

By Laura Flanders
The 2020 presidential race didnโt get decided this week, but the choice before us did: more democracy or less of it. Thatโs the decision we are facing, and if the Democrats manage to foul this up, they may not get another chance.
The very same day that New Hampshire held its primary, the president was out there bullying federal workers via Tweet. By the end of the night, Trumpโs criminally-convicted chum Roger Stoneโs sentence was suspended, and the Constitution, the impartiality of the courts and the supposed rule of law had taken one more power-addled hit.
Democracy on the one hand, autocracy on the other. Whatever you think of the race so far, the stakes for the nation donโt get much clearer than they did Tuesday night. And whatever you think of their candidates, democracy should be something Democrats could sell. While the word may be Greek (a plural noun meaning we the people, the populace, us), the ideaโs beloved by Americans. Any Coca-Cola or Cadillac seller can tell you that.
Ranked along the democracy spectrum, Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren stand out. Demos-driven, decrying big-dollar power, no billionaires bankroll their field campaigns, no self-interested, anonymous sources shell out for their TV ads. Bernieโs socialism, when itโs not explained by haters, has everything to do with more choices for more people, not fewer. Warrenโs many plans speak to the world of input sheโs gotten and seems to have taken to heart.
At the other end of the spectrum is Michael Bloomberg, the three-term Mayor in a two-term limit town, the stop-and-frisk, my-way-or-the-highway CEO in a land of laws defending civil rights. If there is one way for the Democrats to bungle this battle for democracy, Bloomberg is it.
Already, thanks to a DNC rule change, Bloomberg will participate in the Nevada debate without having won a single delegate or small donation. Heโll come to Super Tuesday fresh, having campaigned for months via a one-way media megaphone, while his opponents have had to sweat it out under spotlights, handshake by handshakeโthe senators squeezing in their public service too in the impeachment trial, trying to rein in the predator in chief.
The Democratic establishmentโs clearly rattled. Itโs not democratic socialism they fear, they say, rather Trumpโs vilification of it. But while Trump will surely red-bait Sanders, heโll just as certainly banker-bait Bloomberg. The real question is, for which is the DNC willing to go to bat? The demos or the autocrat?
In 2016, the wolf now in the White House dressed up in โoutsiderโ clothing and cast himself as the dragon slayer of the Democratic establishmentโa developer David vs. New Yorkโs Goliaths. The Donald was lying, but it worked, and heโs run with it ever since. Thereโs no indication that heโs about to change course. If the 2020 choice becomes one between the bully-in-chiefโs MAGA muscle-Ts and Wall Streetโs clean โI Like Mikeโ shirts, a lot of us who hanker for a broader demos will see ourselves in none of it.
Democracy vs. Dictatorship. Democrats should not be able to lose that race, but they could. And what comes next is worse.
Published by Common Dreams, 02.15.2020, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license.
