W Post
 
George Will: Vermont’s Bernie Sanders has mountains to climb

 
By _George F.  Will_ (http://www.washingtonpost.com/people/george-f-will)  
January 23, 2015
 
 
The young man who answered the phone in the Senate office  of Vermont’s 
_Bernie Sanders_ (http://www.sanders.senate.gov/about)   told the caller, a 
would-be campaign contributor, that it is illegal for funds  to be accepted on 
federal property. He advised the person to contact Sanders’s  political 
operation, which might become a _presidential  campaign_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/george-will-vermonts-bernie-sanders-has-mountains-to-climb/2
015/01/23/--%20http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2014/08/11/ber
nie-sanders-for-president-its-the-longest-of-long-shots-but-that-doesnt-mean
-he-wont-do-it/) .  
Sanders, 73, does not smile promiscuously, as befits someone who thinks the 
 republic is being ruined by the government’s parsimony regarding social  
programs, its obsequiousness toward _Wall  Street_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/wp/2014/09/14/bernie-sanders-would-run-for-president
-against-wall-street-not-hillary-clinton/)  and its tolerance of 
billionaires influencing electoral politics. If,  however, he wants to seek the 
Democratic nomination, he should soften his  starchy disapproval of _rich  
donors_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/how-political-donations-changed-hist
ory/2012/01/16/gIQA6oH63P_story.html) . 
 
 
Without them, Sen. Eugene McCarthy’s 1968 anti-Vietnam War insurgency in 
the  Democratic primaries would have been impossible. McCarthy (Minn.) was 
able to  precipitate President Lyndon Johnson’s retirement only because of five 
wealthy  liberals’ seed money (e.g., Stewart Mott’s $210,000 would be $1.4 
million  today).  
Sanders calls himself an independent, although he caucuses and reliably 
votes  with Senate Democrats. He also calls himself a socialist, which is 
naughty  without being informative. Time was, socialism meant government 
ownership of the  means of production, distribution and exchange — or at least 
of 
the economy’s  “commanding heights.” Sanders says his idea of socialism 
exists in Europe’s  social democracies, which he considers hugely successful. 
Never mind the _European  Union’_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/european-central-bank-stimulus-faces-hurdles-compared-to-fed/2015/01/21/a30d9a12-a
1ca-11e4-91fc-7dff95a14458_story.html) s 10 percent unemployment rate and 
0.3 percent growth rate, Greece’s  prostration, etc. 
Long ago, some American mayors called themselves socialists, although, 
writes  historian Morton Keller (in “_America’s  Three Regimes_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/019537424X/ref=as_li_qf_sp_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&cr
eative=9325&creativeASIN=019537424X&linkCode=as2&tag=thewaspos09-20&linkId=R
HEKHSGPOYCZEYS7) ”), “their collectivist impulse did not go much beyond 
public  utilities: ‘gas and water socialism.’ ” In 1912, America’s Socialist 
Party  reached its apogee when its presidential candidate, labor leader 
Eugene Debs,  won 5.99 percent of the vote in a contest with former president 
Theodore  Roosevelt, the incumbent William Howard Taft, and the winner, 
Woodrow Wilson. In  every election from 1928 through 1948, Socialists nominated 
Norman Thomas  (Princeton class of 1905; martinis at the barricades?), whose 
best showing was a  paltry 2.23 percent in the grim year 1932.  

Sanders thinks that mounting a third-party campaign might face insuperable  
barriers to ballot access. If so, the nation is not nearly as unhappy as 
Sanders  thinks it should be. In the annus horribilis 1968, Alabama Gov. 
George Wallace,  with a shoestring budget and negligible staff, ignited a 
conflagration of  grass-roots support that propelled him onto all 50 state 
ballots. 
 
Impediments were much higher then than they now are: California required  
collecting 66,000 signatures in 1967 , and signatories had to fill out a  
two-page legal-size form joining Wallace’s party. More than 100,000 did. His  
Ohio supporters had to gather an absurd 433,000 signatures in 10 weeks. They  
exceeded that total by perhaps 100,000.  
Sanders, however, insists that he is no Norman Thomas, who ran not to win 
but  to leaven the nation’s political conversation with new ideas. Sanders 
says he  will not run in Democratic primaries unless he thinks he can win. But 
how can he  win the nomination if he cannot rally followers sufficient in 
numbers and  intensity to get him on state ballots as a third-party 
candidate? On the other  hand, he does not want to be in 2016 what Ralph Nader 
was in 
2000. Nader’s  97,488 votes in Florida, where Al Gore lost by 537 votes, 
cost Gore this state  and the presidency.  
Sanders, a powerhouse on social media, visited Iowa four times last year 
and  relishes the kind of retail campaigning that Iowans reward. Vermont’s 
neighbor  New Hampshire comes next in the nomination calendar. He represents 
what another  Vermonter, Howard Dean, called “the Democratic wing of the 
Democratic Party,”  but his agenda is not really radical. It is not 
progressivism 
on steroids;  spinach, maybe.  
He thinks college education has become too expensive, but he may not  
understand Washington’s role in this: Colleges increase tuition to capture  
increased federal _subsidies_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/fred-hiatt-subsidized-college-tuition-amounts-to-a-handout-to-the-rich/2014/11/02/af5e22
22-6111-11e4-8b9e-2ccdac31a031_story.html)   for students. He passionately 
favors federal funding for universal preschool and  dismisses research, 
based on 50 years’ experience with Head Start, indicating  that its benefits 
are 
small and evanescent. He is serenely sure “other research”  reaches 
encouraging conclusions.  
Sanders vehemently denounces Supreme Court rulings that limit government’s  
power to restrict the giving and spending that _finance  political 
advocacy_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/george-will-supreme-court-can-rescue-another-freeom-in-a-campaign-cash-case/2013/10/04/77bd9e42-2d23-11e3-97a3-
ff2758228523_story.html) . The court says money is indispensable to the  
dissemination of advocacy, so some limits abridge First Amendment protections. 
 
Sanders’s authentic passion enlivens our often synthetic politics. There 
is,  however, some justice in the fact that his principled rejection of the  
connection between money and speech might prevent his other principles from  
being heard.

-- 
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