By Robert Reich
Will Bernie Sanders’s supporters rally behind Hillary Clinton if
she gets the nomination? Likewise, if Donald Trump is denied the Republican
nomination, will his supporters back whoever gets the Republican nod?
If 2008 is any guide, the answer is unambiguously yes to both.
About 90 percent of people who backed Hillary Clinton in the
Democratic primaries that year ended up supporting Barack Obama in the general
election.
About the same percent of Mike Huckabee and Mitt Romney backers
came around to supporting John McCain.
But 2008 may not be a good guide to the 2016 election, whose
most conspicuous feature is furious antipathy to the political establishment.
If Hillary Clinton is perceived to have won the Democratic
primary because of insider “superdelegates” and contests closed to
independents, it may confirm for hardcore Bernie supporters the systemic
political corruption Sanders has been railing against.
Similarly, if the Republican Party ends up nominating someone
other than Trump who hasn’t attracted nearly the votes than he has, it may be
viewed as proof of Trump’s argument that the Republican Party is corrupt.
Many Sanders supporters will gravitate to Hillary Clinton
nonetheless out of repulsion toward the Republican candidate, especially if
it’s Donald Trump.
Likewise, if Trump loses his bid for the nomination, many of his
supporters will vote Republican in any event, particularly if the Democratic
nominee is Hillary Clinton.
But, unlike previous elections, a good number may simply decide
to sit out the election because of their even greater repulsion toward politics
as usual – and the conviction it’s rigged by the establishment for its own
benefit.
That conviction wasn’t present in the 2008 election. It emerged
later, starting in the 2008 financial crisis, when the government bailed out
the biggest Wall Street banks while letting underwater homeowners drown.
Both the Tea Party movement and Occupy were angry responses –
Tea Partiers apoplectic about government’s role, Occupiers furious with Wall
Street – two sides of the same coin.
Then came the Supreme Court’s 2010 decision in “Citizens
United vs. the Federal Election Commission,” releasing a torrent of big
money into American politics. By the 2012 election cycle,forty percent of all campaign contributions came from the richest 0.01
percent of American households.
That was followed by a lopsided economic recovery, most of whose
gains have gone to the top. Median family income is still below 2008, adjusted
for inflation. And although the official rate of unemployment has fallen
dramatically, a smaller percentage of working-age people now have jobs than
before the recession.
As a result of all this, many Americans have connected the dots
in ways they didn’t in 2008.
They see “crony capitalism” (now a term of opprobrium on both
left and the right) in special tax loopholes for the rich, government subsidies
and loan guarantees for favored corporations, bankruptcy relief for the wealthy
but not for distressed homeowners or student debtors, leniency toward
corporations amassing market power but not for workers seeking to increase
their bargaining power through unions, and trade deals protecting the
intellectual property and assets of American corporations abroad but not the
jobs or incomes of American workers.
Last fall, when on book tour in the nation’s heartland, I kept
finding people trying to make up their minds in the upcoming election between
Sanders and Trump.
They saw one or the other as their champion: Sanders the
“political revolutionary” who’d reclaim power from the privileged few; Trump,
the authoritarian strongman who’d wrest power back from an establishment that’s
usurped it.
The people I encountered told me the moneyed interests couldn’t
buy off Sanders because he wouldn’t take their money, and they couldn’t buy off
Trump because he didn’t need their money.
Now, six months later, the political establishment has fought
back, and Sanders’s prospects for taking the Democratic nomination are dimming.
Trump may well win the Republican mantle but not without a brawl.
As I said, I expect most Sanders backers will still support
Hillary Clinton if she’s the nominee. And even if Trump doesn’t get the
Republican nod, most of his backers will go with whoever the Republican
candidate turns out to be.
But anyone who assumes a wholesale transfer of loyalty from
Sanders’s supporters to Clinton, or from Trump’s to another Republican
standard-bearer, may be in for a surprise.
The anti-establishment fury in the election of 2016 may prove
greater than supposed.
ROBERT B. REICH is Chancellor’s Professor of
Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at
the Blum Center for Developing Economies. He served as Secretary of Labor in
the Clinton administration, for which Time Magazine named him one of the ten
most effective cabinet secretaries of the twentieth century. He has written
fourteen books, including the best sellers “Aftershock, “The Work of
Nations," and "Beyond Outrage," and, his most recent,
"Saving Capitalism." He is also a founding editor of the American
Prospect magazine, chairman of Common Cause, a member of the American Academy
of Arts and Sciences, and co-creator of the award-winning documentary,
INEQUALITY FOR ALL.