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April 25th, 2024

Insight

Will Millennials Ever Forgive Biden?

Dick Morris

By Dick Morris

Published March 5, 2020

Democrats are so afraid that they will repeat the mistake of 1972 — nominating a radical who can't get elected — that they are now making the same mistake they made in 1968 — alienating the young people they need to win the election.

It's not just that Biden beat Sanders on Super Tuesday; it's how he did so.

After months of debate and dialogue, Sanders had an unmistakable lead.

Then the Empire closed in and took it all away. South Carolina Rep. James Clyburn endorsed Biden and the mechanized dominos fell into place.

The former VP won the first primary of his life in South Carolina and, in short choreographed order, Klobuchar, Buttigieg, and a host of local officials came out for Biden, marching in lockstep. As they trampled Bernie, they trashed the passionate dreams of millions of Sanders' followers.


But the machine will do Biden little good in November if he is the nominee. These voters are already part of the Democratic base.

It is the millennial voters who will determine Biden's fate should he secure the nomination, and these are precisely the Sanders supporters who are increasingly shocked and outraged by Biden's electoral manipulation.

How is Biden to appeal to these millennials after defeating their candidate in the primary, stymying their beloved revolution with its glittering promises?

In 1968, the Democratic machine nominated another vice president, Hubert H. Humphrey, even though he never entered any primaries. Anger overflowed and led millions of young Democrats to stay at home and let Nixon be elected.

Bear in mind that this Democratic nominating process has a very long way to go — five months. Week after week, young voters will see their enthusiasm and passion overcome by the Democratic machine. As Yeats wrote, "too long a sacrifice / Can make a stone of the heart."


As Biden's ineptitude, oncoming senility, stale programs and hackneyed rhetoric contrast every week with Sanders' utopian vision, the millennials wil

l turn more and more sour on the former VP. How can he then turn it around in November?

Particularly if Trump's ratings continue their dramatic improvement, it will be hard to get them out for Biden.

So Joe's victory may turn out to be Pyrrhic after all.

Can Trump beat Biden? In a heartbeat.

Can Bernie still win?

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Dick Morris, who served as adviser to former Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.) and former President Clinton, is the author of 16 books, including his latest, Screwed and Here Come the Black Helicopters.

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