Gulf News

Trump’s trolling laid to rest by Sanders

Where Team Trump cared little about the GOP platform, Team Hillary succeeded in using the platform to unite the party

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he thumbs of Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump were poised to tweet his sense of moral outrage as Bernie Sanders walked on stage in Philadelph­ia. Trump wants you to know that he is deeply concerned about Sanders and his treatment by the Democratic National Convention and Hillary Clinton. His empathy for Bernie and his bros knows no bounds. The system is rigged against socialists and Trump feels as bad about that as the Russians feel about the collapse of the Soviet Union. Or he could just be faking it, in a naked attempt to hoodwink Sanders supporters into thinking that he cares about the 99 per cent. On the face of it, Trump and Sanders share something beyond the unlikely journey they took through the primaries. They both stunned the political establishm­ent with their insurgent campaigns. They both railed against trade deals and the media. They both liked to brag about their polling and voting numbers, after bringing new voters into the primaries. And they both channeled post-recession anger into the passion of their fan base. That passion was clear in the extended ovation for Sanders as he walked into the convention hall.

But the similariti­es with Trump ended just as soon as Sanders finished bragging, once again, about the number of voters and delegates he’d won. Amid the tears of his supporters on the convention floor, Sanders detailed the economic decline of the middle class, the grotesque wealth of the 1 per cent, and the Republican role in Wall Street’s recklessne­ss. Then he made the kind of pivot that the Republican­s singularly failed to engineer in Cleveland last week. Trump himself expressed no generosity about the politician­s he had vanquished, and his defeated rivals could barely show up at his convention. Those who did show up, like Ted Cruz, struggled to say his name.

Yet, for all his bitterness towards the Hillary Clinton campaign, Sanders went far beyond the mere act of showing up in Philadelph­ia. He embraced Hillary’s nomination even as his supporters cried and jeered through his first references to her name. Sanders united an otherwise fractious party in the second longest cheer of the night. Where the defeated GOP contenders were jockeying for their starting positions in the 2020 primaries, Sanders made it clear he wanted his supporters to vote for Hillary.

The long and patient diplomacy between the Sanders and Hillary camps clearly paid off in what was neverthele­ss a boisterous convention hall. At the heart of the Sanders-Hillary detente was the haggling over the Democratic platform. Where Team Trump cared little about the GOP platform — except for the weakening of language on Ukraine’s independen­ce from Russia — Team Hillary succeeded in using the platform to unite the party.

“It is no secret that Hillary Clinton and I disagree on a number of issues. That is what this campaign has been about. That is what democracy is about,” Sanders told the convention. “But I am happy to tell you that at the Democratic platform committee, there was a significan­t coming together between the two campaigns and we produced, by far, the most progressiv­e platform in the history of the Democratic party ...”

Stoking resentment

This was as strong a bear-hug of the nominee as anyone in Clintonvil­le could hope for. “Hillary Clinton will make an outstandin­g president and I am proud to stand with her here tonight,” Sanders concluded. The challenge for Sanders — and Hillary — is that his campaign stoked resentment and conspiraci­es as soon as the nomination began to slip away from the Vermont senator. He wasn’t just losing primaries and the popular vote; there was something rigged about the party. He wasn’t just lagging in pledged delegates; the superdeleg­ates were corrupting the entire system.

Now the strategica­lly-timed leak of DNC emails has revived that burning sense of injustice. But back in 2008, Hillary’s own supporters were just as resentful and prone to conspiraci­es. Some of her closest friends and donors told me they would never forgive Barack Obama, even as Hillary herself released all her delegates to her rival. They were sure there was something weak and corrupt about Obama, who would surely lose to John McCain. Those feelings subsided dramatical­ly as the 2008 Democratic convention rolled on and the Clintons fully embraced Obama.

Eight years later, the first night of the 2016 Democratic convention served as a pressure valve for Sanders’ hard core fans. Despite his angry tone, Sanders himself directed his anger towards an unjust economy and towards Trump. As he attacked his keyboard, Trump missed Sanders demolishin­g his own opposition to raising the minimum wage. “All of that work, energy and money, and nothing to show for it! Waste of time,” he tweeted. He was talking about the Sanders campaign, but he might as well have been talking about his own trolling of the Democratic party! As the orange one puts it so eloquently, so often, on Twitter: Sad!

Richard Wolffe is a Guardian US columnist, as well as chief digital and marketing officer at Global Citizen, a non-profit organisati­on dedicated to ending extreme poverty.

 ?? Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News ??
Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News

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