Just a quick little slightly off topic tangent as a centrist and supporter of Bernie myself. "Clinton and the centrists are bad," I don't believe centrists were Clinton's main voter base at all (If nothing else she was going for the usual base that democrats have gone with for at least 30 years now). Don't get me wrong people say centrists are bad, as experience has shown me most political groups take one look at centrists and say choose a side! And when centrists say, "We're our own side because we equally like and hate points on both of your sides" generally the more radical group in question throws you to the opposite side. Case in point how any extreme Lefty stereotypical SJW types *cough* antifa *cough* will call any centrist who disagrees with them on just about anything, Alt-Right or even further a Nazi. (Continuing to diminish the power of that word among many others such as racist, sexist, homophobic and many more words that really need to keep their meaning do to the real issues they represent.)
Anyways just wanted to say that I don't believe the term centrist would be correct in who Clinton's supporters were. I would agree with the argument that centrists also receive a lot of the heat for letting that orange troll doll reject into the oval office, and thus the statement "Clinton and centrists are bad."
Sorry if I was reading too much into that, not trying to start a fight just wanted to take a moment to clear that up.
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On the party situation, I would agree that we will probably end up with another two party system eventually,(Though perhaps we'll see independents like myself become relevant for the first time since George Washington) but I have a feeling, depending on how things swing in coming years that the Electoral college will probably not survive another election.
Sorry, perhaps my terminology was inaccurate. By "centrists", I meant neoliberals, who are toward the center of the global left-right spectrum. And when I said "Clinton and the centrists", I meant Clinton and the neoliberal establishment in the DNC and the party in general, not those who vote for them. And when I said "Clinton and the centrists are bad", I was saying that's what Brazile was metaphorically saying with this article to distance herself from the neoliberal establishment.
I'm not saying centrists or neoliberals are bad (having a range of political ideas is ideal), but when the Democratic Party is
the left-wing party but often don't represent left-wing policies, it's easy to criticize the party. If you're gonna be the left-wing party, be the left-wing party, dammit! The usual (center-left) Democratic voter base is obviously not enough to win elections. So the party shifted towards the right rather than left (as seen over the past 40 or so years), making it a more centrist party rather than outright left-wing, and that's likely to continue in order to take those much-wanted center/right-wing votes from the Republicans (who control both houses of Congress, the executive branch, the Supreme Court, a majority of state governorships, and a majority of both houses of state legislatures). I'm arguing that Bernie and the progressive wing (i.e. those actually left-wing) are the future of the Democratic party as more and more left-wing voters will get fed up with being unrepresented and so will eventually take control.
As I said in a post above, I definitely think that neoliberals (as well as those self-identified centrists) should each have their own party so that there is no ideological splintering or pandering. And since the neoliberals are in power now, their best chance to survive would be to push for electoral reform, removing FPTP voting, which would allow for the viable formation of other parties. 2 big-tent parties obviously leaves the majority of voters dissatisfied, so why not allow people to group together into parties that actually represent their members?
With our current FPTP voting system, there will almost certainly only ever be just two major parties, so by definition, independents will unfortunately almost never be voted in (hence why Bernie had to run for the Democratic nomination). And with the Republicans in power, the Electoral College sadly ain't goin' nowhere.