The growing momentum surrounding the Bernie Sanders
presidential campaign took another step forward over the weekend. In a
display of strength, Sanders got 41% of support in the Wisconsin
Democratic Party straw poll to 49% for Hillary Clinton.
Rick Klein of ABC News reported,
“Straw polls don’t count for anything, and second place is, well,
second place. But how many of these before it will become something?
Hillary Clinton captured 49 percent of the vote at the Wisconsin
Democratic Party’s convention over the weekend, in a straw poll
conducted by WisPolitics.com. The story, though, was second place:
Bernie Sanders got 41 percent, just eight points behind Clinton and far
ahead of his low-single-digits rivals. It’s the latest sign that Sanders
is poised to inherit at least a solid portion of the Ready-for-Warren
energy. And it speaks to a longstanding contention that if Clinton is
vulnerable, it’s on her left.”
Straw polls are only measures of support by those in
attendance. They are not representative samples, so it would be
inaccurate to suggest that the result in Wisconsin will translate to the
broader electorate. The attendees at events like the state Democratic
convention are the dedicated activists. These people are most likely to
be drawn to the grassroots activist campaign of Sen. Sanders.
Forner Sec. of State Clinton has tried to reach out
to the activist left, but the popularity of Bernie Sanders demonstrates
that she still has a lot of work to do in this area. The anti-Hillary
activists on the left are galvanizing around Sanders. This is bad news
for Martin O’Malley and Lincoln Chaffee. O’Malley seems to have been
caught completely by surprise by Sanders’ popularity. In a field where
there is room for one challenger to Hillary Clinton, O’Malley’s
candidacy appears to be redundant and unnecessary.
The segment of the left that thinks Hillary Clinton
is too moderate is flocking to Bernie Sanders. As has been shown in
previous elections, the activist left is a very small portion of the
Democratic Party. The vast majority of Democrats are Obama/Clinton
Democrats, but what can’t be denied is that there is real momentum
behind the candidacy of Bernie Sanders.
Straw
polls are meaningless, but the results in Wisconsin do suggest that the
support for Bernie Sanders is very real and that Democrats could be
treated to a real primary campaign focused on the issues.
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