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Sen. Bernie Sanders and former secretary of state Hillary Clinton exchanged views during last month's Democratic debate in New Hampshire. (Photo: WBMA)
There's just no way around it: the Democrats are intentionally hiding their presidential candidates from the public.
The last Democratic presidential debate was buried on a Saturday night up against the opening of Star Wars. Naturally it drew a fraction of earlier Republican debate audiences - and even of the earlier Democratic debates. The next debate is scheduled, astonishingly, on a Sunday night, January 17, the middle day of a three-day weekend. But just in case that might still draw an audience, it is also up against NFL playoff games. What is going on?
There's just no way around it: the Democrats are intentionally hiding their presidential candidates from the public.
The last Democratic presidential debate was buried on a Saturday night up against the opening of Star Wars. Naturally it drew a fraction of earlier Republican debate audiences - and even of the earlier Democratic debates. The next debate is scheduled, astonishingly, on a Sunday night, January 17, the middle day of a three-day weekend. But just in case that might still draw an audience, it is also up against NFL playoff games. What is going on?
Partly as a result of this scheduling, Republican presidential candidates and their campaign proposals dominate the news and therefore the public's attention. But the Republican candidates are not addressing the country's many problems or offering serious proposals for solving them. Banning certain religions? Even more tax cuts for the rich and their corporations? Unleashing oil companies? More guns? What?
Meanwhile Democrats, with superior candidates and serious proposals for actually addressing our problems, are barely part of the national discussion. Is the pubic hearing about the need for infrastructure investment? No. Is the public hearing about the need to expand Social Security? No. These are winning proposals, but the debate schedule is keeping the public from hearing them. It's as if the leadership of the Democratic party wants to lose the coming election.
John Nichols at The Nation sums it up well, in "Resolution for 2016: Let's Have Lots More Presidential Debates":
That's bad for the Democratic Party and its candidates. It's also bad for a body politic that requires more than the junk-food diet offered up by Donald Trump and most of his fellow contenders for the Republican presidential nod.
What is going on? Why are the Democrats hiding their presidential candidates and potentially sabotaging their 2016 election prospects?
Democrats should demand that the Democratic National Committee schedule several more debates and schedule them at times when most people can and will watch.
Trump and Musk are on an unconstitutional rampage, aiming for virtually every corner of the federal government. These two right-wing billionaires are targeting nurses, scientists, teachers, daycare providers, judges, veterans, air traffic controllers, and nuclear safety inspectors. No one is safe. The food stamps program, Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid are next. It’s an unprecedented disaster and a five-alarm fire, but there will be a reckoning. The people did not vote for this. The American people do not want this dystopian hellscape that hides behind claims of “efficiency.” Still, in reality, it is all a giveaway to corporate interests and the libertarian dreams of far-right oligarchs like Musk. Common Dreams is playing a vital role by reporting day and night on this orgy of corruption and greed, as well as what everyday people can do to organize and fight back. As a people-powered nonprofit news outlet, we cover issues the corporate media never will, but we can only continue with our readers’ support. |
There's just no way around it: the Democrats are intentionally hiding their presidential candidates from the public.
The last Democratic presidential debate was buried on a Saturday night up against the opening of Star Wars. Naturally it drew a fraction of earlier Republican debate audiences - and even of the earlier Democratic debates. The next debate is scheduled, astonishingly, on a Sunday night, January 17, the middle day of a three-day weekend. But just in case that might still draw an audience, it is also up against NFL playoff games. What is going on?
Partly as a result of this scheduling, Republican presidential candidates and their campaign proposals dominate the news and therefore the public's attention. But the Republican candidates are not addressing the country's many problems or offering serious proposals for solving them. Banning certain religions? Even more tax cuts for the rich and their corporations? Unleashing oil companies? More guns? What?
Meanwhile Democrats, with superior candidates and serious proposals for actually addressing our problems, are barely part of the national discussion. Is the pubic hearing about the need for infrastructure investment? No. Is the public hearing about the need to expand Social Security? No. These are winning proposals, but the debate schedule is keeping the public from hearing them. It's as if the leadership of the Democratic party wants to lose the coming election.
John Nichols at The Nation sums it up well, in "Resolution for 2016: Let's Have Lots More Presidential Debates":
That's bad for the Democratic Party and its candidates. It's also bad for a body politic that requires more than the junk-food diet offered up by Donald Trump and most of his fellow contenders for the Republican presidential nod.
What is going on? Why are the Democrats hiding their presidential candidates and potentially sabotaging their 2016 election prospects?
Democrats should demand that the Democratic National Committee schedule several more debates and schedule them at times when most people can and will watch.
There's just no way around it: the Democrats are intentionally hiding their presidential candidates from the public.
The last Democratic presidential debate was buried on a Saturday night up against the opening of Star Wars. Naturally it drew a fraction of earlier Republican debate audiences - and even of the earlier Democratic debates. The next debate is scheduled, astonishingly, on a Sunday night, January 17, the middle day of a three-day weekend. But just in case that might still draw an audience, it is also up against NFL playoff games. What is going on?
Partly as a result of this scheduling, Republican presidential candidates and their campaign proposals dominate the news and therefore the public's attention. But the Republican candidates are not addressing the country's many problems or offering serious proposals for solving them. Banning certain religions? Even more tax cuts for the rich and their corporations? Unleashing oil companies? More guns? What?
Meanwhile Democrats, with superior candidates and serious proposals for actually addressing our problems, are barely part of the national discussion. Is the pubic hearing about the need for infrastructure investment? No. Is the public hearing about the need to expand Social Security? No. These are winning proposals, but the debate schedule is keeping the public from hearing them. It's as if the leadership of the Democratic party wants to lose the coming election.
John Nichols at The Nation sums it up well, in "Resolution for 2016: Let's Have Lots More Presidential Debates":
That's bad for the Democratic Party and its candidates. It's also bad for a body politic that requires more than the junk-food diet offered up by Donald Trump and most of his fellow contenders for the Republican presidential nod.
What is going on? Why are the Democrats hiding their presidential candidates and potentially sabotaging their 2016 election prospects?
Democrats should demand that the Democratic National Committee schedule several more debates and schedule them at times when most people can and will watch.