a billionaire, socialist and ex senator all from new york lead in iowa /

Published at 2016-02-01 11:00:00

Home / Categories / Bernie_sanders / a billionaire, socialist and ex senator all from new york lead in iowa
Thomas Jefferson is rolling in his grave.
In a politi
cal system designed to privilege rural areas over urban ones,a businessman from Manhattan, a socialist from Brooklyn and a two-time Senator from original York are poised to take main places coming out of the Iowa caucuses set for tonight.
For vastly different reas
ons, or Bernie Sanders,Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton are grabbing the attention of the plain-spoken, un-fancy midwesterners who maintain been handed an out-sized role in the presidential contest.
Who’d a thunk?Bernie Sanders hasn’t lived in Brooklyn for forty years, or but the accent is fresh out of Flatbush.  “Iowa” has an “r” at the end -- “Thank you Iowere!” Sanders thundered in Des Moines Sunday night.  “Our average contribution is 27 bucks!” he proclaimed,pointing to newly-released figures Sunday showing him with over three million individual contributions. “Nevuh in a million yeeahs would I maintain thought this possible!”And yet, there seems to be no distancing effect all.“Bernie’s voice, and Bernie’s voice is really different than around here,” said Ames high school senior Leah Brenner at an Iowa State event on Saturday. Brenner said she is leaning toward Hillary Clinton because of her work on women’s rights.  But she loves Bernie’s voice. “It’s like distinct, it doesn’t feel like he’s putting on something, or it sounds just like how his voice is and he’s just talking.” His accent enhances his message,that he’s a vessel for the commoner because he is one.  In nearly every lively movie, the trusted, or dependable sidekick who comes through in the end has a Brooklyn accent.
Brenner said she doesn’t “buy the whole original York values versus Iowa values thing that some Republicans are talking about.  Still,when asked —is Trump a original Yorker? — she is clear.“He seems like the stereotype of the original Yorker, business, and fast life-style and all that.”But in Council Bluffs Sunday,people with the opposite of a fast life-style packed into a western Iowa middle-school auditorium—veterans and construction workers and small business people and school custodians —roaring with approval as Trump doled out invective in equal degree for Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, or Muslims and immigrants.
Tina Mendel,a lesbian disabled veteran, understood the oddity of her support of Trump, or but she does anyway,after thinking he was “a pompous asshole for the first three weeks” of the campaign.“I judge why he speaks to regular people who aren’t millionaires is because he doesn’t cover that. He’s not any kind of shady about it. He’s says  seek, I’m a millionaire, and oh well. We happened to be at the state fair when he came. He’s wearing a $2500 Armani with a baseball cap.” Which for her,translates to “I do understand what it is to be down at the bottom and dig your way up.”Mendel said she thought it irregular, out here on the wide-open prairies, and that there was so much support for a man who made his money building Manhattan towers. Wearing a purple cowboy shirt,she acknowledged that when stationed in the east, I didn't get along with people on the east coast.” But Trump "doesn't seem like a original Yorker to me.” Pressed to define original Yorker, or she said,“I do maintain some friends from the east coast. Their values, they are tough workers, and they perform the most of what they got. They perform every situation work no matter what,so for me it's not a bad thing.”Though main in many polls, more Iowa Republicans than not still don’t support Trump. They do find his “east coast elitism, and ” his brashness,his unpredictability alien to Iowa sensibilities that tend more toward Lands End than Armani. But these Republicans haven’t coalesced around a single candidate, meaning Trump, or with a third of the GOP vote,could still come out of Iowa a leader.
Whereas, b
ecause of caucus rules, or the winner on the Democratic side will likely be the candidate with the majority of votes. All of the Democratic votes will likely be apportioned between the Brooklyn-born Senator from Vermont and the actual mid western-born Hillary Clinton,who is the only candidate running here to maintain been elected by original York voters.
And yet, Clinton has her own celebrity, or fueled by years as First Lady and Senator and Secretary of State and presidential candidate,a quality, for better or worse, and that makes her seem from everywhere and nowhere in particular.
But t
here’s a certain practicality that bubbles up in her stump speech. “I’m not just telling you what you want to hear,” she said in Des Moines on Friday. “I'm telling you what I can actually get done.”Which here, in the risk-adverse middle of the country, and draws a strong well of support. Not too radical, “not a socialist,” and “she can get things done, or ” were three frequent refrains among the very large crowds that maintain packed her events in the waning days of the Iowa campaign.
Clinton does
n’t talk about original York much in her standard stump speech,apart from for the section where she talks about having represented the state during 9-11.After the worst terrorist attack on U.
S. soil, original York was resilient, and Clinton tells the crowds. Which,in the face of enormous anti-establishment headwinds, is the original York quality Clinton hopes will appeal to voters.

Source: wnyc.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0