A Democratic pollster

From NYT.: “Stanley Greenberg, a Democratic pollster, said he was skeptical of Mr. Sanders’s ability to repeat his 2016 Michigan win, or his chances elsewhere in the Midwest, because Democrats this year, who singularly want to beat Mr. Trump, are less open to revisiting arguments over trade or Social Security.

“Voters, astonishingly, have taken over the nominating process,” he said. “Biden did well among blacks, suburban whites and white working-class voters because they want him to take on Trump. That was so powerful on Super Tuesday.”

By the end of the day, we will find out if Greenberg is right.

A little weird

Joe Biden wasn’t my first choice, but it’s still a little weird to hear people on the left smugly, almost happily, predicting, before the fight is engaged, that Joe Biden, if he is the nominee, will either lose, if nominated, or will sit on his hands and do nothing, if elected. I’m glad that Democratic primary voters don’t pay any attention to this sort of nonsense.

Declare a national emergency

If Nero fiddled while Rome burned, Trump lies and fiddles in his own way as a virus spreads and wreaks its havoc on people’s health, lives, and much else here and across the world. His complete unfitness for office is endangering people’s lives. And like any crisis it strikes unevenly. By now, any rational president would have declared a national emergency and thrown the resources of the federal government into action.

Lowering interest rates not enough

Larry Summers makes clear that much more than lowering already low interests rates is imperative now. But here’s the problem: Trump and his crony Republicans in Congress are doing nothing in the face of a national emergency. If anything, they are obstructing a robust response.

Michigan

Barring something unforeseen, if Bernie is unable to win the Michigan primary tomorrow, his path to the nomination is, for all effective purposes, overThe primary map for the rest of March and beyond isn’t Bernie friendly. That reality should compel some rethinking on Bernie’s part as to his next move. I don’t think a reprise of 2016 makes any sense. In politics there is a place for political realism.