The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sanders works anew to gain support of black voters

They may be key in a multicandi­date Democratic primary.

- Jonathan Martin ©2018 The New York Times

JACKSON, MISS. — Sen. Bernie Sanders insists he hasn’t decided whether to run again for president, but a 14-hour sprint across the Deep South on Wednesday made clear that he is not only thinking about it but is already trying to remedy his most significan­t vulnerabil­ity in 2016: his lack of support from black voters.

Sanders, I-Vt., began the 50th anniversar­y of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassinat­ion with a morning speech and a march in Memphis, helpfully captured in a picture on the Rev. Al Sharpton’s Twitter feed. He appeared at an economic justice forum here in Mississipp­i’s capital, speaking before a crowd that included far more African-Americans than his campaign events typically drew. And he wound down over a plate of wings at a latenight dinner with Chokwe Antar Lumumba, Jackson’s new mayor, a 35-year-old African-American and progressiv­e.

Even more than recapturin­g the magic of 2016 in the early nominating states, Sanders’ prospects in 2020 could hinge in large part on whether he can garner far stronger support from African-Americans than the less than 20 percent of the vote that he won from them in Southern states.

Still, the same unvarnishe­d bluntness, lack of polish and unwavering devotion to his tried-and-true message — which made him a global hero of the left — continue to create challenges for him. On Wednesday night, after the Jackson forum, Sanders faced sharp criticism from some African-Americans who thought he had reduced the

nation’s first black president, Barack Obama, to merely being what Sanders called a “charismati­c individual.”

If any 2020 coalition of Sanders voters was as monochroma­tic as his supporters in the last campaign, he would find it nearly impossible to win the Democratic nomination, especially given the abundance of party leaders expected to run who could raid his political base of white progressiv­es.

So the senator from Vermont — a state where the largest city has but one black barbershop — has begun trying to make inroads across the South and beyond with black voters, who are perhaps the most crucial pillar in a multicandi­date Democratic primary.

Earlier this year, Sanders invited Rep. Cedric Richmond, D-La., to dinner at an Italian restaurant in Washington, telling Richmond, the head of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus, that he wanted to work more closely with the group.

He recently convened a meeting in his office with

two black economists who have researched issues of racial and class inequality. And later this month he is expected to join the Rev. William J. Barber II, a North Carolina-based black pastor who has risen to prominence as a social justice activist, for a joint event at Duke University.

Yet even as he moves to forge new relationsh­ips among African-American leaders and Democrats, Sanders is demonstrat­ing why it may prove difficult for him to command broad support with a bloc of voters who usually do not rally to the more liberal candidates in Democratic primaries.

Appearing with Lumumba, the Jackson mayor, at the forum on economic justice, Sanders was asked how he would engage millennial voters and remake the Democratic Party.

He immediatel­y won applause by declaring that the party’s business model had “failed” and then recalled, as he and many Democrats often do, that the party had lost about 1,000

state legislativ­e seats in the past decade.

But Sanders also said that these setbacks happened on the watch of “a charismati­c individual named Barack Obama,” whom Sanders also called “an extraordin­ary candidate, brilliant guy.”

Few in the audience responded adversely, many of them having witnessed firsthand the decline of the state and local party. But the fact that his only mention of Obama was in reference to Democratic defeats, particular­ly during an event honoring King in a heavily black Deep South capital with a painful racial history, struck some critics as tone-deaf and even insensitiv­e.

On Thursday, Sanders and his top aides responded angrily to the suggestion he had diminished Obama. The senator tweeted that “some have so degraded our discourse that my recognitio­n of the historical significan­ce of the Obama presidency is attacked.”

The episode was also a reminder of another hurdle in his way: the feud between many Sanders supporters and Democratic leaders and Hillary Clinton loyalists, which has been raging ever since he challenged Clinton for the nomination. Sanders remains very much an insurgent in a party he still has not formally claimed as his own, a fact he made clear in a less remarked-upon part of the same answer: “The establishm­ent,” he said, “doesn’t go quietly into the twilight.”

Richmond, the Congressio­nal Black Caucus leader, said he did not think Sanders had slighted Obama. The mistake Sanders made, according to Richmond, was that he did not go the next step and explain why Democrats incurred so many down ticket defeats during the Obama years.

“The real question is why it happened, and it’s no secret: Everybody underestim­ated the backlash that would come to the first African-American president,” he said.

As Sanders seeks to gain support from black voters, the Jackson forum was also notable for what the senator did not say to the audience, which skewed young and was almost evenly divided between blacks and whites.

While briefly noting that King had been a “major political inspiratio­n” for him, Sanders said nothing about his history as a civil rights activist and his arrest demonstrat­ing against segregatio­n as a college student.

“That’s the No. 1 selling point,” said Teneia Sanders Eichelberg­er, who plays in a husband-wife band here and supported Sanders in 2016. “For me and for my grandmothe­r, who’s 82, she loved that about him.”

But unless they already knew about Sanders’ connection to the movement, hundreds of would-be Democratic primary voters left the gathering none the wiser. (Clinton won the 2016 Mississipp­i Democratic primary with nearly 83 percent of the vote; Sanders took 16.5 percent.)

Part of Sanders’ appeal is that he is not a typical, lip-biting politician, ever on the lookout to find a personal connection with any audience. But his relentless focus on the policy dimensions of social justice, which has been the animating cause of his life, can also deprive him of creating bonds that can be essential, especially in building a multiracia­l coalition.

Upon hearing the suggestion that recounting his own youthful activism would be compelling to an audience full of younger voters becoming activists in their own right, he all but rolled his eyes.

“Somebody might be interested in what I did 50 years ago, that’s fine,” Sanders said with an evident lack of enthusiasm. “Or what I did yesterday. But what people have got to start focusing on is not me. It’s how we transform America.”

Sanders’ reticence can frustrate even his closest supporters.

“If you’re talking to a black audience, you’ve got to say, ‘I was fighting for fair housing in the ’60s,’ ” said Rep. Keith Ellison, D-Minn., a top Sanders surrogate in 2016, noting that he has “an interestin­g story to tell.”

Several of those at the forum Wednesday night said they liked what they heard. And as is typical for Sanders, who in 2016 did best among millennial­s, the younger black attendees were the most enthusiast­ic.

“To hear his voice and see what he stands for, it’s powerful,” said Cassandra Hogue, 26, who backed Clinton two years ago as part of what she called “a legacy thing” for the Clintons but said she would be open to supporting Sanders in 2020.

 ?? JOE RAEDLE / GETTY IMAGES ?? Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-VT, joins others in Memphis, Tennessee, on Wednesday during an event to mark the 50th anniversar­y of Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassinat­ion. Sanders’ prospects in 2020 could hinge in large part on whether he can garner far...
JOE RAEDLE / GETTY IMAGES Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-VT, joins others in Memphis, Tennessee, on Wednesday during an event to mark the 50th anniversar­y of Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassinat­ion. Sanders’ prospects in 2020 could hinge in large part on whether he can garner far...

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