Busybody
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I'm casting my first ever primary vote for Bernie. I hope he wins!
I might vote for him too. He has a cadre of dedicated followers and that might be enough for him to win enough primaries to edge out Silly Hilly. However, in the general election, he won't have enough supporters to have a chance of winning. If he runs in Nov. 2016, Bernie will break George McGovern's record for landslide losses.![]()

Against who??![]()
McGovern was swamped by the incumbent Nixon in 1972. I don't know yet who the GOP candidate will be in 2016.
Yea I know, and look how that turned out.
If you don't know who the GOP candidate will be in 2016 then how do you know it will be such a landslide?
You have several in your field Bernie could fuckin' CRUSH.![]()
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders has made significant gains on former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in New Hampshire, according to the latest CNN/WMUR poll.
Clinton leads Sanders 43 percent to 35 percent, according to the poll. But just two months ago, Clinton led the poll 51 percent to Sanders' 13 percent. But that poll also included Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who says she will not run. Warren pulled in 20 percent support in that poll.
Realistically we're talking about Jeb or Perry. I wish Rand was on the list but like his father his chances of being president are just slightly higher than mine.
You can reasonably narrow it down however. Some of them either have no realistic chance or are just screwing around. We all know Trump is just getting free publicity. If he gets nominated he'll be the first person to freak out. I don't even think he wants the job. To quote Lex Luthor "Do you have any idea how much power he'd have to give up if he became president?"
Ben Carson has no chance in hell either and if he did get that far Bernie would annihilate him. Lets be honest, the only parts of the country where his message carries well are the same place aren't gonna vote for him.
Realistically we're talking about Jeb or Perry. I wish Rand was on the list but like his father his chances of being president are just slightly higher than mine.
Jeb, yes, but I don't think Perry has much chance. Here are some recent poll numbers: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/ep..._republican_presidential_nomination-3823.html
I think Walker is a very strong contender, since he is ranked second and hasn't even officially announced yet.
Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders spoke before the largest crowd drawn by any candidate in 2016 and used his platform to completely annihilate Republican Gov. Scott Walker in his own backyard.
Sanders announced at the beginning of his speech that they drew the most people to a rally of any candidate this year. Sanders responded to Wisconsin Republicans who called him an extremist, “Let me just say a few words to my friends in the Republican Party about extremism. When you deny the right of workers to come together in collective bargaining that’s extremism. When you tell a woman that she can not control her own body, that’s extremism. When you think a woman is a child and can’t purchase a contraceptive, that is extremism. When you give tax breaks to billionaires and refuse to raise the minimum wage, that’s extremism.”
I think it's just a matter of time before Hillary pays big bucks to label him a radical with DANGEROUS POLICY IDEAS!! (they won't say why exactly of course but they will repeat it till it sinks in.) and creams him.
he conventional wisdom on Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont is that he’s a charming if impractical dreamer, a pie-in-the-sky socialist who’s good at inspiring young people and aging hippies, but hopeless at the knife fighting that real-life politics requires.
Despite the inherent limitations of a self-described democratic socialist who eschews the norms of Beltway fundraising, the Democratic presidential candidate from Vermont has won legislative victory after victory on an issue that has been dear to him since his days as Burlington’s mayor.
That issue is the simultaneously benign and revolutionary expansion of federally qualified community health clinics.
Over the years, Sanders has tucked away funding for health centers in appropriation bills signed by George W. Bush, into Barack Obama’s stimulus program, and through the earmarking process. But his biggest achievement came in 2010 through the Affordable Care Act. In a series of high-stakes legislative maneuvers, Sanders struck a deal to include $11 billion for health clinics in the law.
The result has made an indelible mark on American health care, extending the number of people served by clinics from 18 million before the ACA to an expected 28 million next year.