If the conventional wisdom had ruled in this election cycle, America’s most prominent journalists would have been painted the traditional portrait. Hillary Clinton and the Democrats warmly reminded the country of her husband’s allegedly centrist presidency. Conversely, whoever the Republicans nominated would be declared either (a) too conservative to win or (b) ruined by trying to placate those crazy Tea Party people who inevitably make the moderates unelectable.
Hillary’s long and frustrating march to put away her socialist competitor Bernie Sanders has disrupted the narrative. She cannot package herself as centrist. The media elite will admit Sanders has dragged her to the left. But that doesn’t mean her increasing leftism could damage the Democrats with independent voters.
Consider the liberal-media huddle they call Washington Week on PBS. On April 15, Time magazine’s Washington bureau chief, Michael Scherer was blunt.
“There’s the race for delegates, which Bernie Sanders is losing and Hillary is winning and almost certainly will win,” Scherer said. “But there’s this other race between them about how far left he could push her. And every time she moved a little bit, he seemed to celebrate and get the crowd going and say, ‘Look, see, I did that, she said $15 an hour minimum wage instead of 12, she used to say before.’....It’s not that she wouldn’t be happy if they came true but, you know, she’s created a very modulated campaign so far.”
Actually, that’s contradictory on its face. She wanted to create a very modulated campaign, and has capitulated instead. It’s not just on economic issues, either. The Clintons have been dragged away from the Clinton crime bill and welfare reform in the wake of the “Black Lives Matter” onslaught.
On the same PBS show, New York Times correspondent Jonathan Martin implied that bowing to the radical left was simply acknowledging reality. “It’s a reflection of today’s Democratic Party that that’s what she has to get to. She doesn’t have a choice in the matter...She has got to accommodate a party that is very different today than it was when Bill Clinton ran, you know, in ‘92.”
At no time in this insular little bubble conversation did they talk about consequences. Drifting too far to the left doomed the Democrats in 1968, 1972, 1980, 1984, 1988, 2000, and 2004. No matter. Liberal reporters like the Sanders influence on Hillary. They equate socialism with the “conscience of the country.” His candidacy is welcome because it’s pushing her toward the radical positioning they favor.
This is why Sanders out-performs Hillary when pitted against Republicans in head-to-head polls. Because he’s still perceived as having little chance of winning the nomination, no one is bothering to hammer him for being extreme, or point out that nagging hypocrisy that he’s a millionaire with two homes and donated only four percent of his income to charity.
They’ve loved Sanders from the start. In February of 2015, ABC’s David Wright gushed that Sanders was “as unabashedly progressive as Ben & Jerry’s…Sanders rails against the corrupting influence of money in politics. He stands for economic justice…He's not just for raising the minimum wage, he wants to double it.”
If forced to describe someone who as staunchly on the Right as Sanders is on the Left, ABC wouldn’t sound delighted. They would need an airsickness bag to get through it. The media’s location on the ideological spectrum is so close to Ben and Jerry’s you can almost taste the Cherry Garcia. Never trust them to tell the public who’s the “extremist” and who is not.