He sold out, and Clinton changed her position on the Trans-Pacific Partnership as a result, probably dooming that trade bill, a signature piece of President Obama’s second-term foreign policy agenda.
He sold out, and the Democrats changed their superdelegate rules, binding a much larger percentage of them to the popular vote winners of state contests. At a minimum, this means that establishment candidates will be forced to organize more heavily at a lower level of politics in more states in the future.
He sold out, and he and Clinton are now on board with a college tuition proposal that would satisfy Sanders’ criteria, not the one Clinton initially believed in.
He sold out, and the party endorsed what Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) called its “most progressive platform in history.”
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