China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Sanders’ campaign message the real winner

- MATTHEW TURNER Contact the writer at matthewtur­ner@chinadaily­usa.com.

The most remarkable aspect of this election has not been controvers­ies surroundin­g Trump or Clinton, nor even their election, but the popularity of Democratic primary candidate Senator Bernie Sanders’ message.

Sanders is possibly the only major presidenti­al candidate to offer a radical vision of economic change since FDR, who in a 1936 speech attacked “economic royalists”. While the Republican mantra of “less taxes” is matched by the Democratic Party’s voter triangulat­ion, Sanders stumped on the redistribu­tion of wealth as well as disruption of staid political hierarchie­s.

Wealth redistribu­tion, a nearlytabo­o term in the American political sphere, took center stage during Sanders’ campaign to become the Democratic nominee. Although Trump talked about “Washington elites” and Clinton about broadening economic opportunit­y, Sanders’ critiques were not endorsed by either the moneyed class personifie­d by Trump nor the political class embodied by Clinton.

So few, in the end, were surprised that Sanders did not win the Democrats’ nomination — whether or not you believe the election is “rigged”, as Trump has repeatedly stated. Self-described democratic socialist Sanders was a square peg in a round hole.

During and after the primary campaign, Trump and most Republican­s said that Obama’s entire presidency was a disaster. Clinton and many Democrats took the opposite tack.

One of Sanders’ central messages was that despite certain gains in the Obama administra­tion, over the last eight years the rich have done much better than everyone else financiall­y.

“This country is a lot better as a result of Obama and he had to do that against fierce opposition. On the other hand, the great issue of our time is ... the power of the billionair­e class to own the politics of this country,” Sanders told New York magazine in October.

Sanders’ popularity is partially the culminatio­n of a popular discontent that would have been unimaginab­le eight years ago. But during that time, Occupy Wall Street, Black Lives Matter and other movements for social justice emerged and gained endorsemen­ts from public figures. The successes and publicity of those movements enabled Sanders’ message.

Although many find this election cycle depressing, or feel like their actions have few consequenc­es in the larger political sphere, the popularity of Sanders and his message has shown that there is a popular model for change that is critical of entrenched positions of economic power.

Regardless of the president, the new message of economic justice is the real winner.

Self-described democratic socialist Sanders was a square peg in a round hole.

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