the Sanders campaign has - probably rightly - gambled that if they can win the presidency on an anti-establishment theme, the existing Democratic establishment will *accommodate them* in order to stay close to power. this isn't hard to understand
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what you can't do, however, is run a campaign like this and then whinge that the establishment is trying to stop you and it's unfair. of course they are!
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I mean, you can run this stuff for the public, it's a somewhat effective line. But don't get high on your own supply and become convinced that the establishment is Worse Than The Republicans - because in the end, you *are* going to want their power to get shit done.
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Replying to @BeijingPalmer
I think your analysis of this is wrong. The Democratic Establishment is a mostly fictional foil, and running against both is a perfectly fine strategy that would not hinder Sanders's ability to rule. He would be the establishment once elected.
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Replying to @BeijingPalmer
I understood you to mean that he would need to build alliances with this establishment once elected, so it is a mistake to completely demonize them now.
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Replying to @Pinboard
it's a mistake to *actually believe* in your own demonization of them, because once you're the new establishment you're still going to be dealing with and using the old establishment. They'll *want* alliances with you whatever you said in the campaign (c.f. Trump + everyone).
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It's just the mirror version of "drain the swamp", and people can successfully run on it in perpetuity
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