Online: | |
Visits: | |
Stories: |
Story Views | |
Now: | |
Last Hour: | |
Last 24 Hours: | |
Total: |
Dave Lindorff
Philadelphia — You wouldn't know it from reading or watching or listening to the corporate media, or even, incredibly, to most of the alternative media, but a huge grass-roots campaign has sprung up promoting a mass demonstration in Philadelphia during the July 25-28 Democratic Convention. The promoters of this unprecedented campaign are backers of Bernie Sanders who do not accept the idea of just rolling over at the end of this year-long effort and endorsing Hilllary Clinton.
Sanders has won nearly ten million votes in the primaries including his latest strong come-from-behind win in Indiana, and that is only a fraction of his national base of support, since many states have closed primaries where independents — his strongest backers — have been barred from voting.
If only one in 10 or one in 20 of those backers make their way to Philadelphia, the scene here could end up making the Pope's recent visit look like an ordinary rush hour, or maybe a Mummer's Parade.
What Sanders has been saying lately — that he wants to give the Democrats the “most progressive platform in history” — is a joke. Sanders knows it, and so do all his backers. The party and its candidates never pay any thought to platforms, which have always served as simply a sop to keep disgruntled progressives on the plantation.
What the demonstrators coming to Philly want is for Sanders, if as expected he loses his campaign for the Democratic nomination, to walk away from the convention and the Democratic party and announce plans to run in the general election, either as an independent or, better, as the nominee of the Green Party, should that group will accept him (the Greens hold their own convention in the first week of August). Some in the Green party have been trying to discuss the idea with Sanders, though others oppose the idea.
You haven't read it on Common Dreams or at Truthout, or heard about it on Democracy Now!, but Kshama Sawant, the feiry socialist city councilwoman from Seattle, has a petition out calling on Sanders to run as an independent. That petition now has 21,000 signatures and counting. Sawant and the Green Party 's likely presidential nominee, Dr. Jill Stein, have been reaching out to Sanders privately too, so far to no effect.
A news collective, founded as a blog in 2004, covering war, politics, environment, economy, culture and all the madness