General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Can we have a fresh face for 2020? [View all]R B Garr
(17,982 posts)thing to do. It just turns people off to have someone label them with contrived monikers designed to make others feel superior. If you want to test that, look how the Bernie Sanders group lost at the grassroots level recently in Los Angeles. They made a candidate out to be "Establishment" simply because he knew people, like the mayor...
Article title: Sanders wing dealt setback in Calif. special election
http://www.politico.com/story/2017/04/jimmy-gomez-california-june-runoff-236902
When your talking points at that level consist of calling people "establishment" and "neoliberal", it just emphasizes the phoniness of it all. How on God's Green Earth is getting an endorsement from a mayor 'establishment". This whole name calling and labeling looks to be really overplayed. If someone is venturing into politics at the local level, the alternative is to advertise yourself as a nobody, know-nothing who won't get anything done because they don't know how to function in government. When you boil it down to the essence of what being "anti-Establishment" means at that level, you can see how it is rejected for being the phony tripe that it is.