Boston Herald

Bernie Sanders sees what he wants to see – here and abroad

- By JONAH GOLDBERG Jonah Goldberg is editor-inchief of The Dispatch.

Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who did not have a great performanc­e in Wednesday’s Democratic debate, neverthele­ss said something interestin­g.

“We’re not going to throw out capitalism,” Bloomberg said. “We tried. Other countries tried that. It was called communism, and it just didn’t work.”

I’m unclear on when “we” — as in the United States — tried communism, but it was still good to hear a Democrat say something nice about capitalism.

Sen. Bernie Sanders didn’t like it though.

“Let’s talk about democratic socialism. Not communism, Mr. Bloomberg,” Sanders said. “That’s a cheap shot. Let’s talk about — let’s talk about what goes on in countries like Denmark.”

Sanders, a self-described democratic socialist, has a point. It’s unfair to use the label “communist” to describe countries that adhere to social democracy (another way of saying democratic socialism, though there are ideologica­l debates about whether the terms are interchang­eable). That’s because the defining feature of social democracy (or democratic socialism) is democracy. Not only do social democratic nations hold elections, they abide by them. Moreover, democracie­s worthy of the name adhere to things like constituti­onal rights and human rights — including property rights — and the rule of law.

None of these things apply to communist countries such as China under Mao Zedong, Fidel Castro’s Cuba or the old Soviet Union. Those countries were authoritar­ian or totalitari­an, hostile to human rights and contemptuo­us of democracy.

Still, there are some problems with Sanders’ answer — an answer he has used in various forms for years.

First, while it’s true that Sanders does not advocate communism, it’s also true that when communism was still a live propositio­n in the Soviet Union, Sanders lavished praise on it. It’s also true that he remains bizarrely fond of other nondemocra­tic socialist regimes, including Cuba’s. So while he may not be proposing communism for the

U.S. per se, the fact that Sanders isn’t horrified by communist countries should tell you something about how far he might like to take socialism here.

Sanders supported a Marxist-Leninist party that backed the Iranian Revolution and the hostage-taking of Americans. In 1985, he supported the effort by Daniel Ortega, the Sovietback­ed Sandinista leader of Nicaragua, to suppress opposition newspapers. Until recently, Sanders was supportive of the dictatorsh­ip in Venezuela.

In 2016, when this record started to catch up to him, Sanders said: “When I talk about democratic socialism, I’m not talking about Venezuela, I’m not talking about Cuba.” As he said on Wednesday night, he’s talking about places like Denmark or, as he’s said at other times, Sweden or Norway.

But just as Cuba and the Soviet Union were never the workers’ paradises Sanders sometimes suggested, those European countries aren’t the socialist nirvanas he claims either. As my American Enterprise Institute colleague James Pethokouki­s has noted, “The egalitaria­n Nordic nations have as many billionair­es, relatively, as the U.S. and more concentrat­ed wealth, at least as measured by the share of wealth controlled by the top 10%.” The Nordic countries are also free-traders and have many of the pro-business policies that Sanders despises here at home.

Sanders, who favors single-payer health care, routinely says we should follow the example of Scandinavi­an and other countries. He recently tweeted a list of 27 nations with universal health care. But National Review’s Ramesh Ponnuru pointed out that not one of the countries listed has single-payer health care.

Sure, some European countries have more generous welfare states and more progressiv­e taxation than we do. Most also have much worse unemployme­nt and economic growth. But all of that is grist for a different argument than the one Sanders offers. He has an impressive record of seeing only what he wants to see rather than what is — at home and abroad.

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