California
Related: About this forumThe San Diego Union Tribune endorses Clinton
Theres no question that Sanders has struck a nerve especially with young voters who believe the nation is rigged to favor the wealthy and that as a former New York senator with ties to Wall Street, Clinton is not a credible critic of these powerful interests. Theres no question that Sanders criticism of the U.S. throwing its weight around the world to get its way resonates with those who see the former secretary of state as another imperialist interventionist, albeit a less reckless one than George W. Bush. Theres also no question that Clinton moving to the left on these issues adds to a perception that she is less principled than Sanders.
But we find Sanders far less appealing than his admirers. What feels like idealism to some people looks like grandstanding on closer examination.
Consider his signature proposal to make tuition free at state-supported colleges, with the federal government picking up two-thirds of the cost and individual states one-third. State participation is not mandatory.
At the least, it would have the effect of forcing all participating states to radically reshape their budgets making free college the top priority over public safety, health care, K-12 education, road repairs and more. States that wanted to maintain existing programs at current levels would have to sharply raise taxes.
States arent going to do this. Free college tuition may be the top priority for college students and their parents, but not everyone else. Valuing free tuition over kindergarten and grade school education, for the most obvious example, makes no sense.
No wonder Sanders doesnt have the support of a single senator for his plan.
As for Clinton, she is a divisive figure. Her years as secretary of state open her to second-guessing but give her experience on the world stage; Henry Kissinger said she ran the State Department the most effective way that Ive ever seen. And at her best during her six years in the Senate she impressed lawmakers from both parties and her constituents as a substantive, collaborative leader and a hard worker; dozens of senators have now endorsed her. Unlike Sanders, she understands that compromise, more than ever, is the only way to get things done in Washington. Also unlike Sanders, her feet are on the ground.
For voters with a Democratic ballot, Clinton is the clear choice.
http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/2016/jun/02/clinton-deserves-california-democrats-votes/
riversedge
(70,244 posts)KamaAina
(78,249 posts)Brother Buzz
(36,444 posts)Might be interesting to see what they do, come November
DesertRat
(27,995 posts)Trump is the Great Excommunicator. He wants Muslims banned from the country; a wall built around our southern border; global deals ripped up and renegotiated; American made great again through isolationism.
In his San Diego campaign speech, Trump urged California supporters to vote for him, saying, We want the mandate. We have to have a mandate.
He doesnt deserve the partys mandate.
If you are voting in the GOP primary Tuesday, write in Ronald Reagan for president.
Maybe Trump will get the message.
http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/2016/jun/02/time-to-send-trump-a-message-gop/
Cha
(297,323 posts)Mahalo!
UtahLib
(3,179 posts)still_one
(92,233 posts)Lisa D
(1,532 posts)K&R!
DesertRat
(27,995 posts)brer cat
(24,578 posts)K&R
NastyRiffraff
(12,448 posts)Oh, and K&R!