Independent reporting on American politics
STATE BEACON

Chris Matthews Stumps Chuck Schumer on Difference Between Socialist, Democrat

Chris Matthews makes another Democrat squirm when he asks Chuck Schumer to give the difference between a socialist and a Democrat.

By Blake Seitz·
Chris Matthews Stumps Chuck Schumer on Difference Between Socialist, Democrat

MSNBC host Chris Matthews indulged in a favorite hobby on Tuesday: making Democratic lawmakers uncomfortable by asking if their party is socialist.

Matthews reserved over a minute of a two-minute interview to question Sen. Chuck Schumer (D., N.Y.) on the subject.

"What’s the difference between a socialist and a Democrat?" Matthews asked.

"Oh, it depends how you define each one, doesn’t it?" Schumer said.

"Well, you do it," Matthews said with a fat grin.

"Well, I’m not going to get into it," Schumer said with an equally fat—though probably strained—grin.

Matthews didn’t drop the subject without a fight.

"You guys are well-schooled in political language and nomenclature. You’re quite capable of defining the difference between a socialist, self-described and a Democrat self-described. What is it?" Matthews asked.

Schumer responded that he had nothing bad to say about his socialist colleague Sen. Bernie Sanders (I., Vt.), but did not address the difference between a socialist and a Democrat.

Matthews seemed to think this omission was telling.

"You’ve told me so much. Whenever I hear you not speak, it teaches me a great deal," Matthews said.

So far no Democratic lawmaker has risen to Matthews’ challenge on-air, possibly because they have to court the votes of both liberal Democrats and self-described moderates.

Sanders, a socialist, is polling in first place in the Democratic primary in two crucial early states. Americans as a whole tend to view socialism unfavorably.