The important thing first.

I predicted who would win the Wisconsin primary, although my prediction suggested that Sanders would do better than he did. (He underperformed.) I predicted the outcome of the Wyoming primary exactly.

These are the most recent two in a long series of mostly correct predictions of which Democratic candidate will win each of the contests in this long presidential primary season. My predictions of which candidate would win have been mostly accurate, but also, fairly accurate with respect to how many delegates each candidate would pick up.

Several primaries back, for several primaries in a row, Sanders did somewhat better than my predictions suggested, indicating that the model I was using to make these predictions possibly underestimated that candidate’s long term performance. However, that stopped happening, and Sanders went back to performing pretty much as I expected him to perform, or not as well.

This verifies the fact that Hillary Clinton will finish this presidential primary season in the lead. Yes of course, one never knows. But at some point one has to presume, even if there is a small chance that a numerically nearly impossible outcome will emerge. And, if this turns out to be wrong, since I am tracking every delegate, I’ll be among the first to know and acknowledge, and shift strategy as needed. But at the moment I feel very comfortable working with the assumption that the primary season will end with Clinton having about 2,000 pledged delegates, and Sanders having between 1700 and 1800 pledged delegates.

If the unpledged delegates simply track this outcome, this will give Clinton the nomination on the first ballot.

I have been using a similar model for making these predictions all along, but refining the model (how it works) and adding data (with each contest’s outcome). I have tried several times to develop a version of the model that would put the consistently second place candidate, Sanders, at an advantage, biasing the model with assumptions about a possible improved performance. Not once did that alternative version of my predictive model put Sanders in the lead at the end of the primary season, though he got close once.

Simply put, barring an unlikely surprise, Hillary Clinton will be the Democratic Party’s nominee for president in 2016. That is the important thing.

Now the troubling thing.

From the start of this primary season, I was happy with either candidate, and vowed to support whichever candidate is nominated. Most sane people intend to support the winner, because the alternative is rather horrible. Most people did pick a candidate earlier in the process, but I refused to. Of course, every time I questioned a criticism of Clinton, some Sanders supporters “accused” me (as though that was a legitimate accusation of wrong doing) of supporting Clinton. When I would critique a criticism of Sanders, the reverse would generally happen. Many people were simply not allowing me to be supportive of both. Also, I wasn’t undecided. I had decided that both were excellent candidates, in their own ways.

But it goes beyond that. During this primary season, I’ve witnessed, again and again, people who had previously shown signs of high level functioning and impressive intelligence saying many utterly stupid things. I’ve closely monitored and been involved in many presidential elections, and I note that this often happens to some degree, but this year, this has been happening wholesale and to an extreme. I will not give you examples. If you are a reasonable person who has been paying attention, you don’t need me to give you examples because you know exactly what I am talking about. If you are one of the folks who has been quick to make utterly illogical or fact free arguments about every aspect of this race, often reaching far into the land of conspiracy theory, then you don’t know what I’m talking about but you will sense, somehow, that this paragraph is deeply insulting to you. Feel free to make defensive comments below. I will ignore them. And, I have nothing else to say about this. This departure from reason is, of course, the troubling thing.

The dangerous thing overlaps with the troubling thing.

Weeks ago it started to look like a small number of supporters of Bernie Sanders, in the event that Hillary Clinton was nominated, were going to either write in Sanders, vote for Trump or Cruz, or not vote at all. This did not surprise me, because a good number of the Sanders supporters where I live, in the shadow of Michele Bachmann’s congressional district, are fairly right wing. This may not make sense if you see Sanders as a progressive, very left candidate (which he is) but have a non-nuanced view of politics, but it is both true and understandable. The same thing happened with the Paul mini-Dynasty. I will not spend any time here outlining how this happens.

Over time, however, this “small percentage” has grown, and polling indicates that something close to 20% of declared Sanders supporters are what has become known as “Bernie or Busters” of various political stripes, but all holding the same dangerous view. These folks will not support anyone but Sanders, or will turn on the Democratic party if Sanders is not nominated.

Parallel to this phenomenon we see myriad other destructive practices by Sanders supporters, and by destructive I mean destructive to the political process and to the Democratic candidacy. Given that Clinton is going to get the nomination, it is a significant problem that so many Sander supporters are trying so hard to damage her.

