https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/elect...N2G?li=BBnbcA1
Senate Democrats, who have worked more closely with Sen. Bernie  Sanders (I-Vt.) than anyone else the past 13 years, split into several  factions when they consider the increasing likelihood of the  self-proclaimed democratic socialist as their standard-bearer against  President Trump. 
   
 Some question whether Sanders can appeal to key suburban swing voters  critical to the party’s hopes of claiming GOP Senate seats in Colorado,  Maine, Arizona and North Carolina with such a liberal agenda. “I think  winning a primary election and winning a general election are two  different things,” said Sen. Michael F. Bennet (D-Colo.), a failed 2020  presidential contender himself. 
Others say the key is forging  unity once the presidential primary contest is settled, bringing  together all sides to help Democratic chances up and down the ballot.  “I’m not in the freakout caucus. I think the main thing is that we need  to come together and support the eventual nominee, whoever that nominee  is,” said Sen. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, who has previously chaired  House and Senate campaign committees. 
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Still  others just avoid the topic. “I’m supporting whoever the Democratic  candidate for president is,” said Sen. Gary Peters (Mich.), one of the  few Democrats running a tough reelection campaign this year. 
Sanders  arrived in the Senate in 2007 after 16 years in the House, an  iconoclast with big ideas and not a lot of legislative gravitas. He was  neither loathed nor loved. 
Then, 
in April 2015, Sanders  went to the northeast corner of the Capitol lawn, and with no  supporters around and just a few staff members, announced his long-shot  bid for the Democratic presidential nomination against Hillary Clinton. 
Five  years later, Sanders, who is not even a registered Democrat, is easily  the most well-known member of the Senate caucus, pledging a “revolution”  that has vaulted him to the top of the 2020 field and left his  colleagues wondering what comes next. 
Officially, the mantra for  Senate candidates is to stick to the 2018 campaign themes that House  Democrats used to win the majority, focusing on pocketbook issues such  as the cost of health care and prescription drugs while promising a  corruption-free government. 
“If you’re in your state and you’re  talking to constituents about those kitchen-table issues that matter to  them, that’s what they’re going to remember when they go to vote,” Sen.  Catherine Cortez Masto (Nev.), chairwoman of the Democratic Senatorial  Campaign Committee, said in an interview on Tuesday. 
Cortez  Masto, whose home state delivered Sanders an overwhelming caucus win on  Saturday, cited her experience in 2016 as she ran and won in a state  that also was hotly contested in the Clinton-Trump race. “So yes, there  is a presidential [race] going on, but at the end of the day, [voters]  are going to be able to see you, because you’re going to be able to  spend more time in your state,” she said. 
Yet most senators and  analysts understand how closely Senate races can track with presidential  races. In Nevada, for example, Clinton and Cortez Masto both won by  exactly 2.4 percentage points. 
Bennet, a moderate, struggled to  raise money in the Democratic primary and quit the race this month after  finishing with less than 1 percent in New Hampshire. He ran the  Democrat Senatorial Campaign Committee in 2014, when President Barack  Obama’s low approval rating contributed to a nine-seat loss for  Democrats. 
Heading into the 2020 primaries, Bennet said he hoped  for a presidential nominee who could lift Democrats to a big Senate  majority to pass some of the more sweeping legislative proposals. He  paused for 17 seconds on Monday evening when asked about the potential  of a Sanders nomination. 
“We need to nominate somebody in this  process who is going to be able to win purple states like Colorado and  lead us to a 55-senator majority in the Senate. That could be  challenging,” he said. 
Part of the issue comes from Sanders’s  proposals, such as Medicare-for-all, with their multitrillion-dollar  price tags. He has 14 co-sponsors for that proposal. 
But  Sanders’s past includes controversial statements about socialist  leaders, some of which were re-aired in Sunday’s “60 Minutes” episode  when, during an interview last week, he applauded Fidel Castro’s  literacy programs in Cuba. 
“Listen, I’m sure that all of those  political prisoners languishing in Castro’s jails, I’m sure all of those  who were shot on a firing squad, I’m sure all of those who were  tortured and live in New Jersey and can tell you their stories, would  find the literacy program to really be worthy of losing all of their  freedoms and all of their rights,” Sen. Robert Menendez (N.J.), the only  Cuban American in the Democratic caucus, said Monday night. 
Menendez  said Sanders made a bad mistake that would hurt him in the campaign.  “It would definitely affect the race in terms of what people think,”  said Menendez, who ran the senatorial campaign committee in 2010. 
Sanders has eight congressional endorsements, but just one is from a senator — fellow Vermonter Patrick J. Leahy (D). 
But  many Senate Democrats think that, if he runs a disciplined and unified  campaign, Sanders, 78, can win. “I think that whoever the nominee is,  the race is going to be about Trump betraying workers, and it can work  for any number of Democrats,” Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio said. 
“We  have a lot of great candidates, including a good number of my senator  friends. I think every one of them will beat Trump,” Senate Minority  Leader Charles E. Schumer (N.Y.) said. 
Sanders, as he did at  Tuesday’s debate in Charleston, S.C., is fond of mentioning polls  showing him ahead of Trump nationally and in several of the key  Midwestern battleground states. 
But a couple of hours before the  debate, Van Hollen noted that Democrats need unity above all else. “The  thing I really want to hear tonight, after people talk about their  disagreements, is each of them pledging to support 100 percent the  nominee,” he said. 
However, the debate often devolved into a shouting match as the candidates talked over each other and took personal shots. 
So, for now, some Democrats are planning their own campaigns regardless of who is at the top of the ticket. 
An  underappreciated politician, Peters defeated a 16-year veteran House  Republican in 2008, won reelection two years later in a brutal political  climate and won his Senate seat in the tough 2014 season. 
“I’ve  always been able to run above the Democratic base. I run my own race  based on my own issues. So whoever the Democratic candidate is, I’ll be  supporting,” he said. 
Unease in the Fascist DFPST's over the $60 Trillion Senator.  You go Bernie - leadinig the Fascist DPST lemmings right over the cliff. 
Even nazi pelosi is now on board for Bernie- after repudiating socidalism - she has recanted and joined the Fascist DPST ideolology whole-heartedly!!!
We may well have a new SOH after the election - Kevin Mccarthy!