Rumbling And A-Tumbling On
Campaign Trail 2020-The Mysteries Presidential Candidates Jockeying For Position
Unfurled-Maybe
By Sam Lowell
In the old projects neighborhood
when I was a kid we used to, being very short of money for official store-bought
games, play a game called fuzz ball. The idea, the winning idea was to figure
out where the twelve to fifteen balls (old golf balls found on a country club
golf course just sitting there for the plucking even if we were trespassing)
would wind up once the rules were established which basically kept things
moving (and each of us off the other’s back about fouls and stuff). It was that
ancient silly game that I was thinking about recently when I was asked by my political
comrades who are along with me ever since last January knee-deep, no, waist
deep in the 2020 presidential campaign on behalf of Senator Bernie Sanders of
Vermont.
The real connection
between fuzz ball and this odd-ball presidential election campaign are the
number of ups and down in the process before some kind of clear winner is asserted.
Many a time I thought I had the game in the bag only to have some goof golf
ball come up and whack my chances. When my Bernie group got formed last winter we
thought we had it all figured out and in some ways we had, have but mainly the
jury is still out. Then Sleepy Joe Biden and Senator Sanders apparently mainly
on previous name recognition were assumed to have the front-runner status.
Senator Sanders jumped out into the lead as long as Sleepy Joe had not formally
declared his candidacy. In the meantime serious contenders like Senator
Elizabeth Warren from Massachusetts were putting ground games together as were
holy goofs like Andrew Yang and little Tommy Steyers were spreading plenty of
dough around to keep visible and pray for rain or something.
Then come late spring and
Sleepy Joe’s formal announcement that he wanted to be king of the hill. That sent
his stock way up the charts. Why? Somehow sight unseen he was the only one who
could beat one Donald J. Trump, the only hope of the corporate friendly establishment
wing of the Democratic Party. That mantra kept him afloat for far longer than
any of us in the Sanders corner expected until the debates, until Sleepy Joe
actually opened his mouth and was found to be made of pure dust (which still
hasn’t kept some from using the same old, same old argument about electability)
Some people got nervous
though and started looking for the next best thing which turned out for a
minute through the summer to be Senator Warren, if she could do business, tone
down her act. And she come. Every day you would hear about her surging in some polls
and if you weren’t just a little wary, and a little cynical about such polls
when they were all over the place she looked like she would be queen of the
hill. She fell down a bit on Medicare for All and her general wonkish demeanor
and draw and right now she is licking her wounds. We shall see what happens in
the early going when actual votes are counted. Not everybody put their eggs in
one basket though. Pistol Pete from South Bend began to get (and still have)
some serious play if Sleepy Joe falls down or Professor Warren can’t make a turnaround.
We shall see.
Through all of this I have
not mentioned Senator Sanders who took the biggest hit when Sleepy Joe entered
the lists. His numbers never really moved all summer and he was written off (if
not previously then at that time) as a favorite of the fanatics in the party
and not much else. Worse Senator Warren was pulling voters from his fringes
(and cadre too) so by early October it looked like he was done for. Especially when
the heart attack scare took hold about his age and such. That was the nadir but
strangely from his recovery period onward he has moved up the charts again. Not
an unimportant consideration that rising star Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC) saved
his bacon by a big endorsement and rally in Queens when he was on the ropes.
For that he should be eternally grateful. Who knows what will happen as we head
into the actual vote-counting but my political comrades and I have agreed that
looking at Iowa and New Hampshire the Senator has a shot at getting over the
finish line. Something that in early October seemed totally improbable even to
we die-hards.
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