“I am not a great fan of Uber—you can quote me on that,” declared Democratic hopeful Bernie Sanders in August. The main reason he has “serious problems” with the ride-sharing service? It’s “unregulated,” he told Bloomberg. In this, if little else, Sanders finds himself in agreement with rival Hillary Clinton, who decried the “gig economy” in a major economic address around the same time last summer.
On the face of it, the sharing economy should make people of virtually all political stripes feel warm and fuzzy. Nearly any 21st century stump speech is going to be full of buzzwords—entrepreneurship, fairness, choice, opportunity, consumer empowerment, flexibility—that best describe this fast-growing commercial sector. The vast majority of people who have taken an Uber, shopped on Etsy, or found a place to stay…
