And the fact that the establishment is OK-ish with Warren shows that Bernie can't solely blame the problem on his being too liberal. If he was going to run for president again, he should have worked harder to build/repair relationships with the rest of the party.
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Of course, that assumes Sanders actually wants to be nominated instead of just influencing the discourse. If it's the latter (he's certainly had a LOT of success at influencing the discourse) then his strategy makes more sense in some respects.
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But, yeah, like this doesn't really make any sense given that Warren wants to do pretty much the same stuff.https://twitter.com/BernieSanders/status/1141385420602859520 …
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Great ad placement.
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That assumes that his end goal was to actually be the nominee - not sure that he did just want to have a platform to use as a megaphone for his issues.
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What other candidate would we believe that for? It’s weird that people refuse to treat him as a politician. People remember him staying in until the convention and trying to steal it with super delegates right?
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When was Warren a sworn enemy of Dem establishment?
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"It's Sanders fault that the Democratic establishment hates him. No one made him talk about Medicare For All, a living wage or free college. Such a strategic faux pas"! Nate "The Great Take" Silver
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