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The goal is to hold down their bases without alienating swing voters.The leading contestants in the fall White House matchup at this point, President Donald Trump and Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, don't roll that way. After all, in 2016, 12 percent of people who voted for Sanders during the Democratic primaries voted for Trump in the general election, and white working-class voters are more likely to say they will vote for Trump over Sanders than over moderate Democrats. And the House Democratic efforts to impeach and remove Trump from office over the Ukraine military aid affair were only followed by an increase in his support.Ironically, another asset for Trump is that his message rests primarily on voter grievance, while Sanders' is aspirational.
As said here by MSNBC