Imperial Valley Press

Calif. Democratic chair race angers ‘Berniecrat­s’

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SACRAMENTO (AP) — Democratic activists loyal to the Sen. Bernie Sanders aren’t ready to give up after their favored candidate came tantalizin­gly close but fell short of taking control of the California Democratic Party.

“Berniecrat­s” and like-minded Democrats looking to shake up their party leadership refused Sunday to accept election results and demanded validation in the race for party chairman.

The conflict inflames a bitter divide in a party whose leaders are trying hard to unify behind the goal of stymieing President Donald Trump and Republican­s in Congress.

After Sanders was defeated by Hillary Clinton in last year’s presidenti­al primary and Congressma­n Keith Ellison lost his bid for Democratic National Committee chair, Saturday’s election felt like a third punch in the gut to Sanders-aligned activists. They’ve pushed the Democratic Party to reject money from wealthy interests, deriding many in the party’s establishm­ent as corporate Democrats.

“Things are going to get tough for the Democratic Party, and if they don’t want the Republican­s to win then they need to work with us,” said Bryan Hash, a Sanders supporter from Southern California, said Saturday shortly after results were announced.

Hash, a first-time convention delegate, and other Sanders loyalists rallied behind Kimberly Ellis in the race to replace outgoing party chair John Burton.

Longtime party insider Eric Bauman defeated Ellis by 62 votes out of nearly 3,000 cast — a razor-thin margin for a candidate who lined up support from most of the state’s elected Democrats and, until recently, was widely expected to win with minimal opposition. He had a natural advantage in an election where many delegates were selected by party insiders and elected officials.

Ellis refused to concede, citing unspecifie­d concerns with the vote count and, after speaking with a lawyer, declared “this race is not over.”

“If we want to build a party that moves forward together, strong and unified, we owe it to every Democrat in California to ensure the election was conducted fairly and with transparen­cy,” she wrote on Facebook Sunday.

Ellis and Bauman both endorsed Clinton’s presidenti­al bid and were largely aligned in their approaches to public policy. But Ellis adopted a Sanders-inspired message determined to minimize the influence of money in politics. Her supporters were outraged that Bauman’s political consulting firm accepted money from pharmaceut­ical companies to work against a Sanders-backed initiative aimed at limiting government spending on medication­s.

Bauman, looking to unify the fractured party he now leads, offered words of conciliati­on.

“There is no denying that there is a problem when so many of our hardworkin­g activists feel that they are not welcome within our party and that they have been slighted and shut out of the process,” Bauman said in a statement.

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