Why you shouldn’t ask, “Will you vote for Hillary Clinton if she’s the nominee?”
I have put off writing this for a few months now. After the abhorrent misinterpretation and media spin of Susan Sarandon’s words, I feel it is a pertinent time to introduce this piece. It isn’t meant to attack Secretary Clinton or her supporters. What I hope to achieve is an understanding of my voice as a Senator Sanders supporter and why this question is disrespectful.
I’ve been supporting Senator Sanders since he announced he was running for President. In the last 3 1/2 months I’ve been volunteering for his campaign. In 2012 I was dedicated to President Obama’s re-election and gave everything I had to his campaign. This isn’t the first election where I have been intensely invested in my candidate’s success.
In the time I’ve been volunteering and supporting Senator Sanders, one thing is clear. The passion; the commitment and tenacious zeal from supporters and volunteers are immeasurable. Last weekend a supporter had a photo taken of their tattoo. It said, “Speak for the silent, Stand for the broken”. I sense that subsumes everything we are fighting for. I don’t need to give you a campaign style stump speech and I’m not here to persuade you to vote for Senator Sanders.
A consistent theme of continuity that runs heavily in the Democratic Party is the belief that the race is over and Secretary Clinton is the winner. What people, maybe even you, don’t realize is that every single day we are hearing people ask us when our candidate is going to drop out. The last time I checked we still have many states that are going to be voting. This is far from over. The media insists on painting a disingenuous landscape that we should give up. This undermining and dismissive pressure is unnecessary. So forgive me for being upset and exasperated when the question that we’re always harassed with is:
“Will you vote for Hillary if she is the nominee??”
In my opinion and from my perspective, it is disrespectful and boorish to even entertain the thought that we should be prepared to vote for an opponent when the nomination hasn’t been decided. Secretary Clinton supporters of all people should know this. How did that feel in 2008? We are consistently being told we’re not going to win; our candidate is “unelectable”. His ideas are too big. He can’t get anything done. Not to mention the long list of colorful names I’ve been called on social media for not “supporting a woman”.
So the question, that immensely disrespectful and disparaging question does provoke a number of emotions. Stop asking this question. You may not realize it, but when you ask that question, you’re asking us to give up on our candidate. We aren’t going to capitulate anything right now. Secretary Clinton lost 5 / 6 of the last states by YUGE margins. You don’t see me jumping on your twitter or FB page asking you if you’ll support Senator Sanders because your candidate is weak. No. That is wrong.
The honest answer to that insulting and disrespectful question is, I don’t know. I’m not sure what I will do if it isn’t Bernie. In my mind and in my heart he will be our nominee. This is usually the part where the opposition becomes irrational. That is okay, you’re entitled to your vote. I’m not going to disenfranchise you for who you want to vote for, even if you do it to me.
I can’t imagine a world where Bernie isn’t the nominee. I won’t even begin to try. I won’t apologize for it either. I ask that you stop shaming me for being 100% committed to Senator Sanders. When the convention is over, then we can talk about what the candidate has to do to win the oppositions vote. That isn’t just given to someone, it’s earned.
One thing I would like to point out is the number of Independents that Senator Sanders has supporting him. These are not people who are in bed with the Democratic Party. These voters are not loyal to your candidate and neither candidate is entitled to their vote. Votes are earned. There is no such thing as a “firewall”. These are human beings with a voice and those voices should be heard.
Why should I compromise my values, integrity, beliefs and trust? Why are we expected to settle? Why are we belittled for saying we won’t vote against our best interests? When did it become an expectation for us to settle for the status quo when the status quo isn’t working for us anymore? This is much deeper than voting for a democrat.
There will always be some who will vote for Trump. That’s politics, deal with it. To formulate that there isn’t Hillary or Bust people is absurd. In 2008, half of the people supporting Hillary said they wouldn’t vote for Obama. Stop swinging at supporters whose candidate is still standing and mathematically still in the race.
I hear Secretary Clinton supporters claim they are being attacked. I’m sorry to hear that. I had no idea the media has been relentlessly plaguing your candidate after losing 5/6 states with the question, “Would you support Senator Sanders if he is the nominee?” This in fact, hasn’t happened. I don’t condone any personal attacks, from either candidate’s supporters. Don’t pretend it is one sided. After what I’ve seen today from Clinton supporters going after Susan Sarandon, it is repugnant. We shouldn’t be attacking each other like we’re the GOP.
I’ve worked incredibly hard campaigning and rallying behind Senator Sanders. I have invested so much physically, emotionally, mentally and financially to see him win the nomination. I realize that there is always a risk that he could lose. What I did not expect was to have profoundly intelligent people turn so incompetent when it comes to allowing people their own voice in this election.
The most transcendental thing I’ve learned in volunteering is to treat people the way Bernie would treat them. I’m not here to make enemies or upset friends and family. There is only so much that I’m willing to endure. I won’t have my voice silenced. I won’t stop fighting for Senator Sanders. You aren’t going to get glorification if you’re one of the people who say they’ll vote for him. That’s your choice; it’s not some applause worthy notation. You’re not doing me a favor. Do it for you. To quote Nina Turner today, “Stay true to you”. To my fellow supporters / volunteers, be mindful of others. Be respectful of the opposition. Talk about the facts and contrasts. Senator Sanders hasn’t given up on us; we can’t give up on him.
Last Sunday, Nina Turner said it perfectly; “The cause is right, the time is now”
We are strongest when we are united. We are hopeful. We are bold. We are here to change the world.