Left Field
Hillary Clinton may be the front-runner, but the tandem of Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren is offering liberals a powerful voice.
[center]
[/center]
Looking at the Democratic primary as a movie, a film critic might say that Sen. Bernie Sanders is a little on-the-nose as an antagonist to Hillary Clinton.
He is her reverse. Where Hillary is well-known (and to many women, an icon), he is obscure. Where she embodies the establishment, he is on its outskirts, a self-identified socialist from the liberal enclave of Burlington, Vermont. Where she gives six-figure speeches, he is among the poorest members of the Senate with a net worth of roughly $460,000. She plans to run a $2 billion campaign; he hopes to raise $50 million.
And where Clinton is in the middle of the mainstream, Sanders has been an iconoclast for decades. As a House member, he co-founded the Congressional Progressive Caucus, opposed both wars in Iraq, and voted against the Patriot Act. As a senator for Vermont since 2007, hes criticized the bank bailouts, voted against Tim Geithners nomination for Treasury Secretary, and gave a nearly nine-hour speech against a partial extension of the Bush tax cuts.
Now, as a candidate in the Democratic nomination race, hes an advocate for the left wing of the party.
I am not running against Hillary Clinton, he said in a recent interview with the Washington Post. Instead, hes launching a crusadeagainst inequality, against Wall Street, and against the billionaire class that he claims dominates American politics. Billionaire families are now able to spend hundreds of millions of dollars to buy the candidates of their choice, he says on his campaign website. These people own most of the economy. Now they want to own our government as well.
This is more than rhetoric. To Sanders, the economy isnt just unequal, its rigged, with the richest Americans using their resources to tilt the board in their direction. Ninety-nine percent of all new income generated today goes to the top 1 percent, he said in a recent interview with CNBCs John Harwood. Top one-tenth of 1 percent owns as much as wealth as the bottom 90 percent. To reverse this massive transfer of wealth from the middle class to the very top, Sanders wants high tax rates (If my memory is correct, when radical socialist Dwight D. Eisenhower was president, the highest marginal tax rate was something like 90 percent) and substantial redistribution.
More.