Even If Biden Wins, Have We Really Won?

An elegy for a revolution that never happened

Morgan Jerkins
GEN

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Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., arrives at the Capitol for a vote on a coronavirus bill amendment on Wednesday, March 18, 2020. Photo: Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

TThe news could not have come at a worse time. One of my co-workers, a passionate Bernie Sanders supporter and a woman of color, was celebrating her 27th birthday. It was a brief glimmer on an otherwise gloomy day during the coronavirus pandemic. In fact, it was Tuesday. Just moments after she posted images of herself celebrating alone on Twitter, I scrolled down and saw a breaking headline: Bernie Sanders was suspending his campaign. Immediately, my entire timeline knew that this day was a wash before the clock struck noon.

Of course, I knew it was coming. Sanders had received support from 917 delegates compared to Biden’s 1,217. In Florida, a swing state, Biden bested Sanders by 40%. In 2016, Hillary Clinton won 2,807 delegates and superdelegates compared to Sanders’ 1,893; it seems that we are back to where we started. But what makes this moment exceptionally macabre is that in the midst of a global pandemic, where the constant sirens ring like death knells in major cities and our current president lies to the public and speaks of mortality as if he’s casually reporting the weather, this was the end of the campaign for a man who stood for Medicare for All. It stuns me into absolute silence if I think too hard about it.

We wanted not just a…

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