Liberal
U.S. Senator Sanders to challenge Clinton in 2016 race
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[May 01, 2015]
By Emily Stephenson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senator Bernie
Sanders, an independent from Vermont, launched a long-shot bid for the
2016 Democratic presidential nomination on Thursday, a move likely to
pressure Hillary Clinton from the left on issues from income inequality
to corporate governance.
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Sanders, one of the most outspoken liberals in Congress, called
for rebuilding the middle class and reducing the influence of
wealthy Americans and businesses on U.S. elections.
"This country today, in my view, has more serious crises than at any
time since the Great Depression," Sanders said at a news conference
outside the U.S. Capitol. "How do we create an economy that works
for all of our people, rather than a small number of billionaires?"
The 73-year-old, second-term senator faces long odds against the
fund-raising might and name recognition of Clinton - the Democratic
front-runner and former U.S. secretary of state, senator and first
lady - to head the Democratic presidential slate in the November
2016 election.
Sanders highlighted his fight against authorizing the Iraq war,
which Clinton voted for as a senator, and his opposition to trade
deals that liberals and labor unions fear could hurt American
workers.
Clinton has not expressed her position but said trade deals should
help workers and protect U.S. security.
Clinton said on Twitter that she welcomed Sanders to the race.
"I agree with Bernie. Focus must be on helping America's middle
class," she wrote, saying Republicans would harm that group.
Sanders, a former Burlington, Vermont, mayor and former member of
the U.S. House of Representatives, said he would campaign as an
"independent Democrat," saying a third-party candidacy would be too
expensive.
As an independent, Sanders belongs to neither the predominant
Democratic or Republican parties. However, like fellow independent
Senator Angus King of Maine, he attends Democratic strategy meetings
in Congress.
He has cultivated a liberal following for defending expanding Social
Security and raising taxes on the wealthy.
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The Brooklyn native calls himself a "democratic socialist," and says
voters know that is different from foreign leaders who call
themselves socialists.
His entry could nudge Clinton to take more liberal positions. It
could also give her cover against complaints that she will coast to
the nomination untested.
Some could see Sanders as a substitute for U.S. Senator Elizabeth
Warren of Massachusetts, a darling of the left who has said she is
not running. Erica Sagrans of Ready for Warren said in a statement
the group was "excited" Sanders is running but wants Warren to jump
in.
Similar pressure comes from former Maryland Governor Martin
O'Malley, who has not entered the race but has staked out liberal
positions on issues such as trade.
Sanders' run is in line with a long Democratic tradition of
insurgent liberal candidates challenging more mainstream hopefuls
for the party presidential nomination.
(Additional reporting by Richard Cowan and Susan Heavey; Editing by
Alden Bentley, Jeffrey Benkoe and Jonathan Oatis)
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