Regular Democrats Just Aren't Worried About Bernie [View all]
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/02/regular-democrats-arent-least-bit-worried-about-bernie/606688/?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=share
Judging by media coverage and the comments of party luminaries, you might think Democrats are bitterly polarized over Bernie Sanderss presidential bid. Last month, Hillary Clinton declared that nobody likes the Vermont senator. Last week, James Carville, who ran Bill Clintons 1992 campaign, said he was scared to death of the Sanders campaign, which he likened to a cult. Since the beginning of the year, news organization after news organization has speculated that Sanderss success may set off a Democratic civil war.
But polls of Democratic voters show nothing of the sort. Among ordinary Democrats, Sanders is strikingly popular, even with voters who favor his rivals. He sparks less oppositionin some cases far lessthan his major competitors. On paper, he appears well positioned to unify the party should he win its presidential nomination.
So why all the talk of civil war? Because Sanders is far more divisive among Democratic eliteswho prize institutional loyalty and ideological moderationthan Democratic voters. The danger is that by projecting their own anxieties onto rank-and-file Democrats, party insiders are exaggerating the risk of a schism if Sanders wins the nomination, and overlooking the greater risk that the party could fracture if they engineer his defeat.
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Although political handicappers sometimes presume that centrist Democrats are hostile to Sanders, the Quinnipiac poll suggests that Sanders enjoys widespread affection even outside his ideological lane. Among self-described moderate or conservative Democrats, Sanders boasts a net favorability rating of 43 pointsfar higher than Biden or Bloomberg fares among the very liberal Democrats who compose Sanderss ideological base. Ninety-eight percent of Warren supporters, 97 percent of Buttigieg supporters and 92 percent of Biden supporters say they would back Sanders against Donald Trump. Only among Bloomberg supporters does that number dip to 83 percent. Overall, Sanders voters are significantly more likely to say that they wont back one of his rivals in the general election than the other way around. Sanderss critics within the party may resent his supporters for threatening to stay home in November. But most Democratic voters, including most centrist ones, have little problem with Sanders himself.