So you two are saying that the ACA had no impact? I totally disagree.
And yes, I understand that Trump is NOT a small government person, that wasn't my claim...but you're missing my point about the ACA. Trump is about repealing it. That's what resonates. The people only see dollars and cents. They see their health care rising and the insurance companies that are backing out. They lost their doctors when government told them they wouldn't. What makes you think that Bernie could sell them on even more government in that specific sector? I think you are way off on that one.
Your argument seemed to be, "I don't think Bernie would have beaten Trump, because he was promising more government involvement in healthcare, and people don't like the ACA." People don't like the ACA because it's a shitty law that has caused premiums to skyrocket for millions of Americans; not because it's "big gubmint". The people who put Trump in the White House like their government benefits quite a lot, and there's plenty of evidence that they liked what Bernie was selling.
Bernie, like Trump, found success due to a cult of personality ad a vocal minority of very fervent supporters. He was also running against the single worst candidate in the modern history of presidential politics and he still got trounced.
If Hillary was the only common thread here, you might have an argument. But that doesn't explain why the Establishment candidate lost against the outsider in the last 3 elections. And it doesn't explain why Trump was
+16 over Romney with voters in the lowest income bracket:
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">I wish people would stop sharing this without noting the 16 point swing to Trump among <$30k incomes <a href="https://t.co/8tU3KDI0ph">https://t.co/8tU3KDI0ph</a></p>— ryan cooper (@ryanlcooper) <a href="https://twitter.com/ryanlcooper/status/796483224016920576">November 9, 2016</a></blockquote>
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Marco Rubio would have run away with the nomination in February if Chris Christie hadn't boned him in the New Hampshire debate. Any one of the other candidates, including Jeb, would have beaten Trump. I don't need to explain to you the mathematical advantage of a small plurality of supporters in a crowded field. I'm not crying "no fair," it is what it is. I just think we're going overboard with our retrospective analysis of how popular Trump was in either the primary or the general.
(1) If a couple of nasty comments from Christie was all it took to turn Rubio into a stuttering robot (and thereby wreck his entire campaign), he wasn't ready for prime time. And Trump made countless gaffes, none of which seemed to touch him. Perhaps that means GOP primary voters didn't just reject Rubio because of that one miscue?
(2) Jeb would have lost almost as badly as Clinton did. He had all the same establishmentarian baggage that she did.
(3) You're simply not comfortable with this retrospective analysis because it quite clearly demonstrates that your favored politics has no future.
Holy conflation, batman. The populism is in Europe is a revolt against exactly the kind of policies Bernie Sanders advocates for America. They're not the same in the slightest. The "Remain" supporters in the UK are quintessential Bernie people.
Absolutely not. The populism sweeping Europe is a revolt against globalists like Clinton, Jeb and Romney. Bernie was, in many respects, running against that same class of people. He has never been a member of the Davos/ Martha's Vineyard crowd.