Tad Devine and Jeff Weaver speak in Burlington two weeks ago. Credit: File: Paul Heintz

Top advisers to Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) responded to Tuesday’s big losses with a heaping pile of metaphors — some mixed, some not — designed to demonstrate that he’s still, you know, in the game. 

Sanders’ bid for the Democratic presidential nomination has always been “an uphill fight,” campaign manager Jeff Weaver said late Wednesday during a strategy call with reporters. 

But, said senior adviser Tad Devine, “We see a lot of daylight ahead and, you know, green pasture.”

As for that 1,139 to 825 pledged-delegate lead that former secretary of state Hillary Clinton has accrued? That’s “really the high water mark for the Clinton campaign,” Weaver said.

“We are literally about halfway through the delegate-selection process in terms of the number of delegates,” he added. “I don’t want to overuse the sports analogies, but [it’s] sort of halftime in this process.”

“I agree we’re at halftime here,” Devine said. “We agree that we’re behind, but we also think that we’re going to win this game, and we’re going to finish ahead, and we see a path to get there.”

Metaphors aside, Sanders’ strategy includes:

  • Taking advantage of a primary and caucus calendar that both campaigns believe favors Sanders in the coming weeks, by winning in Arizona, Idaho and Utah next Tuesday and then in Alaska, Hawaii and Washington four days later.
  • Racking up big wins in the delegate-heavy states of New York and California and, to a lesser extent, Pennsylvania. 
  • In caucus states, picking up delegates on “the back end,” as Devine put it, by outperforming Clinton in the county and state caucuses where delegates to the Democratic National Convention are actually selected.
  • Convincing delegates — pledged and un-pledged alike — that Sanders would be more likely to defeat Republican frontrunner Donald Trump in a general election.

“We anticipate, in the weeks and months to come, that we will steadily, consistently and successfully erode [Clinton’s] current advantage in pledged delegates when we get through June 7,” Weaver said, referring to the day that the final six states, including California, vote.

The Clinton campaign, of course, isn’t buying it.

In a memo released Wednesday morning, after the former secretary of state won Florida, North Carolina, Ohio and Illinois, her campaign manager argued that she had run up “a nearly insurmountable lead.”

The Missouri primary was still too close to call.

“The bottom-line results from last night: Hillary Clinton’s pledged delegate lead grew by more than 40 percent, to a lead of more than 300,” Robby Mook wrote in the memo, “leaving Sen. Sanders overwhelmingly behind in the nomination contest — and without a clear path to catching up.”

Mook noted that Clinton’s delegate advantage was nearly twice as large as any enjoyed by President Barack Obama in his successful 2008 campaign against Clinton. Moreover, he said, Clinton had already won 8.4 million votes in the current campaign — 2.5 million more than Sanders.

In order to catch up, Sanders would have to win double-digit victories in most of the remaining states. Mook argued that, even if Sanders won by a 60-40 percent margin in California, New York and Pennsylvania, he would still be 120 delegates behind. 

“Our pledged delegate lead is so significant that even a string of victories by Sen. Sanders over the next few weeks would have little impact on Secretary Clinton’s position in the race,” Mook said.

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Paul Heintz was part of the Seven Days news team from 2012 to 2020. He served as political editor and wrote the "Fair Game" political column before becoming a staff writer.

3 replies on “Metaphorically Speaking, Sanders Aides See a Path Forward”

  1. Old Yeller’s electoral math is just as bad as his budget math. He can’t win at this point and discredits all his good ideas every time he claims that he still can. Time for him to declare victory for the issues he’s raised and exit gracefully. Say, is that BernBerry KoolAid on Weaver’s mustache?

  2. Math is not an opinion. He needs about 58% of all remaining pledged delegates to win. Saying he can or can’t do that is an opinion.

  3. Old Yeller is about done. He needs to get out while he still has some dignity left. Left, get it? Ol’ Lefty needs to put on his big boy Paul Bunyan britches and declare victory and drop out and come back to Vermont, where he can screw up our economy and lie us into a comedy routine. I didn’t vote for the old Red, and if you did, you got what you deserve, idiot.

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