How Bernie Sanders’ passionate base revitalized his campaign
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[February 10, 2020]
By Simon Lewis
DES MOINES, Iowa (Reuters) - When
Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders suffered a heart attack
in October, what upset his long-time supporter Craig Althof the most was
the way it was covered by the media.
In the opinion of 65-year-old Althof, who had a similar procedure to
Sanders to prop open an artery, journalists were too quick to write
Sanders' political obituary, speculating that the 78-year-old’s second
White House run was likely over.
"I’m a two-stent guy, just like Bernie," said the substitute teacher in
Newton, Iowa. "It opened people’s eyes that they’re out to get him."
Four months later, the progressive firebrand's turnaround -- a virtual
tie for first place with Pete Buttigieg in last week's Iowa caucuses and
another strong showing likely in New Hampshire on Tuesday - is at least
partly thanks to the passion of supporters like Althof, who says the way
the U.S. Senator was written off reminds him of the 2016 nominating race
- which Sanders ultimately lost to Hillary Clinton - all over again.
Those fans were determined that the outcome would be different this
time.
In the week following the heart attack, staff and volunteers held nearly
300 events in Iowa alone, from house parties to canvassing outings, and
made 800,000 calls in four days to early voting states including Iowa
and New Hampshire, campaign officials told Reuters at the time.
Days later, Sanders won the most sought-after progressive endorsement
from first-term Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the first of a
string of endorsements.
More than any of the other 10 Democrats vying for the right to take on
Republican President Donald Trump in November, Sanders leans heavily on
this fervent core of supporters for donations and for canvassing voters,
an approach summed up by his slogan "Not me, us."
Sipping a beer at Sanders' post-caucus party in Des Moines last week,
Michael Tunney, 34, said he traveled from Los Angeles to knock doors for
Sanders, and was planning to do the same in Nevada ahead of the caucuses
there.
“It’s easy to do because you don’t feel like you’re selling something,”
he said. “When you knock on doors you have nothing to be ashamed of,
it’s not like your a used car salesman, because you know you’re right on
all the issues."
Sanders raised $96 million in 2019, more than any other Democratic
contender. In January alone, Sanders raised $25 million, according to
the campaign, some of which would be put into the 14 states that vote on
March 3, known as Super Tuesday.
These are all strong signs Sanders may be building a progressive version
of the populist wave that swept Trump into office in 2016, observers
say.
But the analogy to Trump is exactly what makes many skeptics
uncomfortable.
Sanders' fiercest supporters can be unwilling to countenance criticism
of their candidate and seem ready to back him almost no matter what he
does.
Sanders himself has shown no interest in reaching out to the Democratic
Party's moderate wing, which rivals believe would become a major
liability if he became its nominee.
Instead, the self-described Democratic Socialist has continued to push
the message in recent weeks that he is taking on establishment
Democrats.
"We are their worst nightmare," he said in a Sioux City rally on Jan.
26, referring to the party hierarchy as well as Trump and business
interests that he said were "nervous" at the idea of him in the White
House.
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Democratic U.S. presidential candidate Senator Bernie
Sanders speaks at the Politics and Eggs event at the New
Hampshire Institute of Politics at Saint Anselm College in
Manchester, New Hampshire, U.S., February 7, 2020.
REUTERS/Mike Segar
'STAUNCH ON HIS VALUES'
That unapologetic stance may have helped him with many liberals who
had been weighing him versus fellow liberal U.S. Senator Elizabeth
Warren, who was building momentum with a similar policy platform
before Sanders' heart attack. Both support Medicare for All - a
single, government payer system that would all but eliminate private
healthcare.
Warren's separate proposals since then - that she would finance
Medicare for All without any tax increases on the middle class, and
that she would seek a gradual transition into the system - have
sparked criticism from all sides.
Moderates accused her of lying to taxpayers. And more than a dozen
Sanders supporters who had been considering Warren told Reuters in
recent weeks they saw the idea of a transition as a sign she was
moving to the center.
Sanders won 26.1% of state-delegate equivalents in Iowa's
first-in-the-nation caucuses, just behind Buttigieg's 26.2% but well
ahead of Warren, who finished third with 18%, and former vice
president Joe Biden, who had 15.8%.
"I feel like Warren is becoming less progressive to kind of cater to
Republicans. That’s what Hillary did in 2016 and it obviously didn’t
work," said Marisa Rude, 19, a freshman at the University of Iowa,
who switched from Warren to Sanders in the past month and was
volunteering for his campaign in January.
"So that’s why I’m for Bernie. I think he’s staunch on his values."
TWO DOORS A SECOND
Sanders held on to some key staff in Iowa from his 2016 campaign and
had built up a formidable organization by October, with 112 staff
working out of 16 offices.
His campaign spent nearly $6 million to air television ads 20,272
times in Iowa, according to data published last week by Wesleyan
Media Project. Only billionaire Tom Steyer and Buttigieg outspent
Sanders on TV in the state.
In Iowa, the campaign said it knocked on 500,000 doors in January.
At one point staffers and volunteers knocked on two doors every
second over a five-hour period, said Misty Rebik, Sanders' Iowa
state director.
In the days before the caucuses, Sanders' campaign was looking
strong - enough to prompt moderates to try to stop his surge, airing
television ads arguing that a socialist cannot win in many of the
states beyond Iowa.
Supporters like Rod Sanders, 53, dismissed those concerns.
"I’d rather have the guy over here who’s trying to get me the best
deal possible, instead of conceding from the start," he said. "And
maybe America needs scaring a little bit."
(Reporting by Simon Lewis; Editing by Soyoung Kim and Sonya
Hepinstall)
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