Chicago Sun-Times

Why media fail to see how Sanders can win

- Robert B. Reich was secretary of labor under President Bill Clinton. BY ROBERT REICH

‘Bernie did well last weekend, but he can’t possibly win the nomination,” a friend told me for what seemed like the thousandth time, attaching an article from the Washington Post that shows how far behind Bernie Sanders remains in delegates.

Wait a minute. Last Tuesday, Sanders won 78 percent of the vote in Idaho and 79 percent in Utah. Three days before that, he took 82 percent of the vote in Alaska, 73 percent in Washington, and 70 percent in Hawaii.

In fact, since mid-March, Bernie has won six out of the seven Democratic primary contests with an average margin of victory of 40 points. Those victories have given him roughly 100 additional pledged delegates.

As of now, Hillary Clinton has 54.9 percent of the pledged delegates to Sanders’ 45.1 percent. That’s still a sizable gap — but it doesn’t make Sanders’ candidacy an impossibil­ity.

Moreover, there are 22 states to go with nearly 45 percent of pledged delegates still up for grabs — and Sanders has positive momentum in almost all of them.

Clinton’s lead in superdeleg­ates may vanish if Bernie gains a majority of pledged delegates.

Bernie is outpacing Clinton in fundraisin­g. In March, he raised $39 million. In February, he raised $42 million, compared with Hillary Clinton’s $30 million. In January, he raised $20 million to her $15 million.

By any measure, the enthusiasm for Bernie is huge and keeps growing. He’s packing stadiums, young people are flocking to volunteer, support is rising among the middle-aged and boomers.

In Idaho and Alaska, he exceeded the record primary turnout in 2008, bringing thousands of new voters. He did the same thing in Colorado, Kansas, Maine and Michigan.

Yet if you read the Washington Post or the New York Times, or watch CNN or even MSNBC, or listen to the major pollsters and pundits, you’d come to the same conclusion as my friend. Every success by Bernie is met with a story or column or talking head whose message is “but he can’t possibly win.”

Or the media simply ignore Sanders. Early on, the prestigiou­s Columbia Journalism Review noted that Sanders’ candidacy had been ignored by the mainstream media “as nearly as they could a sitting U.S. senator who entered the presidenti­al race.”

The major media can’t see what’s happening because the national media exist inside the bubble of establishm­ent politics, centered in Washington, and the bubble of establishm­ent power, centered in New York.

The major media don’t know how to report on political movements that emerge from the hopes and frustratio­ns of millions of Americans.

The major media have come to see much of America through the eyes of the establishm­ent. That’s not surprising. After all, they depend on establishm­ent corporatio­ns for advertisin­g revenues, their reporters and columnists rely on the establishm­ent for news and access, their top media personalit­ies socialize with the rich and powerful and are themselves rich and powerful, and their publishers and senior executives are themselves part of the establishm­ent.

So it’s understand­able that the major media haven’t noticed how determined Americans are to reverse the increasing concentrat­ion of wealth and political power that have been eroding our economy and democracy. And it’s understand­able, even if unjustifia­ble, that they continue to marginaliz­e Bernie Sanders.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES
| JEWEL SAMAD/AFP ?? Sen. Bernie Sanders
GETTY IMAGES | JEWEL SAMAD/AFP Sen. Bernie Sanders

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