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In reply to the discussion: Bernie had a joint fundraising agreement with the DNC too. [View all]Jim Lane
(11,175 posts)29. OK, I've checked the facts. I'm right. Here's a link.
According to Donna Brazile, as quoted in this book excerpt in Politico, the agreement I described in #24 was signed in 2015. Brazile wrote:
When you have an open contest without an incumbent and competitive primaries, the party comes under the candidates control only after the nominee is certain. When I was manager of Al Gores campaign in 2000, we started inserting our people into the DNC in June. This victory fund agreement, however, had been signed in August 2015, just four months after Hillary announced her candidacy and nearly a year before she officially had the nomination. [emphasis added]
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++++perfectly stated. Loyalty to his talking points is not a Democratic value.
R B Garr
Nov 2017
#13
that isn't factual...that is a slant. Coalition building is powerful, but it can come with dilution
JCanete
Nov 2017
#18
Its still slant, because you act like coalition bulidng for Clinton wasn't empowering her own place
JCanete
Nov 2017
#20
you are defining one person as doing work towards goals, and the other as just saving his own skin.
JCanete
Nov 2017
#22
I think this is more about Brazille and Schultz than Clinton and Sanders, they can both go to hell.
phleshdef
Nov 2017
#14
O'Malley (unlike Hillary Clinton) was a lifelong Democrat. Was he offered a similar agreement?
Jim Lane
Nov 2017
#34
Oh, right, I forgot. Therefore we should ignore everything he says. Good point. (n/t)
Jim Lane
Nov 2017
#56
No, but I wouldn't bet he can guide us to a win...I blame Nader mostly for his loss...but
Demsrule86
Nov 2017
#61
What facts? From what I can tell... the 'facst' were either out and out lied about or
Demsrule86
Nov 2017
#63