Seems like a good time to look back and see who endorsed Kyrsten Sinema in her 2018 primary against the @justicedems supported candidate.
You all got what you wanted, I don't see why you're complaining now
Here's a piece from 2017 asking one of the beltway media's favorite "millennial progressive" stand-in @jonfavs not to endorse Sinema, outlining her terrible voting record.
Here's the rest of Sinema's 2018 primary endorsements (and link: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018_Unit…)
of course the @dscc endorsement means she was hand-picked by the party. Looking at all those establishment advocacy groups that she's currently screwing over with her withheld votes rn.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Twitter’s nanny state language is just like every other tech company, and it’s hilarious they’re attempting to push HR-approved discourse to their users when they know full well that most people use Twitter to explicitly free themselves from that kind of surveillance
For those wondering why Bernie argued in 2016 for superdelegates in their states to honor the winner of that state, a thread of how SDs marginalized his wins:
New Hampshire:
BS 60.1%, HRC 37.7%
Delegates:
BS: 16, HRC: 15 (5 more SD)
Sanders won both of these states, but Hillary got more total delegates because of superdelegates: