The defeat of Hillary Clinton by Donald Trump did have one upside for the US Democrats: the defeat of Hillary Clinton.
Ever since JFK himself, Democrats have done best with Kennedyesque leaders like Barack Obama and Bill Clinton. With Mrs Clinton finally out of the way, the party can turn to a younger, fresher figure to take back the White House in 2020.
There’s no shortage of possible candidates. Over the next few years you’ll have your chance to see each of them – and their great hair – profiled in the media.
Or maybe don’t bother. According to Matt Yglesias in Vox, the front-runner for the Democratic nomination is even older than the Hills and his days as a hair model are far behind him:
“… [but] make no mistake: [Bernie] Sanders is the real 2020 Democratic frontrunner.
“He’s doing exactly what a candidate who fell short needs to do to run a second time. He’s established a national political organization, he’s improved his ties with colleagues on Capitol Hill, he’s maintained a heavy presence in national media, and he’s traveling the country talking about issues.”
Sanders was the second-biggest surprise of the 2016 campaign: a self-described socialist who came remarkably close to beating Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination. No one saw it coming and no one thought he could win – which, according to Yglesias, is the main reason why he didn’t win:
“Elected officials were almost uniformly afraid to endorse him, even if their policy views were closer to his than to Clinton’s, and left-of-center think tanks — including ones that are deliberately positioned to the left of mainstream Democrats ideologically — shied away from working with Sanders on policy development, for fear that Clinton’s wrath would destroy them if they did.”
This time round, it is Sanders who you don’t lightly make an enemy of:
“Bernie Sanders is, by some measures the most popular politician in America, by far Democrats’ most in-demand public speaker, and the most prolific grassroots fundraiser in American history.”
Though of a different ideological stripe, Robert W. Merry of the American Conservative agrees with Yglesias:
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