Entrepreneur Andrew Yang's quixotic U.S. presidential campaign gets
serious
Send a link to a friend
[October 14, 2019]
By Joseph Ax
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Entrepreneur Andrew
Yang knows most people initially viewed his candidacy for U.S. president
– and his campaign promise to guarantee every American a basic,
government-funded income – as a gimmick.
"You all heard at some point there's an Asian man running for president
who wants to give everyone $1,000 a month," the 44-year-old New York
Democrat said to laughter and cheers inside a packed union hall this
month in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Then he turned serious: "We're in an era of economic change, and we need
to think differently."
That way of thinking has propelled Yang, the Ivy League-educated son of
Taiwanese immigrants who would be the country's first Asian-American
president, from what many considered to be an entertaining diversion to
a mainstream contender for the Democratic presidential nomination in
2020.
Now Yang's campaign, which began in 2017 but has seen its fortunes rise
sharply in recent months, is rushing to catch up with rivals.
He stands near 3% in the latest public opinion polls, putting him in
sixth place in the 19-candidate field ahead of numerous sitting
lawmakers. His $10 million fundraising haul in the third quarter was the
sixth-most among Democrats and more than triple his total for the second
quarter.
Most importantly, he continues to inspire a fervent following known as
the Yang Gang, supporters who wear blue "MATH" hats - a tribute to
Yang's devotion to data that has since become an acronym for "Make
America Think Harder" - and revel in his "nerdy" campaign.
When Yang promised to become the first president to use PowerPoint in a
State of the Union address, the Las Vegas crowd chanted, "PowerPoint!
PowerPoint!"
Yang's central message – that automation is destroying U.S. jobs and
that his "Freedom Dividend" is the best way to mitigate the damage – has
particularly resonated with young, male Democrats, independents and some
Republicans, according to Reuters/Ipsos polls.
In that sense, Yang appears to be drawing many of the same types of
voters U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders did in his unexpectedly strong
outsider run for the White House in 2016.
According to Reuters polling data, Sanders supporters are three times as
likely to choose Yang as their second favorite than backers of either
U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren or former Vice President Joe Biden, the
other two leading contenders.
Las Vegas resident Kelsey McCormick, 30, said she "fell in love" with
Yang after hearing about his universal basic income proposal.
"It's refreshing for a politician to say he'll give people what they
need without telling them how to use it," she said.
BUILDING A 'YANG GANG' GROUND GAME
Buoyed by last quarter's cash infusion, Yang's team is aggressively
hiring in the early voting states of Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and
South Carolina, just in time for the crucial stretch ahead of the first
nominating contests in February.
[to top of second column]
|
Democratic 2020 U.S. presidential candidate and entrepreneur Andrew
Yang greets supporters at the New Hampshire Democratic Party state
convention in Manchester, New Hampshire, U.S. September 7, 2019.
REUTERS/Gretchen Ertl
Yang's aides, while reluctant to share precise figures, said the
campaign staff - currently in excess of 75 - had tripled since Sept. 1
and would triple again by Nov. 1.
The hiring spree is aimed at translating Yang's online strength –
including Yang Gang volunteers across the country – into
on-the-ground operations such as neighborhood canvassing and phone
banks.
Several Democratic officials in New Hampshire and Iowa said Yang's
ground operations still lag well behind those of his main rivals,
including Warren, Biden, Sanders and others, who were able to build
up teams earlier in the year.
Last week, Yang staffers held a two-day retreat in New York City,
where they mapped out strategy and played appropriately nerdy
bonding games, like presidential trivia.
The campaign, whose top aides early on were all political neophytes,
has brought on more than a half-dozen seasoned Democratic operatives
since the summer.
One of those new hires is national organizing director Zach Fang,
who oversaw field operations in several states for Sanders' 2016
campaign and previously worked for Democratic U.S. Representative
Tim Ryan's presidential campaign this year.
Like many of Yang's supporters, Fang said he joined because Yang's
focus on automation made sense to him after he spent time working in
Silicon Valley, where he saw firsthand the way technology was
threatening traditional work.
"There was no one else saying what Andrew was saying," Fang said. "I
didn't realize how many other 'me's' there were out there in the
world."
During the Las Vegas town hall, Yang dismissed the various theories
propagated by cable television pundits as reasons for Trump's
victory in 2016: racism, Russia, Hillary Clinton.
"The real catalyst and the numbers – I'm a numbers guy – is that we
automated away four million manufacturing jobs in Michigan, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Iowa," he said. "And if that list of states
sounds familiar, those are the states that Donald Trump needed to
win, and did win."
Yang said Nevada, which relies heavily on its hospitality industry,
will lose more jobs to automation than any other state, noting that
MGM Resorts International has announced plans to replace bartenders
with robots at its casinos.
"We're in the midst of the greatest economic transformation in the
history of our country, what experts are calling the fourth
industrial revolution," he said. "When is the last time you heard a
politician say the words 'fourth industrial revolution'?"
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Daniel
Wallis)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |