Chattanooga Times Free Press

Minority delegates frustrated with ‘Bernie or Bust’

-

PHILADELPH­IA — As most Democrats rally around Hillary Clinton, the lingering “Bernie or Bust” movement is stirring frustratio­n at the party’s convention among delegates of color, who say they’re upset at the refusal of the Vermont senator’s most fervent backers to fall in line.

“I am so exhausted by it,” said Danielle Adams, a black Clinton delegate from North Carolina. “I think there are undercuts of privilege that concern me.”

Adams is among those who say the “Never Hillary” crowd, a group that is largely younger and white, isn’t considerin­g the struggles black Americans still face every day. And, they argue, how the nation’s ethnic and racial minorities may be affected by a Donald Trump presidency.

Rep. Cheryl Brown, a California delegate from San Bernardino who is black, condemned what she called the “aggressive” behavior of some Sanders delegates, saying they jumped on tables and shoved people at the state’s hotel the night that Sanders moved that the convention nominate Clinton by acclamatio­n.

“I think here at the convention, it’s been exacerbate­d by the way they are treating people,” she said. “I haven’t had that happen with any of the African-American Bernie supporters.”

Maryland Rep. Elijah Cummings, an African-American and close ally of Clinton, was telling the story of his late father — a share-cropper in South Carolina — on the convention’s first day when Sanders supporters started chanting “No TPP” and holding up signs opposing the trade pact.

“It was downright disrespect­ful,” said Kweisi Mfume, a Clinton delegate and former head of the NAACP, who called it a “a low point” of the four-day summer meeting. “I think it does not necessaril­y help the relations that Bernie’s people may have with the larger African-American community.”

To be sure, many black delegates at the convention said they don’t view the “Bernie or Bust” movement through a racial lens. Count Cummings among them. He said that as a veteran of many civil rights protests, he understand­s the passions that drove the mostly young delegates to shout over his speech.

“The optics were not pretty, but I couldn’t be upset with them. Two or three years ago, they would have been outside politics,” he said, adding that more than 100 people have since apologized for the outbursts. “I am so glad these people are under our tent.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States