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HORIST: Democrats down to two warring camps

<p>It is often said that we should be careful what we wish for&period;  For months&comma; Democrat leaders have been wishing that the unusually large field of presidential candidates to get winnowed down&period;  They finally have their wish – and it is not a pretty picture&period;  The field has been left to two old geezers supported by bases that seem to have a particularly strong dislike for each other&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The animosity is less based on differences over issues than an entire cleavage on principle&period;  Despite his descriptive as a &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;moderate&comma;” former Vice President Joe Biden leans quite far to the left – much further to the left than the pre-Sanders Biden&period;  There is little doubt that Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders has dragged the Democratic Party to the left&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>If the differences between Biden and Sanders on the broad range of overarching issues are relatively small&comma; they are extremely intense&period;  The two camps do not like each other&period;  The question is not which leader will represent a party with a unified philosophy – but rather&comma; which faction will control the Democratic Party to the detriment of the other faction&period;  It is truly a fight for the heart and soul of the Party&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Issues aside&comma; Biden represents the establishment that has controlled the Party for generations&period;  Sanders represents an insurgent faction determined to displace the old guard&period;  The Sanders campaign is – as he describes it – a movement … a revolution&period;  In many ways&comma; it is the 2016 Republican contest all over again&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The factional battle within the Democratic Party is not a recent dynamic&period;  From the very start of the presidential season&comma; it has been the Bernie Bros against the Democrat establishment&period;  It never mattered who would be the standard bearer for the old guard&comma; it was to be –and is – a fierce battle between opposing political tribes&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>As the political season dragged on&comma; there developed a discernible &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;stop Bernie” movement&period; The us-against-Bernie battle line was seen when virtually all the other &lpar;establishment&rpar; candidates began dropping out and jumping on the Biden bandwagon&period;  The Democrat establishment is no longer divided&period;  They have their champion in Biden&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Can Biden stop Sanders from getting the nomination&quest;  Probably&comma; but not absolutely certain&period;  The more important question is&comma; however – at what price&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Uniting the two political bases is not an equal challenge&period;  The nature of the bases is quite different&period;  Should Sanders be nominated&comma; establishment leaders and voters are likely to coalesce – albeit reluctantly &&num;8212&semi; behind his candidacy&period;  They see their mission as defeating President Trump and gaining power for the Party&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Sanders base&comma; however&comma; is not as likely to come to the Kumbaya table&period;  They are not PARTY loyalists&comma; but rather Bernie acolytes&period;  One of the factors that played into former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s defeat was the large number of Sanders’ voters who stayed home on Election Day&period;  They were not only disappointed in his loss – they were furious&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In 2016&comma; there was a general feeling that Sanders was defeated by a rigged system&period;  The emails that were revealed as a result of the hacking of the Democrat National Committee substantiated their belief&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The current seething animosity between the two bases was evident on CNN&comma; when Chris Cuomo interviewed a Sanders and a Biden supporter – Nina Turner and Hilary Rosen&comma; respectively&period;  It turned into a catfight with the combatants screaming at each other&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The gloves have been coming off between the candidates themselves&period;  Biden has gone on the attack against Sanders for his enormously expensive proposals and even his lack of history as a Democrat&period;  For his part&comma; Sanders argues that Biden has been on the wrong side of history – support for the Clinton crime bill and voting for the Iraq War &&num;8212&semi; among other things&period;  Both claim the other is unelectable&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>For the next few weeks&comma; the battle will be fiercely enjoined from primary to primary&period;  If anyone gains the prerequisite 1991 delegate votes to secure the nomination before the convention&comma; it is likely to be Biden&period;  That will mark the end of the Sanders Revolution&period;  There is no other Bernie Sanders as an understudy&period;  The socialist revolution will be over for the foreseeable future&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>If neither Biden nor Sanders secures the 1991 delegate votes before the Democratic National Convention&comma; there will be a battle royale in Milwaukee – with the potential for chaos – on the streets and in the hall &&num;8212&semi; not seen since Democrats gathered in Chicago in 1968&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Ironically&comma; the best way to keep the Democratic Party as united as possible in the campaign against Trump may be to nominate the man least likely to beat Trump – Bernie Sanders&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; there &OpenCurlyQuote;tis&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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