From this FB post. Recall he served in Clinton 1's cabinet and knows the Clintons inside out. Hence he now supports Sanders, not Clinton. Quote:
Responses to Bernie Skeptics:
1. “He’d never beat Trump or Cruz in a general election.”
Wrong. According to the latest polls, Bernie is the strongest
Democratic candidate in the general election, defeating both Donald
Trump and Ted Cruz in hypothetical matchups. (The latest Real Clear
Politics averages of all polls shows Bernie beating Trump by a larger
margin than Hillary beats Trump, and Bernie beating Cruz while Hillary
loses to Cruz.)
2. “He couldn’t get any of his ideas implemented because Congress would reject them.”
If both house of Congress remain in Republican hands, no Democrat will
be able to get much legislation through Congress, and will have to rely
instead on executive orders and regulations. But there’s a higher
likelihood of kicking Republicans out if Bernie’s “political revolution”
continues to surge around America, bringing in young people and
millions of other voters, and keeping them politically engaged.
3. “America would never elect a socialist.”
P-l-e-a-s-e. America’s most successful and beloved government programs
are social insurance – Social Security and Medicare. A highway is a
shared social expenditure, as is the military and public parks and
schools. The problem is we now have excessive socialism for the rich
(bailouts of Wall Street, subsidies for Big Ag and Big Pharma,
monopolization by cable companies and giant health insurers, giant
tax-deductible CEO pay packages) – all of which Bernie wants to end or
prevent.
4. “His single-payer healthcare proposal would cost so much it would require raising taxes on the middle class.”
This is a duplicitous argument. Single-payer systems in other rich
nations have proven cheaper than private for-profit health insurers
because they don’t spend huge sums on advertising, marketing, executive
pay, and billing. So even if the Sanders single-payer plan did require
some higher taxes, Americans would come out way ahead because they’d
save far more than that on health insurance.
5. “His plan for paying for college with a tax on Wall Street trades would mean colleges would run by government rules.”
Baloney. Three-quarters of college students today already attend public
universities financed largely by state governments, but they’re not run
by government rules. The real problem is too many young people still
can’t afford a college education. The move toward free public higher
education that began in the 1950s with the G.I. Bill and extended into
the 1960s came to an abrupt stop in the 1980s. We must restart it.
6. “He’s too old.”
Untrue. He’s in great health. Have you seen how agile and forceful he
is as he campaigns around the country? These days, 70s the new 60s.
(He’s younger than four of the nine Supreme Court justices.) In any
event, the issue isn't age; it's having the right values. FDR was
paralyzed and JFK had Crohn's disease, but they were great presidents
because they stood for the right things.
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