so, a couple of things. i realize that this perspective is very unpopular on this community, and i apologise in advance. playing devil's advocate is not something that i'd imagine people particularly enjoy doing, but i feel like it's necessary for some food for thought sometimes. this, i feel, is one of those times.
i'd like to preface this post by saying that out of everyone on the current democratic field, i'd vote for Bernie Sanders a hundred times over. ideologically, i feel like my views align with his the most. i'm a struggling college student, i avoid hospitals (i shouldn't, but y'know...'murica) because i really don't want to deal with the medical bills, and im currently working a job that doesn't pay me nearly enough to survive. all of these things combined make me a prime target for the foundation of what Sanders is talking about, and in a lot of ways, he's right. this country is fundamentally broken is a lot of ways and i feel, imo, that he's the best candidate to fix those, our national debt be damned. fiscal republicans and democrats can bitch about it all they want, economically speaking as long as our interest rate is low and our economy is "good" (read: no recession), the larger number is meaningless. a government being in debt is not the same as an individual being in debt and i think that's what a lot of people don't realize.
anyway, onto my main point... which is that it's worth taking a step back and thinking about why Joe Biden appeals to a lot of people to begin with. i think it's quite tunnel-visioned to say that his appeal lies just in the fact that he's a moderate. sure, that's a part of it, he's certainly a moderate compared to literally anything Sanders offers, but the biggest contrast that i see between Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders is the execution of their message. this basically means that while the substance of what you say is important, how you say it is more important. if you don't believe me, consider how many times you've heard (if you have, that is) that Hillary Clinton sounds "inauthentic" and "fake" in comparison to Sanders in 2016. Sanders gave a message of revolution which was strong, Clinton sounded flat in comparison. she sounded boring, corporate and at a lot of times, stiff in her speeches. Sanders in that same time period was a new face that REALLY riled up the anger that young people felt towards the government during that time and wanted a complete overhaul of how things were done, and kickstarted the rise of the progressive movement.
how your message comes across and how you deliver it speaks volumes to people. this is the biggest reason why Sanders, as far as im aware, has been struggling a lot with expanding his base. people who vote for him agree with the bigger picture of his platform (i mean duh, but i'll get to why this matters) and also are the people who are directly most impacted by it. it's imperative that the US finally be brought to the 21st century as far as healthcare is concerned and it's ridiculous that college costs as much as it has, among other things like eliminating student debt and the like, you get the point. Sanders' policies to his supporters make sense on a logical level.
Joe Biden is different in the sense that he focuses a lot on the execution of his message rather than the substance of it. personally speaking i don't remember a damn thing that Biden has promised as the top issue that he plans to tackle rather than turning the clock and things being as the were back in the Obama era except i think Biden is slightly more left, but that'd be about the only difference. i mean, everyone is already familiar with his gaffes and stumps by now but like... Biden's personality as an affable old man who hugs people a lot, talks about his dead son a lot and in general speaks about things in a much more emotional, humanistic way makes people feel like he cares about them on an individual level. whether you personally feel he actually does or not is irrelevant, but it's the biggest difference between the two and quite the stark difference, at that.
Sanders does very little of this, in contrast. it's more often "the 1%" "the millionaires and the billionaires" and (insert something negative about the Democratic Party here). i mean, yeah, logically, he's right, but despite being right, he ends up pissing a lot of people off and if not doing that, he ends up looking disconnected to the average voter. the thing is, Sanders spills out hard truths that people don't want to hear, but need to. his supporters are more often than not people who resonate with those hard truths in wanting to weed out corruption in government. and look, it's not that Biden supporters are in some super different camp when it comes to wanting corruption out of government, but they feel that Biden's more "friendlier" image is better for the job as they prioritise that execution more than a guy who constantly sounds like his default speaking voice is like 75 decibels.
a lot people also think Biden's "dementia" is going to bite him in the ass against Trump in the debates and i've seen countless upon countless times that people fear that Trump is going to demolish Biden, but let's not forget that Trump lost all three debates against Clinton yet that wasn't a guarantee for her to get into the white house. Trump is not some debating mastermind like some people think he is, he's an incompetent moron. he didn't win the presidency because of his debate skills, he won the presidency in part because he delivered his message in an effective way and convinced enough people that he was an outsider moderate republican that was going to change things for the better instead of the same old corporate dc bullshit. despite his electoral college win, it's not like Trump won important states by a landslide. Florida was won by a percent and some change, Pennsylvania was won by a thinner margin, and North Carolina was won by 3%, and Michigan was won by like less than half a percent?
anyway the tl;dr of all of this is to provide a different perspective of sorts. it'll be interesting to see what happens in the coming months as to whether or not Biden maintains his lead or whether Sanders catches up.