My Prediction: Bernie Sanders Will Win the White House
On May 12th, I presented my analysis of the polling as of that time, headlining, The Early Signs of Whom The Next U.S. President Will Likely Be: Presidential Polls Look Confusing Regarding Bernie, But Downright Bad Regarding Hillary & All Republicans. Based on the net-favorability ratings of candidates in the first poll that had really meaningful results on that most important of all factors (which poll had just been published), and also based on the latest available reliable poll of Americans ideological preferences (which had been taken in 2011, but thats okay because ideology changes only very slowly), I concluded that Vermont U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders was likely to surprise on the upside at the start of his contest, and that, Sanders would probably be able to crush any Republican except perhaps Rand Paul, if he were to win the Democratic primaries. He is already surprising on the upside (though pundits havent yet caught on that Hillarys a dud), and so I am now predicting that Sanders will win, first, the Democratic nomination, and then the White House. But, first, to summarize:
The crucial net favorabilities were shown and documented in that May 12th article to be outright terrible for every candidate except Scott Walker, Marco Rubio, and Bernie Sanders; they were merely bad for Walker and Rubio; and they were probably marginally good for Sanders, but the latest poll hadnt even included Sanderss name, and so for him I extrapolated from ideologically the only candidate, who had been named, who was at all similar to Sanders ideologically, and this was Elizabeth Warren; and she had a slightly positive net favorability rating, which was by far the best of any of the named candidates (either male or female). Based on information that Ive been provided access to, she will not be entering the contest, and Senator Sanders will be the only progressive candidate running in the Democratic primaries.
The 2011 ideological poll showed that of the five ideological orientations that were named, the one with the highest net-favorability the ratio of positive to negative ratings by the American public, was Progressive, at 67%/22%, or 3.05; and the second-highest was Conservative, at 62%/30%, or 2.07. Like Senator Warren, Senator Sanders is one of the U.S. Senates three leading (if not the Senates only three) progressives. He clearly represents the most-widely-shared ideology: progressivism. If he wins the Democratic nomination, then the nation will be in for its first clear ideological choice since 1932 in a two-major-Party contest between a progressive Democrat versus a conservative Republican. That time it was FDR versus Herbert Hoover.
READ MORE: http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2015/06/my-prediction-bernie-sanders-will-win-the-white-house.html
There ya have it. Pack it in Hillary.
dreamnightwind
(4,775 posts)LOL at your pack it in statement! I don't really think Bernie has much of a chance to beat Hillary, would love to see it happen though, and I'm fairly certain he would defeat anyone the Republican Party has to offer.
In fact I think his arguments would play better than hers against the Republicans, she differs from them mostly by small degrees whereas he differs from them in principle and can clearly explain the way things ought to be.
It's for that reason that I like his idea of debating Republicans in the primary. One aspect of choosing a primary candidate has to be how well a candidate can fare against the Republican opponent. Bernie can get all over them on the wars, surveillance, financial deregulation, privatization, income inequality, etc etc etc, the best Hillary can do on any of those issues would be to differ slightly in degree from the Republicans.
Warpy
(111,383 posts)but I think he'll make enough of a splash in the primaries to force the insider crowd to alter their priorities just a little.
After all, if they can keep him out, they might not be able to manage it with a younger man who has orator skills.
So far, he's got my primary vote. It's early, though, so it's possible there could be a change.
Aristus
(66,478 posts)I'm voting for Hillary. But if having Bernie Sanders in the primary pulls Hillary more to the left, that would be great.
freshwest
(53,661 posts)Everything Bernie is proposing, was tried by Obama with zero credit for successes, naturally. Most people don't have a clue as to what he did. The facts nor the truth won't overcome the media bias.