These trends, of “Bernie or Busters” or of taking Clinton as seemingly equivalent to Satan, are a problem not only because of their immediate effects, but because the Sanders campaign accepts and exploits these activities and attitudes. It is no longer possible to point to the two or three times that Bernie Sanders scolded someone for this attitude and claim he is taking care of this, and it is no longer possible to give the Sanders campaign the benefit of doubt, suggesting that they just don’t know about what is going on. Campaigns know these things. Sanders knows about these things.

To this we add the clearly emerging pattern of the Clinton campaign working down ballot, to elect a blue, or at least, bluer Congress (and to help Democrats in other ways), while Sanders does very little in this area (he has done some things, but not much). Sanders’ strategy of having the masses show up in DC to shame the GOP Congress into not being nefarious haters was never going to work. Clinton’s strategy, and the strategy of the rest of the Democratic Party, to take back Congress, can work if we follow through. The numbers show that we actually could do it this year, if we don’t throw away the opportunity. Sanders appears to be throwing away the opportunity, Clinton is not.

So that’s the dangerous part. We need to approach the general election with a candidate and supporters who are going to do what is needed. The Sanders campaign has become a danger.

Several days ago I posted this on my Facebook page:
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Among the reactions to this meme were assertions that somehow it is wrong for candidates to help each other (see comments above about taking back Congress .. Franken’s election is exactly how the Democrats retook the Senate for a couple of years). Among the reactions was a call to find someone to primary Franken. These are insane reactions. These are the reactions of deluded cultists, not political activists.

And, these reactions were among the small number of final straws that had fallen upon this particular camel’s back. I decided to take a break from the Facebook conversation about this election for a few days, and I blacked out my profile pics, without comment, as a form of protest. To underscore the protest, I began posting nothing but cat pictures. A handful of my Facebook friends understood and commiserated. A good number of Sanders supporters seemed to quiet down (except one or two), probably realizing that I was fed up.

And now, I’m back. But guess what. I’m not going to argue about Sanders, or Sanders vs. Clinton. The Sanders campaign is done. If this had all gone somewhat differently, I’d still be talking about Sanders, points he’s making, interesting things about his campaign, but the cost of doing that is too high. The Sanders campaign, owing mainly to the personality cultists and the Bernie or Busters, which are probably in total about a third of his supporters, have ruined the campaign, and made it not worth talking about. The Sander campaign, sadly, has become less interesting, more annoying, and just as predictable, as a bunch of cat pictures.

980xThis is not to say that Sanders contribution has not been great. It has been very significant, and this souring of his campaign detracts from that only modestly. But that part is done. We’ve heard Bernie, we’ve listened, he’s influenced the process.

But from hear on out, if you are a Bernie supporter, talk to the paw.

Comments

  1. #1 Wesley Dodson
    April 11, 2016

    Dear kitten’s foot: when pragmatism overlaps with racism, sexism, ageism, corporate cronyism, and military-industrialism, all I can say is, Bernie or bust. What’s happening in America is not a conspiracy, it’s the status quo, and it’s unsustainable. I cannot in good conscience vote for anyone else.

  2. #2 Chris O'Neill
    April 11, 2016

    Clinton’s strategy, and the strategy of the rest of the Democratic Party, to take back Congress, can work if we follow through.

    Indeed, President Obama has been very successful at getting people to actually vote in an election (the presidential one) instead of never voting and just whining about the guvmint and saying stupid things like there’s no point in voting for anyone other than themselves.

    Speaking from another type of democracy, I think there’s some value in having a presidential election but the sad thing is that many Americans only vote in that election and not in the Senate and HoR elections, apparently because they don’t realize that those elections are even more important than the presidential one.

  3. #3 G
    April 12, 2016

    Dear Wesley: When President Cruz destroys everything you value, there won’t be anyone left to help you. And I won’t lift a finger either.
    Your bed. Make it. Lie in it.

    I’m supporting Bernie in the primary, and (Hi Greg;-) if Hillary gets the nomination (as appears almost certain at this point) I’ll support her equally strongly, and the entire ticket. Any progress is better than any regress.

