Bernie Sanders, stuck in Trump's trial, leans on star power of 'AOC'
Send a link to a friend
[January 27, 2020]
By Simon Lewis
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (Reuters) - U.S.
presidential candidate Bernie Sanders drew large, passionate crowds in
Iowa this weekend, even when he was not there.
The U.S. Senator from Vermont has been rising in opinion polls just as
Iowans prepare to pick their choice of Democratic presidential nominee
on Feb. 3, but has been stuck in Washington, where he is serving as a
juror in Republican President Donald Trump's impeachment trial.
In lieu of the candidate himself, Sanders supporter Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,
a first term U.S. congresswoman from New York, has proven almost as much
of a draw, filling rallies and town halls and galvanizing members of
what she called a "mass movement" led by Sanders to push progressive
politics.
"It doesn't rely on any one person to carry this whole movement on their
back. We all shoulder a little," she told a group of volunteers going
out to canvass for Sanders in Cedar Rapids on Saturday morning.
The strong turnout for Sanders even in his absence underscores the
strength of his young and diverse base of supporters, who have rallied
behind his unapologetic liberalism. But it also shows as much enthusiasm
for 30-year-old Ocasio-Cortez, who became a star of U.S. left-wing
politics after being elected to the House of Representatives in 2018.
Interviews with a dozen prospective caucus-goers over two days showed
her backing had lent Sanders a degree of youth appeal and bolstered his
progressive credentials, especially on Ocasio-Cortez's signature issue
of tackling climate change.
Sanders, proposing tax hikes for the wealthy and corporations to fund
measures such as universal government-run healthcare and tuition-free
college, is rising just as the first voting nears, according to a
Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll this week, polling at 20% and just behind Joe
Biden, the front-runner and former vice president.
In Iowa, whose first-in-the-nation caucuses have an outsized role in
picking presidential nominees, Sanders is leading some polls or in a
statistical tie with Biden and Pete Buttigieg, the former mayor of South
Bend, Indiana.
His rise has come since Ocasio-Cortez, wildly popular among progressives
and known for her bare-all social media presence, formally endorsed him
in October just after a heart attack threatened to cut short his second
run for president.
"It gave him a needed boost at an important time, but also I think it
signaled for a lot of young progressive people that this is the campaign
that we should throw down for," said Sayles Kasten, Iowa State director
for the Sunrise Movement, a youth group organizing on climate change
that endorsed Sanders this month.
Grant Woodard, an Iowa lawyer and former Democratic political operative
in the state, said Ocasio-Cortez and filmmaker Michael Moore, who
campaigned alongside her this week, were "cat nip" to Sanders' base, but
were not likely to expand his appeal to moderate Democrats.
Sanders, an avowed Democratic Socialist, remains a "polarizing figure in
the party," he said.
"I guess we'll see as this plays out how much of a thirst for Democratic
Socialism there in the national Democratic Party. I don't know if it's
that great," said Woodard.
STAR POWER
All the Democrats running for president are sending out high-profile
allies, Hollywood stars and family members to campaign on their behalf
or alongside them, but few attract the level of excitement seen for
Ocasio-Cortez, better known by her initials AOC.
[to top of second column]
|
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez speaks at a Democratic 2020 U.S.
presidential candidate and U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT)
campaign rally in Ames, Iowa, U.S., January 25, 2020. REUTERS/Ivan
Alvarado
On Friday night, Sanders' voice boomed in briefly at a college hall
in Iowa City when he called in from Washington by phone after the
day's impeachment trial proceedings, but it was Ocasio-Cortez who
got a rock-star welcome from the crowd of more than 800.
"She's actually talking about issues that other politicians don't
bring up regularly, like student debt and medical care," Max Oelmann,
19, a freshman studying social work. "I think she's good at cutting
through the bullshit, which is what a lot of people like about her."
Ocasio-Cortez, who volunteered as an organizer for Sanders' 2016
campaign, is the author of the Green New Deal congressional bill
that Sanders incorporated into his electoral platform and which
envisions massive investment in clean energy.
Her endorsement - along with the support of other high-profile
progressive lawmakers Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib - came at the
pivotal moment of Sanders' campaign in early October, when the
78-year-old was hospitalized and had two stents inserted in an
artery.
Sanders, a Brooklyn native, vowed to stay in the race and drew
nearly 26,000 people to a comeback rally alongside Ocasio-Cortez in
the New York City borough of Queens, the largest crowd for any
Democrat in the 2020 campaign.
'IF SHE ENDORSES, I'M OBVIOUSLY GOING TO LIKE HIM'
During her latest swing through Iowa this weekend, Ocasio-Cortez,
whose family hails from Puerto Rico, visited mainly colleges and
towns with Latino populations, as Sanders' campaign hopes to turnout
both students and Hispanics – groups that tend to support his
progressive platform but are historically less likely to turn out to
caucus.
Sanders joined her in Iowa for more rallies after the Senate broke
on Saturday.
Alli Marshall, 19, a junior at the University of Iowa who attended
Friday's rally, said she discovered Ocasio-Cortez through videos
showing the congresswoman grilling witnesses in hearings. In one
video that went viral on social media in October, she upbraided
Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg for failing to stop
political misinformation on his platform.
"I was all like, wow! She's awesome. She was just nailing them,"
said Marshall, adding the congresswoman's endorsement had helped her
decide to caucus for Sanders and volunteer for his campaign.
"Honestly, if she was a candidate, I would vote for her, but she's
not. So if she endorses (Sanders), I'm obviously going to like him."
(Reporting by Simon Lewis; Editing by Soyoung Kim and Alistair Bell)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |