amphibian, on 09 April 2016 - 07:11 PM, said:
EmperorMagus, on 08 April 2016 - 07:42 PM, said:
The black community in the 90s wanted that crime bill and related concepts. That's why the Clintons have such strong credibility with the older black voters.
Now, we realize that crime/prison setup was a disaster, but to Bill and to a lesser degree, Hillary, that legislation is one of the times they came through for the black community. Bill doesn't fully realize that the younger black voters are not the same as the older ones he had such strong ties with.
It's not that he doesn't fully realize it; it's that until now they have been able to dismiss younger black voters—younger and poorer, I should say. The Clintons attract older and younger middle class black voters. Problem is, older middle class people of all races are finding that their children can't make it into the middle class, and this is particularly dramatic among racial minorities and especially black communities. The Bernie phenomenon isn't just any old manifestation of youthful idealism; it's also a manifestation of the consequences of austerity as it is practiced in the modern global economy: austerity for working people and largesse for those with the most capital (which creates public debt).
So with these last several states the Clintons are seeing a level of rejection that they didn't quite expect, though in a way everyone else saw it coming. Hillary probably thought that her wins in Ohio and Florida were signs that she wouldn't lose too badly in the Western states. After those results, she probably didn't expect Bernie to be able to match what she did in the Deep South, and she probably thought she had a good chance of winning Wisconsin. And she probably hoped that she'd maintain her Deep South margins with black voters.
All that said, again, Bernie has a hard road ahead and evidence suggests that political momentum isn't actually a thing. If he wins NY by a margin similar to Wisconsin, he's got a shot at this, because he's probably stronger in CA. (Not that worry is representative. There are CA people on another forum I go to, two in particular; one is a Hillary pragmatist and the other is an independent type who I suspect is on the Bernie train; she hasn't been posting much lately so I have to guess based on her past posts.) But NY seems like a long shot at this point? I haven't been paying much attention to polls since the pollsters started juking the stats after Michigan. Too much noise.
PS: Check out how many counties in Wyoming went 50-50. Bernie won the state, closest margin in a while: 56-44.
This post has been edited by Terez: 10 April 2016 - 01:52 AM