Whatâs the matter with Bernie Sanders? A lot
Good morning. Iâm Paul Thornton, and it is Saturday, March 1 â er, I mean, Saturday, Feb. 29. Letâs take a look back at the week in Opinion.
Some of the readers who harangue me about fixating on President Trump week in and week out (heâs the president, and heâs terrible at it, so what do you expect?) might find something to like in this newsletter, for it expresses reservations about one of the presidentâs favorite targets. Sen. Bernie Sanders, the non-Democrat from Vermont seeking the presidential nomination of the Democratic Party, will likely win the California primary in a landslide on Super Tuesday and appears to have the best shot at garnering enough delegates to face Trump in November.
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This unnerves me, and not because of Sandersâ purported socialism (memo: he is almost certainly not a socialist) or because of any concerns over his purported lack of electability â an odd objection coming from candidates who have yet to beat him in, you know, an election. In fact, I donât look forward to a Sanders administration for the same reason I wouldnât want to live under a Michael Bloomberg presidency: Both candidates have a troubling view of federal power in which constitutional limits are rendered irrelevant by their policy aims.
(Of course, none of this means I wouldnât vote for Sanders in November. Of course I would â a second term for Trump would be unacceptable, and thereâs no evidence that Sanders is in this for himself the same way our current president is.)
Jon Healey, the L.A. Timesâ deputy editorial page editor, explained this objection to Sanders in a piece prodding Democrats to sharpen their attacks on him:
âThereâs no need to get down in the policy weeds with Sanders. The questions that need to be asked, pointedly and often, are much more fundamental.
âFirst and most important, they need to ask him to define what Washington could and could not do under a Sanders administration, because his platform suggests no limit to the governmentâs power in many areas. (The main exceptions are in the governmentâs power to enforce criminal statutes and police the border.) Obliterate the health insurance industry? Sure! Give away electric cars? Of course! Stop all coal and gas extraction on federal lands and kneecap the domestic energy industry by banning fracking? With a snap of the fingers! Use trillions of federal tax dollars to build housing? Why not? Guarantee everyone a job? Itâs about time!
âHis proposals, if adopted, would result in a breathtaking federal intrusion into markets, substituting Washingtonâs priorities and federal taxpayersâ money for the choices that businesses and consumers have long been making themselves.â
Actually, Sanders can save the Democratic Party. The PTSD from George McGovernâs landslide defeat drove the party of Bill Clinton to the right; in fact, itâs drifted to the right of American public opinion, which happens to align more closely with Sanders, writes columnist Robin Abcarian. Voter concern with soaring income inequality has fueled Sandersâ rise, says Danny Feingold. Columnist Jonah Goldberg warns that Sandersâ rise bears a troubling resemblance to a certain Republicanâs ascent in 2016.
You read it in the L.A. Times: Joe Biden, Michael Bloomberg and Sanders are âgeezers.â Virginia Heffernanâs hot take on the Democratsâ debate in South Carolina didnât sit well with readers, who faulted the columnist for espousing ageism and even misunderstanding when the candidatesâ mothers were born. Wrote Heffernan: âThe stumbles that mark these three men as holdovers rather than visionaries might be endearing in less perilous times. But we already have a kitsch geezer president â and, as America now knows, the joke wears off quickly.â L.A. Times
You probably didnât hear about a mass shooting this week, which in this country doesnât mean there wasnât one. Brian A. Boyle, an alumnus of Marquette University, laments that the shooting deaths of five people at the Molson Coors factory in Milwaukee âhit a little too close to home for me.â Troublingly, Boyle notes that he searched in vain for timely breaking news updates and tweets about the shooting, evidence that âthis tragedy barely pierced the mass consciousness.â L.A. Times
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Is an L.A. City Council candidate a socialist and a right-winger? Of course not, but someone is smearing Loraine Lundquist as both a âloyalâ Republican and an âextremistâ who wants to raise property taxes and force people to buy electric cars, editorial writer Kerry Cavanaugh writes. âJust as galling, the polar-opposite portrayals of Lundquist come from the same group: Working Californians, the political arm of the union that represents Los Angeles Department of Water and Power employees.â L.A. Times
Michael Bloomberg is nothing like Donald Trump. Both are billionaires (although really, Bloombergâs limitless wealth dwarfs Trumpâs), but thatâs where the similarities end. Roger Lowenstein notes that among the differences between the two â the former New York mayor is a serious philanthropist who supports a wealth tax â is a crucial one: âBloomberg, a bookkeeperâs son, is self-made. Trump was staked to millions by his father, Fred Trump, and repeatedly bailed out by Daddy when he blew his wad.â L.A. Times
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A cure for the common opinion
Get thought-provoking perspectives with our weekly newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.