacies
to a race to the bottom of America’s empty coffers.
Because the Democratic candidates have left little ideological daylight between
them, it shouldn’t come as a surprise to any of them that Bernie Sanders is
emerging as the winner among the Democrats, pulling away from the pack and
showing some momentum in recent polling. Of all the Democrats falling over each
other to bribe voters with their own money, Sanders has been at it for as long
as he’s been in politics. Some of these other candidates are merely ideological
carpetbaggers. They aren’t fooling anyone. The free-money crowd can smell these
opportunists.
They also know that Bernie is the real deal. The odds are incredibly low that
he’s been playacting at wanting to give money away for decades as a strategy to
get elected — only to turn around and adopt the mindset of a fiscally prudent
businessman once he gets into office.
If there’s one advantage that Trump’s candidacy also still retains heading into
November, it is authenticity. That, and his interest in dismantling the
Washington establishment. Clearly Trump has upheld that promise — except not
perhaps in the way that Americans wanted. Draining the swamp by filling it up
with one’s own swamp creatures probably wasn’t what voters had in mind when they
elected him — and the extent to which Trump has completely disregarded even the
most basic of functional norms may prove to be more than they’re willing to
tolerate.
The big question is whether voters who elected Trump because of his authenticity
and establishment-busting approach could bring themselves to be agnostic enough
on Sanders’ ideological leanings to take a chance on his own anti-establishment
approach.
If it shapes up to be a Trump vs. Sanders race, America’s choice will be reduced
to the lesser of two evils: Trumps dodgy self-serving against Sanders’ leftist
ideology. That American voters in a country of nearly 330 million people aren’t
being offered a better choice means that no one really wins.
COPYRIGHT 2020 RACHEL MARSDEN