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.

He still endorsed her in the primary. medium.com/@JTR2020/we-de…
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.

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More from @lindsayballant

6 Oct 21
Oh good lord ImageImage
lmao come on ImageImage
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
Read 5 tweets
28 Feb 20
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:

Michigan:
BS 49.8%, HRC 48.3%
Delegates:
BS: 67, HRC: 76 (13 more SD)

Indiana:
BS 52.5%, HRC 47.5%
Delegates:
BS: 44, HRC: 46 (7 more SD)
Minnesota
BS 61.6%, HRC 38.4%
Delegates:
BS: 49, HRC: 43 (9 more SD)

West Virginia
BS 51.4%, HRC 35.8%
Delegates:
BS: 20, HRC: 17 (4 more SD)

Wisconsin:
BS 56.6%, HRC 43.1%
Delegates:
BS: 49, HRC: 47 (8 more SD)

Colorado:
BS 58.9%, HRC 40.4%
Del:
BS: 41, HRC: 35 (10 more SD)
Read 11 tweets

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