So, why don’t Republicans point this out in their
speeches?
Republicans should constantly refer to Democrats as the
“Socialist Democrat Party” and use terms like “Marxist Democrats” and
“Socialist Democrats” and the “National Socialist Party.”
Senator Bernie Sanders’s speech on Thursday explaining his democratic
socialist ideology carried little risk among supporters and other Democrats: A
solid majority of them have a positive impression of socialism, according to a New York Times/CBS News poll released this month.
Fifty-six percent of those Democratic primary voters questioned said they
felt positive about socialism as a governing philosophy, versus 29 percent who
took a negative view.
In an address Thursday afternoon at Georgetown
University, Mr. Sanders argued that the redistribution of wealth was at the
heart of the American social contract, seeking to link himself with the
legacies of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Franklin D. Roosevelt. The
applause he drew should come as little surprise: Sixty-nine percent of Sanders
supporters see socialism in a positive light, versus just 21 percent who view
it negatively.
Even most of those supporting Hillary Rodham Clinton for the Democratic
nomination approve of socialism, 52 percent to 32 percent.
Still, Mr. Sanders’s unabashed use of the term could become
a liability were he to reach the general election. Just 32 percent of
all Americans rate socialism positively, compared to 52 percent who view it
negatively.
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