Socialism watch: The Democrats have a problem

Joe Biden likes to say voters are in a battle for the soul of America. But first, there’s the battle for the soul of his party.

With voting finally underway in the 2020 president election, the leftist, socialistic wing of the Democratic Party led by Sen. Bernie Sanders is jamming the moderates who say they have the best chance to beat President Trump in November.

With votes from the flubbed Iowa caucus more or less counted, Sanders is essentially tied with former mayor Pete Buttigieg, with Sen. Elizabeth Warren third and Joe Biden fourth. If you add the votes of the top four candidates, the leftists Sanders and Warren got about 44.3% of the vote, while the moderates Buttigieg and Biden got 42%. If you include Amy Klobuchar, who came in fifth, with Biden and Buttigieg, the moderate portion rises to 54.2%.

In terms of what Iowa voters want, 57% said they favor the huge government health care program, Medicare for all, that would eliminate private insurance, according to Edison Research. Only 38% said they oppose that. Medicare for all is probably the touchiest leftist idea, thoroughly opposed by nearly all Republicans, many Independents and some Democrats. If any single issue could sink a Democrat against Trump in the general election, it’s probably “socialized health care,” as Trump likens the Sanders program.

DERRY, NEW HAMPSHIRE - FEBRUARY 05: Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) speaks during Town Hall campaign event held at the Derry Opera House on February 05, 2020 in Derry, New Hampshire. Mr. Sanders is campaigning before the primary on February 11. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) speaks during Town Hall campaign event held at the Derry Opera House on February 05, 2020 in Derry, New Hampshire. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

The Iowa election was so shambolic and indecisive that it didn’t carry the normal weight the first primary vote does. Yet the Democratic candidates are rapidly realigning anyway, with Biden’s campaign suddenly reeling. Biden had been the on-and-off leader in Iowa, and a fourth-place finish looks like a collapse. In Morning Consult’s first national poll of Democratic voters since the Iowa caucus, Sanders replaced Biden as the top choice, 25% to 24%. Mike Bloomberg surged into third place, with 15%, followed by Buttigieg and Warren.

Sander’s fund-raising continues to lead the pack, as well. He pulled in $25 million in January, more than any candidate has raised in any month in the whole election so far. The other campaigns haven’t yet released their fundraising tallies for January, but Biden took a day off from campaigning in New Hampshire, just days before the Feb. 11 primary there, to meet with donors—an obvious sign of concern.

Financial markets unfazed by Sanders

The race can still take many turns, but Sanders is peaking at precisely the right moment, and he has the funds to last till the end, no matter what. Biden could recover, especially since he’s expected to win the Feb. 29 South Carolina primary. But establishment Democrats have worried about Biden’s staying power all along, and their worst-case scenario—a Biden fade combined with a Sanders surge—may be playing out.