March 11, 2026

Bernie Pivots for Biden – Trump Must Be Defeated

041620-08-Bernie-Sanders-Biden-Trump
Bernie Pivots for Biden - Trump Must Be Defeated

Bernie Pivots for Biden - Trump Must Be Defeated
Former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Bernie Sanders shake hands ahead of the third Democratic primary debate of the 2020 presidential campaign season in Houston, Texas on September 12, 2019. (Photo: Frederic J. Brown / AFP via Getty Images)

If anyone thinks it doesn’t matter much whether Trump is re-elected, they’re living in some kind of bubble.


Bernie Pivots for Biden - Trump Must Be Defeated

By Norman Solomon


This week, soon after Bernie Sanders suspended his campaign, one of its most effective message-crafters summed up a vital challenge ahead. โ€œThe best hope to defeat Trump is to positively and constructively motivate a large Democratic turnout,โ€ David Sirota wrote. โ€œThe best way to do that is to show progressive voters they are actually valued, rather than taken for granted. And the best way to show them that they are valued is to actually embrace an agenda that they want.โ€

Progressives should never stop fighting for policies that truly represent our values. And activists, unlike even the best politicians, can avoid the pitfalls of making diplomatic statements that arenโ€™t true.

While announcing the deactivation of his campaign on April 8, Bernie said that Joe Biden is โ€œa very decent man.โ€ But decency is not a word that remotely applies to Bidenโ€™s political record that spans several decades (as Iโ€™ve described in one article after another after another after another after another after another after another).

Ironically, at this historic juncture, Bidenโ€”a longtime eager corporate toolโ€”is now the only electoral implement available to progressives for preventing the re-election of Trump. At this point, thereโ€™s simply no other plausible way to prevent this monstrous president from winning a second term.

And so, in an interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday, Bernie spelled out a choice: โ€œDo we be as active as we can in electing Joe Biden and doing everything we can to move Joe and his campaign in a more progressive direction? Or do we choose to sit it out and allow the most dangerous president in modern American history to get re-elected?โ€

Bernie started this week by endorsing Biden in an awkward video duet with the presumptive nominee. Symbolically, if not intentionally, when the video went to full screen while Bernie spoke, one object was clearly visible behind himโ€”a chessboard.

There are reasons to criticize some of Bernieโ€™s recent tactical moves. (I wish he hadnโ€™t suspended his campaign before the end of primary voting.) But, looking ahead, heโ€™s being sensible about current political realities.

Crucially in swing states, Trump can only be defeated by votes for the Democratic presidential nominee, whoโ€™s now virtually certain to be Biden, and thereโ€™s no point in pretending otherwise. Magical thinking might be a wondrous literary device, but itโ€™s uselessโ€”or worseโ€”in politics.

โ€œWe had a contentious campaign,โ€ Bernie told AP as he noted differences with Biden. โ€œWe disagree on issues. But my job now is to not only rally my supporters, but to do everything I can to bring the party together to see that (Trump) is not elected president.โ€

(A bit paradoxically, Bernie said that heโ€™s hoping people will vote for him in the 20 or so states that have upcoming primariesโ€”so that thereโ€™ll be more Sanders delegates for the Democratic National Convention in August. More of those delegates will increase progressive leverage when the convention adopts a platform and sets future party rules.)

If anyone thinks it doesnโ€™t matter much whether Trump is re-elected, theyโ€™re living in some kind of bubble. To those outside of such a soundproof bubble, Bernie is now sending an unequivocal message: โ€œI believe that itโ€™s irresponsible for anybody to say, โ€˜Well, I disagree with Joe Bidenโ€”I disagree with Joe Biden!โ€”and therefore Iโ€™m not going to be involved.โ€™โ€

Bernie Sanders is saying that progressives have a profound responsibility to fight againstโ€”and oustโ€”the extreme right-wing forces that have gained control of the U.S. governmentโ€™s executive branch and, increasingly, the federal judiciary. Of course, in political terms, progressives wish that we were in a very different place. But this is where we are.


Published by Common Dreams, 04.16.2020, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license.