Why the Democratic Party can't beat Bernie Sanders' democratic socialist army

The Democratic Party elite is clearly biased against Bernie. But even if he loses, the political movement he started has a very important future.

They can't be beat.
(Image credit: AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)

It's been obvious from the start of the 2016 presidential race that just about the entire Democratic Party establishment is in the tank for Hillary Clinton. The head of the Democratic National Committee is one of her 2008 campaign co-chairs, and the DNC has refused to allow more than six debates, deliberately scheduled them at comically bad times to prevent Clinton challengers from getting much attention, and most recently briefly cut off Bernie Sanders' campaign from its own data.

The DNC's obvious bias is bad. It's also utterly predictable. Clinton has deep ties to party elites thanks to her husband being a former president and her serving as secretary of state for the current president. It's something less than shocking that the party's elites are putting their thumbs on the scales against an avowed socialist primary competitor (though the DNC's cynical rat cunning is arguably harming Clinton in the long run).

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Ryan Cooper

Ryan Cooper is a national correspondent at TheWeek.com. His work has appeared in the Washington Monthly, The New Republic, and the Washington Post.