Bernie Sanders to online trolls: Stop 'ugly personal attacks'
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[February 14, 2020]
By Simon Lewis
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Democratic
presidential contender Bernie Sanders on Thursday urged an end to online
"bullying or ugly personal attacks" after a powerful
hospitality-industry union in Nevada accused his supporters of
harassment.
The Culinary Workers Union said supporters of Sanders, a front-runner in
the Democratic White House race, "viciously" attacked the organization
via Twitter, text, voicemail and direct messaging after the union
criticized the senator's universal healthcare plan on Tuesday.
Sanders, a progressive who bills himself as a champion of organized
labor, did not acknowledge his own supporters' alleged abusive behavior
specifically and applied his call for an end to harassment to all
campaigns' backers, but said members of his movement must be
"respectful."
"Harassment of all forms is unacceptable to me, and we urge supporters
of all campaigns not to engage in bullying or ugly personal attacks," he
said in a statement.
In an interview on "PBS NewsHour" on Thursday, Sanders added: "Anybody
making personal attacks against anybody else in my name is not part of
our movement. We don't want them. And I’m not so sure, to be honest with
you, that they are necessarily part of our movement.”
Sanders won the most votes in Democratic nominating contests in Iowa and
New Hampshire this month. The next contests in the state-by-state battle
to pick a candidate to face Republican President Donald Trump in
November's election are in Nevada on Feb. 22 and South Carolina on Feb.
29.
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Democratic U.S. presidential candidate Senator Bernie Sanders
arrives at his New Hampshire primary night rally in Manchester, N.H.,
U.S., February 11, 2020. REUTERS/Rick Wilking
Sanders' opponents have frequently criticized his legion of online
supporters for engaging in attacks, including those aimed at female
candidates such as his 2020 rival Senator Elizabeth Warren and
former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who defeated him for the
2016 Democratic nomination.
He previously urged his supporters to engage in civil discourse, but
his backers have argued that they have been unfairly maligned.
The 60,000-member Nevada union, with outsized influence in a state
heavily dependent on tourism, said on Thursday it would not endorse
a presidential candidate, but warned its members that Sanders'
Medicare for All proposal, which would replace private health
insurance with a government-run program, could put their hard-won
union health coverage at risk.
(Reporting by Simon Lewis; Editing by Ginger Gibson and Peter
Cooney)
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