Los Angeles Times

An older voter for Sanders

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Re “Can Biden win young voters?” Opinion, March 8

As a 70-year-old supporter of Sen. Bernie Sanders for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination, I’m living proof that his so-called revolution­ary proposals — Medicare for all, the Green New Deal, free public college tuition, a living wage and a less bellicose foreign policy — resonate with all voters, not just the young.

His rally in Los Angeles just before Super Tuesday was packed with enthusiast­ic voters of all ages and multiple ethnicitie­s who together can take down the morally challenged person currently occupying the White House.

By focusing on how former Vice President Joe Biden can attract progressiv­e support, Harold Meyerson, like other mainstream pundits, seems not to be able to stomach Sanders because he threatens the status quo. It’s time for real change to prevent the twin existentia­l threats of nuclear war and environmen­tal collapse.

Sanders is far and away our best hope for a livable future.

ALAN SUTTON

Laguna Niguel

From my perspectiv­e it appears that young voters have more at stake then any other age group in this election. In the 2018 midterm, only 36% of the 18- to 29-year-olds voted, compared to 66% of people 65 and older.

The youth of America will be the ones dealing with the climate disaster that will unfold within this century. They also risk witnessing the further degradatio­n of democracy in this country and the eliminatio­n of our middle class.

It doesn’t take a college education, which most young people now have, to see why voting is more important then ever. As one very educated person once said, we get the government we deserve (or did not show up to vote for).

DAVE NOVIS

Santa Barbara

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