Boston Herald

Democrats caught in socialist predicamen­t

- By DAVID LIMBAUGH David Limbaugh is a syndicated columnist.

Many have noted the dilemma the socialists — er, I mean the Democrats — are in over the prospect of Sen. Bernie Sanders winning their nomination. If nominated, they’re running a socialist. If not, their base will be out of sorts.

It’s time for a reckoning. The Democratic Party is going to have to be honest with itself — and the American voters — sooner or later. It is already mostly socialist. But is it ready to embrace the label?

While a majority of Democrats now have a favorable view of socialism (just think about that for a second), a majority of Americans do not, though the gap is shrinking thanks to liberal academia, Hollywood and Democratic propaganda.

Democrats always go left during primaries and pretend to be moderate during the general election campaign. But radical leftism now controls their party, and they have little plausible deniabilit­y.

There’s an arguable parallel between the 2016 Republican­s and the 2020 Democrats in that each had a broad range of candidates. And if Sanders is nominated, each will have chosen an unorthodox candidate, but one whom the base can enthusiast­ically endorse.

The similariti­es end there. While the left repeats with mind-numbing monotony that the Republican­s just keep moving further to the right, that’s really not true. Under President Trump’s leadership, our conservati­ve policies have finally lined up with our rhetoric, but our rhetoric — our agenda — hasn’t become appreciabl­y more conservati­ve since former President Reagan.

Yes, I’m aware that our neverTrump friends on the right will descend into spasms over my remark that Trump is governing conservati­vely, but most (not all) of those self-described “principled conservati­ves” are too busy cavorting with Democrats to be taken seriously. I’ll concede that Trump appears to have strayed from conservati­ve orthodoxy on trade, but even there he’s more of a horse trader than a protection­ist.

If Bernie loses, Democrats will have to convince their hoppingmad base that they were forced to settle on a racist-sounding gazilliona­ire whose tax returns and emoluments clause issues will bite them in the rear — or some other lackluster candidate who will still be light-years better than the evil Donald Trump. Anyone but Trump.

If Bernie wins, Democrats will have bigger problems. It’s not just that Bernie’s an avowed socialist. It’s the economy, stupid! It’s the improved standard of living and rising employment across the board, especially for minorities. It’s the astounding stock market. It’s Trump’s bullishnes­s on America, and America is, in fact, stronger again.

All they’ll have left is identity politics, which means exaggerati­ng race problems, manufactur­ing gender problems and engaging in all out thermonucl­ear class warfare. But every bit of that message is pessimisti­c. No hope and change on the horizon. All the Democrats have is negativity — complainin­g about Trump, and whining about unfairness and alleged inequaliti­es.

But given that all income groups are improving and race relations are better than under former President Obama, Democrats will have trouble winning the swing states with only negativity. It doesn’t really matter how much is owned by these evil liberal capitalist billionair­es — Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates, etc. If people’s lives are better — and they are — class envy won’t be nearly as seductive.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States