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		 Sanders 
		says he'll seek Democratic nomination for president 
		
		 
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		[April 30, 2015] 
		WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Independent 
		U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, a self-described socialist and 
		one of the most outspoken liberals in Congress, will seek the 2016 
		Democratic nomination for president, he told U.S. media on Wednesday. 
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			 "I believe (voters) want a fundamental change so that government 
			works for ordinary Americans and not just billionaires," Sanders 
			told USA Today. He said he would make the announcement official on 
			Thursday. 
			 
			Sanders also told the Associated Press in an interview he was 
			running for president. 
			 
			With former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton looming as the 
			front-runner for the Democratic nomination in 2016, few other 
			candidates have stepped forward in the party. Former Maryland 
			Governor Martin O'Malley is expected to enter the race next month. 
			 
			Sanders told USA Today he can compete by attracting small 
			contributions from millions of Americans and mobilizing young people 
			and other volunteers to help him wage a nationwide campaign. 
			
			  "I am running in this election to win," he said. "We've got a long 
			path forward. Most people in America have never heard of Bernie 
			Sanders. More than 90 percent of Americans have heard of Hillary 
			Clinton. ... I will absolutely be out-spent. But I do believe we 
			have a chance to raise significant amounts of money through small, 
			individual contributions," he told the paper. 
			 
			Sanders, who caucuses with Democrats in the Senate, and liberal 
			Democrats such as O'Malley and Senator Elizabeth Warren of 
			Massachusetts are pressing Clinton to move to the left on economic 
			policy by embracing tighter Wall Street regulation and a more robust 
			social safety net. 
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			Sanders, 73, has especially turned up the heat on the former first 
			lady over the Trans-Pacific Partnership and a proposal to fast-track 
			the approval of the 12-nation trade pact. 
			 
			In a statement last week, Sanders blasted the TPP as a jobs-killer 
			that favors corporations. He then raised questions about where 
			Clinton stands on the issue. 
			 
			(Reporting by Eric Beech; Editing by Peter Cooney) 
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