Buy The Ticket-Take The Ride-The
Trials And Tribulations Of Scoping The 2020 Democratic Party Nomination-Part
By Allan Jackson
As long as I have been in politics,
interested in politics which is a very long time now it never fails to hit me
on the impeachment process (Fall 2019) of one Donald J. Trump, POSTUS who by
any standard of decency or hygiene should have been shown the door a long time
ago. But the rages against the night over that one are not what has me exercised
today. Especially since once the process gets to the Senate floor it is given the
actual political configuration dead on arrival, DOA, in every sense of that expression.
No what has me exercised in light of the political reality of the day is how the
issue of impeachment and acquittal will lay out to Trump’s unearned advantage.
More pressingly how it will affect the configuration going into 2020. This
after having recently spent an afternoon in the wiles of New Hampshire stirring
up the pot for Senator Bernard Sanders of Vermont who at this point (unlike a
couple of months ago) has a track to the Democratic Party nomination if things
work out for him early in places like Iowa and New Hampshire.
From what I can gather
after one afternoon (and some other time not in New Hampshire but courtesy of
modern technology calling voters in the state from home) is that impeachment
business among the somewhat culled working lists is more a spectacle for the
pros than a living, breathing concern of those out in the hinterland. But that
could cut both ways. As far as I know every Democratic presidential candidate
has come out one way or another for impeachment, including Senator Sanders, so
that will color politics going forward if not now then come fall general
election time. That is probably all that subject is worth at this time but stay
tuned.
What is really intriguing
is the play in New Hampshire and nationally this fall as candidates jockey for position.
I am the first to admit that in early October I thought Senator Sander’s
chances due to health and a trend toward other candidates, particularly the
rising star of Senator Elizabeth Warren as former Vice President Joseph Biden’s
star was fading was at best stalled. Since then with his recovery and with a
crucial endorsement and major rally in Queens with rising super-star AOC things
have turned somewhat, turned for the better. Strangely, if thankfully, during that
period the Senator Warren star has fallen somewhat. Fallen mainly over fudging
the issues around Medicare for All but in general not convincing people that
she will not, or would not, cave in to muddled maybe someday pie in the sky medical
care issues favored by the Democratic Party establishment. Perhaps the biggest
if most expensive political lesson she has had to learn in her short political
career.
It really comes down to
the question of trust, and maybe time too. Senator Sanders has been touting his
social and political agenda for the past forty years-and people have finally
caught up to him. He did not cut corners when he was virtually alone out in the
wilderness and he has not now when he has a whole freaking movement at his back
to raise holy hell. Yeah, it comes down to trust, a commodity in short supply
in the political universe these days. That and a certain amount of undefinable
courage to fight the fight against the greed-heads, the con men, the ever
present bag men and the corner cutters. That is the sense that I get talking to
people in the hills of old New Hampshire about Senator Sanders whether they support
him or not. You can hardly get anybody to disagree that he will not fight like
seven dervishes once he hits the White House running. Forward to victory in the
New Hampshire come February 11, 2020.
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