Austin American-Statesman

Sanders rattled Clinton campaign, emails show

Clinton officials sought signal of Obama support.

- By Andrew Taylor

Allies of Hillary Clinton felt threatened by the power of Sen. Bernie Sanders’ candidacy and wondered about getting some signal of support from President Barack Obama in the heat of the Democratic primaries, according to the latest emails in a hacked trove from Clinton campaign Chairman John Podesta.

Ahead of the Illinois primary in March, liberal operative Neera Tanden asked Podesta, who formerly worked on Obama’s transition in 2008, if the president could give any kind of indication that he was supporting Clinton over Sanders.

Tanden asked Podesta whether Obama could “even hint of support of Hillary before Tuesday?”

Obama stayed officially neutral in the primaries until Clinton clinched the nomination in June.

Tanden wrote: “Maybe they don’t want to do this, but the stakes are pretty damn high in this election for him.”

The email exchange was contained in more than 1,500 emails released Wednesday by the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks. The notes were stolen from the email account of Podesta as part of a series of high-profile computer hacks of Democratic targets that U.S. intelligen­ce officials say were orchestrat­ed by Russia, with the intent to influence the Nov. 8 election. Russia has denied the allegation­s.

In a separate June 2015 email, the Clinton campaign worried that some state affiliates of the nation’s largest labor union, the National Education Associatio­n, were set to endorse Sanders even though the national union had not yet made an endorsemen­t. On June 22, 2015, Clinton’s labor outreach director Nikki Budzinski emailed other campaign officials to let them know “NEA is concerned their VT affiliate could do a Tuesday (next week) recommenda­tion of endorsemen­t (with potential press release). This is not confirmed. The bigger concern is that RI and MA might go with VT as well.”

Carrie Pugh, the NEA’s political director, had similar concerns and shared them with Clinton campaign officials.

Budzinski said the move in Vermont “doesn’t pose serious concern for the NEA overall endorsemen­t” but called it an “optics problem” coming before a major meeting of NEA representa­tives.

The NEA ultimately endorsed Clinton in October 2015 despite some complaints that leaders hadn’t taken Sanders seriously enough and should have waited.

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