Bernie Sanders has more than halved the gap with Hillary Clinton in the early-voting state of Iowa, according to a new poll which shows the leftwing insurgent building on his recent record-breaking public appearances with growing support among key Democratic voters.An estimated 10,000 supporters filled an arena in Madison, Wisconsin, on Wednesday night to hear the Vermont senator call for “revolution” in American politics as he challenges Clinton for the party’s nomination in the 2016 presidential election.Bernie Sanders raises $15m so far in campaign for Democratic nomination Read moreSanders told the crowd: “Tonight we have made a little bit of history. Tonight we have more people at any meeting for a candidate of president of the United States than any other candidate.”Though still seen as a long-shot candidate when compared with the former secretary of state and establishment favourite Clinton, the momentum behind Sanders’ uncompromising progressive message is also beginning to show in opinion polling.The latest survey in Iowa, carried out by Quinnipiac University, shows him trailing her by 33 to 52 percentage points among likely Democratic participants in the state caucuses on 1 February.Advertisement"" style="border: 0px; vertical-align: bottom;">This compares with Clinton’s 60-15 point lead, more than twice as large, in the last Quinnipiac poll on 7 May and the latest CNN poll from the other key early-voting state of New Hampshire showing Clinton only eight points ahead of Sanders.
Good. Bernie is the best hope we have for this country.
And yes, those folks and large corporations will have to pay under a Sanders administration more in taxes so that we can use that revenue to rebuild our crumbling infrastructure, create the jobs we need, make sure that every kid who has the ability is able to get a college education in America because public colleges and public universities will be tuition-free," he said.
Asked about the type of people who would make up his cabinet, Sanders ticked off the names of three liberal economists: New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, Nobel Prize-winner Joseph Stiglitz and former Bill Clinton labor secretary Robert Reich.
The guy is a straight-up pop politician with no credibility.
Not sure why you think you're so in tune with what America needs when you don't even live here.
Quote from: Mad Max on July 06, 2015, 03:08:18 PMNot sure why you think you're so in tune with what America needs when you don't even live here.Sweet. I'll be watching out for anything you say about Israel, Palestine, Iraq, Syria, China, Russia, the Ukraine or any other country for that matter. But I'm fairly sure even you know that the fact you aren't geographically located in a country doesn't put you at some kind of disadvantage, and instead you're just trying to defend your political candidate on some narrow, shallow and ill-thought-out basis.
Well good luck, because you wont find me talking about things I don't know about.
Character-wise, I'd much rather have Sanders elected over Clinton. He's got very little leadership experience, but Clinton has none. And the president isn't as powerful in moving legislation through Congress as we make it out to be, so he can't really do a vast amount of damage. Being a consistent voter, as opposed to someone like Obama who has flipped on a laundry list of major points, we'll know what we're getting which is better than the obscenely corrupt political machine of the Clintons.And the best part is that he'll be easy to beat. Yeah he's got an impressively obnoxious viral advertising campaign going on, but he'll get torn to shreds when those ads actually matter for something.
Quote from: HurtfulTurkey on July 07, 2015, 06:37:31 PMCharacter-wise, I'd much rather have Sanders elected over Clinton. He's got very little leadership experience, but Clinton has none. And the president isn't as powerful in moving legislation through Congress as we make it out to be, so he can't really do a vast amount of damage. Being a consistent voter, as opposed to someone like Obama who has flipped on a laundry list of major points, we'll know what we're getting which is better than the obscenely corrupt political machine of the Clintons.And the best part is that he'll be easy to beat. Yeah he's got an impressively obnoxious viral advertising campaign going on, but he'll get torn to shreds when those ads actually matter for something.I belive Bernie actually balanced out a city's budget when he was elected as Mayor, so I'd say that's a plus. Yeah Nation>City, but having knowledge of economics helps.
Quote from: Nick McIntyre on July 07, 2015, 07:34:43 PMQuote from: HurtfulTurkey on July 07, 2015, 06:37:31 PMCharacter-wise, I'd much rather have Sanders elected over Clinton. He's got very little leadership experience, but Clinton has none. And the president isn't as powerful in moving legislation through Congress as we make it out to be, so he can't really do a vast amount of damage. Being a consistent voter, as opposed to someone like Obama who has flipped on a laundry list of major points, we'll know what we're getting which is better than the obscenely corrupt political machine of the Clintons.And the best part is that he'll be easy to beat. Yeah he's got an impressively obnoxious viral advertising campaign going on, but he'll get torn to shreds when those ads actually matter for something.I belive Bernie actually balanced out a city's budget when he was elected as Mayor, so I'd say that's a plus. Yeah Nation>City, but having knowledge of economics helps. His knowledge of economics literally boils down to raising taxes on every entity making more than an arbitrary amount he's come up with in his head.
Aren't all tax brackets arbitrary?
Remember the Paulbots?Same shit different election cycle.
Quote from: memecube han on July 09, 2015, 04:45:01 PMRemember the Paulbots?Same shit different election cycle.Ron Paul had some pretty absurd, unattainable ideas. Most of which dealing with abolishing government agencies and shit.
Quote from: Mad Max on July 09, 2015, 04:46:35 PMQuote from: memecube han on July 09, 2015, 04:45:01 PMRemember the Paulbots?Same shit different election cycle.Ron Paul had some pretty absurd, unattainable ideas. Most of which dealing with abolishing government agencies and shit.I'm mostly referring to the hype involved. . .
Quote from: memecube han on July 09, 2015, 04:49:23 PMQuote from: Mad Max on July 09, 2015, 04:46:35 PMQuote from: memecube han on July 09, 2015, 04:45:01 PMRemember the Paulbots?Same shit different election cycle.Ron Paul had some pretty absurd, unattainable ideas. Most of which dealing with abolishing government agencies and shit.I'm mostly referring to the hype involved. . .Lots of hype, but for different reasons, I'd say.
Ron Paul had some pretty absurd, unattainable ideas.
Or thinking college is unaffordable?
Umm...it is.
Quote from: Mad Max on July 09, 2015, 04:46:35 PMRon Paul had some pretty absurd, unattainable ideas. Like a $1 million investment in infrastructure? Or a $15 minimum wage? Or buying into the wage gap myth? Or opposing free trade? Or thinking college is unaffordable? Or thinking banks should be broken up? Or wanting a single-payer system? Yeah, he's leagues ahead of Paul.
His growth will begin to slow within the next 3-5 months. By January, this'll be but a dream.
Quote from: Icy Wind on July 09, 2015, 05:04:08 PMHis growth will begin to slow within the next 3-5 months. By January, this'll be but a dream.That's a damn shame because there aren't any other democrat candidates I'd consider voting for. Might have to go Green in this one.