The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Sanders foresees ‘progressiv­e’ South Carolina

- By Meg Kinnard

COLUMBIA, S.C. >> Two years after a tough loss in South Carolina’s Democratic presidenti­al primary, Sen. Bernie Sanders returned Saturday to the state where he said his progressiv­e message is resonating more strongly than before.

In an interview with The Associated Press following a rally attended by roughly 1,000 supporters, Sanders said, “The day is going to come, sooner than people believe, that South Carolina is going to become a progressiv­e state.”

“We have helped transform political consciousn­ess in this country,” the Vermont independen­t said.

Sanders’ trip to the home of this first-in-the-South presidenti­al primary came as part of a swing through several other states with early positions on the primary calendar. Next up was Iowa. A visit to Nevada was planned for next week.

The South Carolina trip differed from many of Sanders’ other stops, where he’s stumping with congressio­nal candidates. None of them campaigned with him in South Carolina, with some young Democratic leaders in the state eschewing his trip as a self-serving exercise.

Still, Sanders received thunderous applause from his crowd of supporters.

“So there are progressiv­es in South Carolina! I was told that nobody would come out to a meeting like this,” Sanders said. “Thank you all very much for being here.”

The trip was billed as a “Medicare for All” rally at the behest of Our Revolution, an offshoot of Sanders’ 2016 presidenti­al effort. The event came on the heels of visits by potential 2020 hopefuls Cory Booker and Kamala Harris , both of whom stumped with multiple Democratic candidates during several days in the state accustomed to hosting candidates testing out their messaging and building activist and donor relationsh­ips ahead of a national run.

News of Sanders’ trip was met with a cool welcome from some Democrats, who characteri­zed it as a distractio­n and portrayed Sanders’ left-leaning message as too liberal for the conservati­ve state. Sanders finished a distant second to Hillary Clinton in South Carolina’s 2016 Democratic presidenti­al primary, with only 26 percent of votes cast.

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