By
Rania Khalek
“I’m a life-long Democrat and life-long disappointed,” said 47-year-old Bill
Frantal of Indiana.
Frantal was among hundreds of Bernie Sanders supporters who gathered outside
Philadelphia’s City Hall in the sweltering heat on Sunday afternoon to protest
the Democratic National Committee ahead of the convention.
Outrage at the Democratic party establishment was magnified by the batch of
internal
DNC emails published by
WikiLeaks over the weekend proving that the DNC conspired with the Clinton
campaign and the media to undercut Sanders during the primary.
Anger was also directed at the corporate media, as demonstrated by the
crowd’s reaction to the presence of a CNN news crew at the rally. For ten
minutes, Sanders supporters surrounded CNN, chanting, “shame, shame” and “CNN
has got to go!” out of frustration over biased anti-Sanders coverage from the
establishment press.
“When I was brought up, Republicans were for corporate interests and
Democrats were for public interests,” Frantal told Shadowproof. “Unfortunately,
the Democratic Party is now the left-wing of the Republican Party. They’re all
for corporate interests.”
While Frantal remains undecided about voting for Clinton in November, he was
one of the few people I could find who would even consider casting a ballot for
her, and it was purely out of fear of Republican presidential nominee Donald
Trump. Far more people said they plan to vote for Green Party candidate Jill
Stein.
Protester at the March For Bernie. Photo by Rania
Khalek.
Pasu Tivoret likened the race between Trump and Clinton to
“choosing to vote
for Lex Luthor or the Joker.” Formerly a Green Party member from California,
Tivoret became a Democrat to support Sanders but plans to re-register with the
Green Party. “I dropped the Dems just like they dropped Bernie,” he
reasoned.
Scott Brown, a 31-year-old Sanders delegate from Atlanta, Georgia, is
“withholding judgment” about voting for Clinton until after the convention. “I
just have to think about the right strategy for a progressive future,” he told
Shadowproof. While he recognizes the importance of stopping Trump in the short
term, Brown argued that “in the long term, if we keep electing Democrats with a
neo-liberal agenda, we’re going to keep enabling them.”
As for Sanders’ call for party unity in the aftermath of the DNC leaks
scandal, Brown said, “There’s a contrast between unity and having the strongest
party you can, not just to win this election but to win the long-term
ideological battle in this country. If we let our party get away with
short-changing its constituents, then people will lose faith in our party.”
Brown’s friend, Astrid Rodas, 37, flat out refused to vote for Clinton
because “she doesn’t represent my values, she sides with Wall Street.”
A sign from the March For Bernie at the 2016 Democratic
National Convention. Photo by Rania Khalek.
“The Democratic Party lost me,” said Rodas, who plans to cast a ballot for
Jill Stein. She also expressed disappointment in Sanders’ endorsement of Clinton
ahead of the convention. “It hurt everyone a lot,” she observed, though she
still appreciates Sanders’s push for a progressive agenda.
Brown agreed that Sanders’ premature endorsement was painful. “That bothered
me a lot at first too. I thought it hurt our momentum,” he said. But he now
believes “it gave Democrats a chance to see Clinton’s poll numbers without
Bernie in the race” and they’re still terrible.
Indeed, with Sanders out of the race, Clinton is polling
within
the margin of error against Donald Trump. In key battleground states, he’s
polling ahead of her.
Lauren Teffers, 18, and Madi Aha, 20, from Baltimore, Maryland, are both
registered Democrats who plan to vote for Stein. “[Clinton’s] not for the
people. She’s taking money from Banks and big oil companies” and will be
returning the favor once elected, said Aha, who also expressed concern about
Clinton’s hawkish foreign policy.
Maureen Maske, 37, is also Democrat who plans to vote for Stein. Clinton, she
says, is “too aggressive” on foreign policy. “I think it’s an insult to make
Americans choose between this lesser-of-two-evils crap,” argued Maske.
It’s appears that the treatment of Sanders throughout the primary has exposed
the corruption within the Democratic Party like never before. Based on the
reaction of some of his most enthusiastic supporters, it’s clear that the
outrage he unleashed can’t be tamed by his endorsement of Clinton, especially
among his younger supporters.
Protester at the March For Bernie. Photo by Rania
Khalek
According to one poll,
nearly
half of millennials who supported Sanders plan to vote for a third party
despite his endorsement.
Seattle councilwoman Kshama Sawant believes that progressive disillusionment
with the Democratic Party presents a unique and pressing opportunity to finally
build an independent and viable third party alternative.
Asked how she responds to those who argue that a vote for a third party is a
vote for Trump, Sawant replied putting energy into supporting another corporate
Democrat is the more dangerous option.
“I am as horrified as any other progressive who finds Trump’s agenda
stomach-turning. But what I’m worried about is far bigger than Trump himself.
Trump’s rise signifies decades of betrayal by both the Democratic and Republican
parties, that is why he’s risen up,” Sawant argued.
“In 2010, the Tea Party made gains not because the country was turning
right-wing, but because people were angry at the corporate bailouts of Obama,”
she continued. “And the left and the labor movement stood by at that time,
passively cheer leading Obama. Meanwhile, there was burning anger among ordinary
people.”
“What’s happening now is Trump is tapping into it. That’s dangerous, because
if Trump can tap into it, far more dangerous right-wing elements can tap into
it,” Sawant explained. “We could even see the formation of a far-right party.
The only way to stop that from happening is to build the left immediately and
have a sense of urgency about this.”
“Black Men For Bernie” bus at the March For Bernie.
Photo By Rania Khalek.
“Folding our movements behind Hillary and her Wall Street agenda will feed
into the right because people are angry and they need an alternative. The
right-wing right now has a monopoly on that. We need the left to take that
monopoly.”
While Sawant’s message resonated in the street, the idea of supporting a
third party remains a major point of contention among Sanders supporters.
State Representative Carol Ammons, a Sanders delegate and the first black
woman to be elected in Illinois 103rd district, understands that people are
frustrated, “but at the end of the day we must consider the outcome of a Trump
presidency,” she told Shadowproof.
“I would hope that those of us who were Sanders supporters would not get lost
in discussion of a third party candidate only to give it over to Trump.
Numerically that is what it will do,” Ammons insisted, adding that “we have a
candidate in the White House that we can work with.”
Judging by the attitudes witnessed among Sanders supporters outside City
Hall, Ammons argument has little chance of persuading a significant slice of
Sanders supporters who are fed up.