Technically, Sanders still isn't a Democrat.
And his supporters wonder why the Democratic party hasn't been supportive of his campaign. Why would they be if he's only a Democrat when he wants to run for President?
Berners by and large are ... not bright. Frankly, many of the ones I ran into at the county and state conventions in 2016 were cut from the same cloth as HBs like cambo. Ignorant
and entitled. Also apparently incapable of simple arithmetic. Sanders actually won the primary in Travis County something like 51% to 49%, but the representation at the county convention was roughly 60% Clinton supporters, 40% Sanders supporters.
Now, the one core truth about politics is that you win by showing up. Even though Sanders had won the primary (barely), Sanders supporters simply did not show up to the county convention, and by a significant margin. Apparently, in Berner-world, you win simply by being more
annoying passionate and committed to your candidate.
It turned out that everyone who showed up at the county convention was eligible to be a delegate at the state level
1. Towards the end of the day there was a resolution to forego precinct-level caucusing and automatically make everyone who showed up delegates for the state convention, which passed handily. The Sanders contingent pitched a blue-lipped fit, arguing that it wasn't
faaaaaiiiir that they wouldn't get equal (or greater) representation based on who actually
showed up. And they pointed out that
of course fewer Sanders supporters showed up to the county convention because it was scheduled during SXSW, and
everyone knew that young people overwhelmingly supported Sanders, so the whole process was disenfranchising and inherently biased against Bernie.
The dipshittery didn't end there, either. Shenanigans at the state convention had me wanting to hit people with a tire iron. I suddenly understood all the Truman-era Democrats at the 1968 convention in Chicago, wondering just what the hell was going on.
And when Bernie wasn't the nominee, they voted for Trump. Because.
1. Texas (or at least the Democratic Party in Texas) changed the rules in 2016. Prior to that year, we held both primaries (to select candidates) and caucuses (to select delegates to the county and state conventions). We did away with the caucus in 2016, so anyone who voted in the primary was eligible to go to the county convention. There were enough slots available at the state convention that everyone who showed up to the county convention was eligible to serve as a delegate to the state convention.