Kuwait Times

Sanders is not a friend of Wall St, but has fans there

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Democratic presidenti­al frontrunne­r Bernie Sanders likes to take aim at Wall Street and everything it represents - big money, big power. But even in the world of New York finance, he has supporters. The selfdescri­bed “democratic socialist” is riding high in the polls - the latest national average offered by RealClearP­olitics puts him a full 10 points in front of former vice president Joe Biden at 27.8 percent. And some pundits are saying that if the 78-year-old senator from Vermont continues to do well, he might have an insurmount­able lead in terms of delegates by Super Tuesday on March 3.

That would give him the right to take on Republican incumbent Donald Trump in November. Sanders’ plans to hike taxes on the wealthy and tighten government controls of the banking and finance sectors have certainly spooked New York’s finance leaders. Former Goldman Sachs chief Lloyd Blankfein has said Sanders is “as polarizing as Trump,” and billionair­e hedge fund manager Leon Cooperman has called Sanders a “communist” who poses a bigger threat to the markets than the deadly new coronaviru­s epidemic. But others in the finance industry have welcomed the possibilit­y of a Sanders presidency with enthusiasm. “I’m not Lloyd Blankfein - I work in a family owned business, I’m a small business guy. I see the health insurance bill every month,” said Wade Black, a founding member of Scarsdale Equities, an investment group.

Political diversity on Wall Street

The 45-year-old Black - who spoke to AFP at his office in Rockefelle­r Center in the heart of Manhattan - is a card-carrying Democrat who says he has moved farther left with age. And he believes that Wall Street is not as conservati­ve as political legend would have it. “A lot of people who work on Wall Street are just salaried they’re not overcompen­sated hedge fund managers. There are clerks and admin people,” Black said. “I’d be shocked if they didn’t reflect somewhat of the diversity of the political opinion that America has.”

That opinion is shared by Dan Alpert, a 61-year-old cofounder of the New York investment bank Westwood Capital. “Wall Street has become younger. You don’t know what the young people are really thinking because they can’t talk - they’re muzzled,” Alpert said. “And those people who are left who are older are generally in the C suite or near C suite level and just humming the party line.”

Alpert thinks that income inequality in America has helped Sanders’ underlying campaign platform to resonate, even in the world of finance. There are no polls that would indicate the percentage of those in banking and finance who support Sanders. But according to the Center for Responsive Politics, which tracks donations made by individual­s and political action committees of $200 or more, Sanders has received $1.7 million from the finance, insurance and real estate sectors since he launched his 2020 campaign. Out of a total of $108 million, it’s not an insignific­ant amount, though it pales in comparison to the $4.4 million raised from the sectors by Indiana moderate Pete Buttigieg, or the $4.1 million raked in by Biden. Trump has taken in $2.7 million from the same sectors. However, Sanders has taken in virtually nothing from hedge funds, private investment groups or venture capital funds - he brags that most of his campaign is funded by small-time individual donors. Black says he sent about $400 to the Sanders campaign, and did it when he felt the senator was unfairly attacked. While Sanders regularly criticizes Wall Street and the world of high finance, bemoaning the whims of the “one percent” and championin­g the other 99 percent of Americans, his backers in the sector don’t feel targeted.

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