New York Post

Bernie’s Way

Democratic voters reject all the pale imitations

- Rich lowry Twitter: @RichLowry

THE Democratic race is shaping up as most of the candidates expected, with the campaign appealing to the most fervent progressiv­e wing of the party showing formidable strength. It’s just that Bernie Sanders is the one running that campaign.

At the beginning, everyone wanted to hug Bernie in the hope of replacing him. They’d be younger, more diverse, fresher, more acceptable to the Democratic mainstream or more electable than the old, white, male socialist standard-bearer.

Who could resist getting everything that Sanders stands for in a more politicall­y palatable vehicle? The answer seems to be Democratic voters.

The would-be Bernies, who became uncertain over time whether that’s who they really wanted to be, have dropped out, or, in the case of Elizabeth Warren, lost altitude, while Bernie has a serious shot. The Bernie model is working for Bernie where it failed everyone else.

The foremost reason is authentici­ty. No one believed that Cory Booker — who the day before yesterday was the pragmatic mayor of Newark, championin­g charter schools and teaming up with then-Gov. Chris Christie and Mark Zuckerberg on an education initiative — was a progressiv­e warrior.

No one bought into Kirsten Gillibrand, the erstwhile moderate from an upstate New York House district, as a left-wing purist.

Yet all of them stood with Bernie and endorsed his version of Medicare for All.

The plan would require massive taxes, entail huge cuts in payments to doctors and hospitals, forbid private insurance and impose a more restrictiv­e and generous government-run health-care system on the US than exists in European social democracie­s. It’s not something you endorse lightly, but Booker & Co did. They all wobbled, hedged their bets or flip-flopped, demonstrat­ing, if there were any doubt, their insincerit­y on a key issue with deep philosophi­cal implicatio­ns.

Warren has suffered from the same disease. She has lasted much longer than the others and is still on the hunt in Iowa. She also has gone further down the Sanders path. She unequivoca­lly stated, “I’m with Bernie on Medicare for All” in one of the early debates. Then, she got tangled up on the question of financing, because the part of her brain worried about the general election didn’t want to admit she’d have to raise taxes on the middle class.

This led to an agonizing climbdown. She settled on the implausibl­e compromise position that she’d initially pursue incrementa­l health-care policies until passing Medicare for All in the third year of her presidency, when presidents aren’t at a high ebb of their legislativ­e power.

It’s no accident that the candidate thriving in the Bernie lane is the only one who is still a fullthroat­ed proponent of Medicare for All, namely, Bernie himself.

Warren’s struggles with Medicare for All played against a backdrop of other authentici­ty issues, most famously her purported Native American heritage. Bernie has no such issues, in fact, the opposite.

No one can match his socialist cred, built up over decades. Only Bernie honeymoone­d in the Soviet Union. Only Bernie has videos out there praising Castro. Only Bernie for years refused to join the Democratic Party. Only Bernie took on the party establishm­ent single-handedly in 2016 and almost won.

Sanders says things that are fantastica­l and untrue all the time, but out of sincere belief in his program. He has shifted on issues like guns and immigratio­n over the years but still gives the impression more than any other major politician of simply being incapable of going out and mouthing poll-tested bromides.

His grassroots army and smalldonor fund-raising give him an independen­ce from traditiona­l donors and their world that no other major candidate has.

If Bernie is going to win the Democratic nomination, it is going to be, like Donald Trump in 2016, as a total rejection of every aspect of his party’s establishm­ent — its preferred policy mix, its traditiona­l strategic thinking and its personnel.

This politics of disruption necessaril­y entails avoiding halfmeasur­es, compromise­s or inhibition­s. With Trump, this meant staking out stark positions on trade and immigratio­n and never toning down his personal outrageous­ness. With Bernie, it means never bowing to convention­al Democratic thinking; he, too, is always doubling down, although on substance and political strategy rather than tweets.

The clear message, from Trump in 2016 and Bernie now,, is that the old rules don’t apply, not even a little bit.

You can’t adopt this posture occasional­ly, or while trying to keep a foot in both camps, or with an eye to a pivot in the general election. You have to be all-in. If you want to be Bernie Sanders, you have to be Bernie Sanders.

 ??  ?? Authentic: Whatever his policy faults, Bernie Sanders never fakes it.
Authentic: Whatever his policy faults, Bernie Sanders never fakes it.
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