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Robert Philpot

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Robert Philpot,

Robert Philpot

Analysis

Surging Sanders gives Team Clinton a scare

June 18, 2015 14:25
1 min read

On the Richter scale of political earthquakes, it hardly compares to Hillary Clinton's humiliating third-place finish in the Iowa caucuses on January 3, 2008 - the moment when Barack Obama's bid for the presidency truly caught fire.

But last weekend's surprisingly strong second-place finish by Bernie Sanders in the Wisconsin Democratic Convention straw poll will have sent a minor tremor through the campaign of the former First Lady as she attempts to avenge her defeat of seven years ago. Mr Sanders, the only Jewish contender for either party's nomination in next November's presidential election, polled 40 per cent to Mrs Clinton's 49 per cent.

That score should come with a huge health warning. This was a poll of largely liberal activists - Mr Sanders's core constituency - and it does not have a stellar record when it comes to predicting either party's eventual nominee. It's been wrong in each of the last four election cycles.

Nonetheless, the straw poll has finally caught the media's attention and confirmed that the Vermont senator has what Slate termed "Bernie-Mentum". At 73, Mr Sanders has thus far been seen as too old and politically exotic - he is the only self-described socialist in Congress - for the media to give his candidacy more than a cursory nod. That, combined with Mrs Clinton's supposed invulnerability, saw the New York Times relegate Mr Sanders' announcement of his candidacy to page 21, while the CBS Evening News accorded him a single sentence at the end of a two-minute report about the Democrat frontrunner.