Sanders Battles Barney Frank as Dems' Family Brawl Rolls On
Sanders Battles Barney Frank as Dems' Family Brawl Rolls On · The Fiscal Times

It’s no surprise that Sen. Bernie Sanders wants to strip former Massachusetts Rep. Barney Frank of his duties as co-chair of the rules committee at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia this summer.

Sanders, the long-shot Democratic presidential candidate, and Frank, the cantankerous former House Financial Services Committee chair from Massachusetts, have been at each other’s throats for years and couldn’t be further apart in their views on how to regulate the big banks on Wall Street or avert a repeat of the 2008 financial crisis.

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By Sanders’s lights, Frank is the poster child for establishment Democrats who have done just about everything possible to “rig” the Democratic primary elections and candidates’ debates to assure Hillary Clinton’s nomination. And as Frank sees it, Sanders is a dyed-in-the wool independent and a late comer to Democratic politics who simply can’t accept the fact that Clinton is beating him.

Just a week before the critical Democratic primary grand finale in California, New Jersey and four other states, Frank lashed out at Sanders on Tuesday as a spoil-sport who was willing to jeopardize Clinton’s chances of beating Republican presumptive nominee Donald Trump in the general election campaign for the sake of his political vanity.

“Sen. Sanders is disappointed that he hasn’t won,” Frank said during an interview with Kate Snow of MSNBC. “He’s losing not because anything was rigged or there was dirty trickery. He’s losing because Hillary Clinton has gotten more votes.”

With 2,383 delegates needed for nomination, Clinton currently holds 2,323 delegate – just 71 shy of the nomination. That includes 1,769 pledged delegates won during the primaries and caucuses and 543 superdelegates who automatically get to vote at the convention.

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Sanders -- with 1,501 pledged delegates but only 44 superdelegates -- insists he can win the California primary and overtake Clinton in pledged delegates next week. An emboldened Sanders would then turn his attention to persuading hundreds of superdelegates to switch their allegiance from Clinton to Sanders.

“I think he has a right to stay in,” Frank said, although he remains highly dubious Sanders has a legitimate chance of gaining the nomination at this point, especially after losing a substantial part of the African-American vote to Clinton. “I never said he should stay out. I just wish he would stay in and talk about the issues where he wants to focus, and not make the bogus claim that he is being cheated.”