    +2 Celsius and +2 Supreme Court Justices, vs. the politics of snit. Easy choice.

    I will also concede that a lot of the Bernie supporters out there are textbook cases of “oppositional defiant disorder,” or, more colloquially (how can one say this in a G-rated forum?), “arsehauls.” But keep in mind that many forums, including Daily Kos, are thoroughly infested with Republican trolls who will do anything to stir up nasties between Democrats. Frankly we should be doing likewise on every Republican forum, but I’m not going get into a digression here about the merits of psyop tactics.

    One of the reasons for the high visibility of arsehauls in the Bernie camp is plain simple emotional contagion. Anger and other primal emotions are particularly contagious, as we have also seen with the Trump campaign. The remedy for emotion-pollution is to clean up the nasty emotions by spreading good ones. Humor is always good, and depending on what it’s mixed with, can be a useful transitional state between many pairs of two other emotional states.

    As for strategy, the best thing is always to focus on registering new voters and making sure every registered voter has the paperwork to actually vote. Ignore the arsehauls altogether, focus on voter registration, and eventually the arsehauls will come sniffing around in search of social reinforcement. At that point the thing to do is encourage them to register more voters as well.

    Registering new voters is the cure for many of life’s ills;-)

    And when it works, we all have something to celebrate together.

  4. #4 StevoR
    Adelaide hills, South Australia
    April 12, 2016

    @1. Wesley Dodson : “Bernie or bust. … I cannot in good conscience vote for anyone else.”

    Which means you are a de facto Cruz or Trump voter and other real people all around this pale blue dot will pay a steep price in misery and suffering and poverty and death for the sake of your purist tantrum-throwing.

    How’s that sit on your conscience?

  5. #5 StevoR
    April 12, 2016

    ^ Continued @ 1. Wesley Dodson :

    ..when pragmatism overlaps with racism, sexism, ageism, ..

    Hillary Clinton has certain been – and will continue to be discriminated against unfairly on two out of three of those grounds – gender and age. She’s an older woman, both factors which have been used against her in the past, are being used against her now – including by some Sander’s supporters – and will no doubt be used against her into the future too.

    Sanders has perhaps faced ageism if you consider it ageism to note that his age – 74 years old – might be a potential concern.

    Note that if elected Sanders would be 78 at the end of a hypothetical first term and 82 at the end of a second. Clinton at 68 would be 72 at the end of her first term and 76 at the end of her second. IOW Hillary Clinton when potentailly leaving office after two terms would be just just two years older than Sanders is today. Trump at 69 years old is a year older than Hillary and thus would be 73 and 77 at terms end~wise respectively assuming the world survived! Oldest POTUS elected was Reagan – 69 when he was voted in & 77 when he left office. The average age of becoming POTUS is one month short of 55 years old.

    Source :

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Presidents_of_the_United_States_by_age#List_of_Presidents_by_Age

    I don’t think age should disqualify anyone from Presidential candidacy but when people get into their mid-70’s it does raises questions of physical and mental health and competence in an extremely demanding & stressful job given gerontological realities.

    So ageism perhaps is questionably a factor for all three currently most likely Presidential contenders.

    OTOH, Bernie Sanders certainly hasn’t faced the same sexism that Hillary Clinton has faced all her life. Bernie has been, as noted, a bit too quiet in condemning the blatant sexism of some of his followers and Trump is amongst the most misogynistic of the very misogynistic Repub pack.

    .. it’s the status quo, and it’s unsustainable.

    Yes – but a rapid collapse from the status quo into something very much worse and potentially globally catastrophic if a republican wins would be better how exactly?

    If Clinton wins then it will be time to pressure her to move further left and start reversing the dangerous rightward list in the US ship of state. If Cruz or Trump or another Repub gets in, that listing will worsen dramatically possibly even quickly capsizing and sinking the whole metaphorical ship.

    Those it seems almost certain are the options, there aren’t realistically any others whether we like it or not.

  6. #6 cosmicomics
    Danmark
    April 12, 2016

    #1
    I won’t vote for no candidate what ain’t a virgin.
    Bernie or bust!
    (I do enjoy your correctly buzz-worded jargon. Rubiot rides again!)