Weekend Herald

Feel the Bern

Inside uncle Bernie’s political machine

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Vermont senator Bernie Sanders, at 78, has defied the pundits to edge closer to the Democratic nomination. Behind him is a formidable machine.

By the fall of 2018, when Democrats were promoting a slate of centrist candidates to topple Republican­s in Congress, Bernie Sanders was seeing a very different picture.

The Vermont senator and avowed democratic socialist was convinced his most fervent supporters were as energised as ever, ready to rally around the political insurgency flag he planted in 2016. He could keep stoking the deep frustratio­n and mistrust of the political system and attract backers who had felt too disillusio­ned to bother voting in the past — much like President Donald Trump had on the right.

Sanders, 78, the oldest candidate in the race, also saw his unwavering commitment to universal health care, combating climate change, canceling student debt, and tuition-free college continuing to excite young people, including Latinos who came to call him “Tio” (uncle) Bernie.

And, most importantl­y, he was sure he’d have the money, built on mostly small donations made online from around the country, to finish what he started in 2016, rising from an unknown nationally to a credible challenger to Hillary Clinton for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination.

This time, Sanders’ movement has a political machine to propel it.

“Last time, we really did not know how this would go with our fundraisin­g model,” said Jeff Weaver, Sanders’ senior adviser. “It ended up being US$240 million [$380m], but we had no way of knowing that in the spring of 2015, so we were very slow to staff-up in early states. This time, we did things very differentl­y. We knew we were a front-runner.”

Now everyone else knows it, too. Sanders’ lopsided win in Nevada capped his remarkable transforma­tion from political insurgent to possibly even a favourite to face off with Trump in November. Both have campaigns built on mobilising die-hard loyalists but also disaffecte­d voters — even though their politics are polar opposite.

“The Trump Democrats are people that got abandoned by the Democrat Party and Bernie was straightfo­rward about that,” said Jim Hightower, a populist former Texas agricultur­e commission­er who endorsed Sanders in 2016 and remains loyal to him.

Sanders’ impressive campaign bank account has helped keep many others loyal to him as well. He raised nearly US$96m by the end of last year, raked in an additional US$25m in January and has vowed to raise and spend US$1 billion to defeat Trump in November. His donors are like a faucet that he can turn on as needed because they contribute in small amounts, with little concern of exceeding federal limits.

That stream of cash has also meant Sanders could build a more profession­al operation, with longerrang­e planning and better organisati­onal structure. His last campaign didn’t even have a human resources department, something that allowed multiple accusation­s of sexual harassment among staff to fester and forced Sanders to apologise before launching his 2020 bid. This time, Sanders has emphasised hiring more women and minorities to top positions, including Faiz Shakir, a Pakistani-American, who is the first Muslim to manage a major presidenti­al campaign.

Beyond money and organisati­on, Sanders has also worked to better frame issues. After he struggled in 2016 with foreign policy, Sanders spent the years between presidenti­al runs giving speeches about America’s place in the world and became an especially vocal critic of US efforts to help Saudi Arabia fight a war against insurgents backed by Iran in Yemen.

He also worked for change within the structure of the national Democratic Party, muscling through rules changes that helped his campaign this time. “Superdeleg­ates”, mainly elected officials and party leaders, helped Clinton secure the party’s nomination four year ago. Sanders supporters helped force a change to limit their influence.

And his campaign drove changes in the way Iowa reported its caucus results by reporting voters’ first preference in addition to how many delegates a campaign won. That’s allowed Sanders to crow about edging Pete Buttigieg, in the popular vote, even though they essentiall­y tied in the number of delegates awarded.

“One way to put it is the 2016 campaign was compost the 2020 campaign has grown out of,” said Norman Solomon, co-founder of the RootsActio­n.org and a Sanders

delegate to the 2016 Democratic National Convention. “A lot of campaigns go boom and then go bust. Bernie is still booming.”

It didn’t always seem that way. Sanders joined the 2020 race with polling that was largely stable but not overly impressive, showing him among the leaders with former Vice President Joe Biden, but potentiall­y with less room for growth than newcomers like Buttigieg.

To improve his standing, Sanders began hiring staff in Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada far faster than in 2016 when “he wasn’t well-known and it took a while for people to catch on”, said Jane Sanders, the senator’s wife and close adviser.

“They didn’t know him throughout all of the country and that hurt,” she said. “They do now.”

Rather than introducin­g himself to voters, Sanders focused on attracting Iowans who traditiona­lly didn’t vote, hiring students who lobbied their classmates. He ultimately won nine of the 13 precincts with more than 20 per cent of registered voters under 23.

Sanders also activated volunteers nationwide who supported him in

2016 and began pouring into Iowa as the election neared. By just before caucus night, his campaign said about

1700 out-of-state volunteers arrived. “I think a lot of people wanted change in the Obama years and we didn’t see enough,” said Boyd Walker, a 51-year-old real estate investor who drove from his home in Virginia to volunteer in Iowa for Sanders in the weeks before the caucus. “Now we’re really ready for change.”

The campaign also concentrat­ed on 87 satellite caucuses, sites which Sanders supporters had lobbied for and which were designed to make voting more accessible for people unable to attend traditiona­l caucuses — which, in some cases, were college students and minority voters.

The campaign said it built similarly strong racially diverse support in heavily Hispanic Nevada, where Sanders advertised in Spanishlan­guage media and organised more than 30 events in Spanish, including a town hall led by one of his top supporters, New York Representa­ive Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez.

It is attempting to do the same in California and Texas, the largest states voting on Super Tuesday and home to 13.5 million eligible Hispanic voters. During a rally in San Antonio, organisers led the more than 1500 people in the crowd — some of whom didn’t speak even basic Spanish — in cries of “Arriba Tio Bernie!”

Sanders’ core message, though, remains an economic one. He’s promising to reduce income inequality, appealing to Americans Sanders sees as most hurt by the current system, working-class people and those under 25 — even though they tend to vote in lower numbers.

The results so far have been mixed. Sanders vowed to spark unpreceden­ted Iowa caucus turnout and failed. Eight days later he won a New Hampshire primary that featured a record of nearly 300,000 Democratic ballots cast — but that total was inflated by the state’s votingage population.

And then there was Sanders’ heart attack October 1.

“With that, I think he’s also reassessed the campaign. Similar to when you’re looking at your life and looking at a campaign, you’re trying to see what’s working, what’s not,” said Shannon Jackson, Sanders’ New Hampshire state director.

Indeed, Sanders was largely able to rebound not by overhaulin­g his campaign, but by simply staying the same. Sanders’ top policy advisers say he focuses on making big ideas relatable to people who have felt left out of the political process.

One area the campaign had hoped to stress more this time compared to his 2016 run was Sanders’ personal side. In his announceme­nt speech in Brooklyn, the senator spoke about growing up in “a three-and-a-half room rent-controlled apartment” nearby. In San Antonio, Sanders told a crowd about 240km from the USMexico border that he understood the immigrant experience, speaking about his father arriving penniless in the US from Poland.

While Sanders has made an undeniable connection with his voters, he hasn’t done it by revealing much about himself, something he acknowledg­es. “I’m not particular­ly anxious to tell the world about everything personal in my life.”

The higher he rises, the harder that may become.

A lot of campaigns go boom and then go bust. Bernie is still booming.

Norman Solomon, Sanders delegate

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