The mislabeled ones.
These are the same short bus riders who keep calling the Nazi Party a socialist organization.
Your ignorance is showing, ty.
Sanders' movement to the right began in May, when he came out in support of Heath Mello, a Mayoral race candidate in Kansas who was anti choice but "Sanders said it's OK, so, it's OK, end of story."
Then there is this article:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-sanders-movement-is-only-just-beginning/2016/08/09/228b8744-5d87-11e6-9d2f-b1a3564181a1_story.html?utm_term=.a8218e9dd555
The Vermont senator has announced the formation of Our Revolution, which will support progressive candidates up and down the ticket. Organizers from the Sanders campaign have launched Brand New Congress, an ambitious effort to run 400-plus populist candidates for Congress — including independents and Republicans as well as Democrats — in 2018, with “a single, unified campaign with a single plan,” and centralized crowd-sourced financing — small donors contributing to a national pool in a historic effort to transform a Congress that is corrupt and dysfunctional. These new efforts will augment progressive groups like the Working Families Party, MoveOn.org, Democracy for America, the Progressive Change Campaign Committee and People’s Action, all of whom are growing in energy and ambition in the wake of the Sanders campaign.
This article was very revealing to me in that it describes Sanders "Our Revoloution" reform effort as extending broad support to Democrats that you would almost definitely call conservative. Also Moderate Republicans who are only moderate in relation to the radical right now in power.
I summed up what I've seen Bernie doing in the post below. The post was in response to Bernie's 2016 presidential policy of free college education for all.
He's going to back off from this position too (prediction). He's showing his strategy and it all involves movement toward the center and policies compatible with moderate liberal and moderate conservative voters who are not happy with extremism in either party.
He's going squishy on health care
He's backing candidates who are anti choice
He's not even mentioning civil rights and racial issues
His "Our Revolution" reform movement is courting moderately conservative Republican candidates
Bernie's policies regarding racial issues do not exist. Social equality makes white people uncomfortable and that's the base he's courting.
He's kind of doing a Democratic version of Reagan's courting of Democratic party white moderate voters. Except Bernie is courting moderate conservatives. White people, mostly.
Campaign finance reform resonates well with these left and right moderates. I think he'll keep this as a centerpiece of his policies. But I think that's the only issue anybody can count on from Bernie right now.
Bernie never was a leftist. Leans left, sure. But best described as moderate fiscal liberal with socially conservative policies. Basically status quo. I've been watching his strongest supporters who post here move more and more to the right too. Not saying they are conservatives but they are moving rightward in rhetoric. I don't think they changed, just they no longer pose to be strongly liberal.
Please don't take this as criticism of Bernie. If he can get corporations, PACs, outsized voice of wealthy donors out of campaign finance it will be a great contribution. We can then work on other issues like soaking the rich to subsidize the education you mention. Maybe healthcare too, although this will be a sticking point with moderate conservatives.
I'll be glad to post links to information that I used to form this opinion. This is an opinion and I might change it with new information. I value your viewpoint and hope you reply back whether you disagree or agree.
Healthcare you might ask? Why am I saying he's moving to the right regarding healthcare? Because he no longer says it's a necessary policy in his "Our Revolution" reform. How is this any different from Feinstein and Clinton,
@Padawanbater2 ?
He's still left of center in fiscal policies. Also unwavering in Campaign finance reform. That he's surrendering to systematic and institutional racism in order to cater to the left and right white majority makes him socially conservative to my mind.