Times Colonist

Sanders’ hopes rest on Obama template

- DAVID LIGHTMAN

CLEAR LAKE, Iowa — Eight years ago, Hillary Clinton had an aura of inevitabil­ity.

Barack Obama? Who? An African-American president?

Flash forward to today. Clinton again wants to project that aura, but it’s again slowly cracking, thanks to another rival who, on paper, seems a long shot to get elected president.

To do that, though, Bernie Sanders has to first win over the people of Iowa’s 99 counties, as Obama once did. It won’t be easy. But it’s not out of the question.

The U.S. senator from Vermont, who is an independen­t but running for president as a Democrat, has been drawing huge, enthusiast­ic crowds in friendly places such as college campuses and liberal bastions such as Portland, Oregon, and Madison, Wisconsin.

Friday night he was out of those comfort zones, sharing the bill in Clear Lake, population 7,692, with Democratic presidenti­al candidates Clinton, Martin O’Malley and Lincoln Chafee.

Clinton wowed the throng of 2,100 with her energy and vigorous defence, sometimes jokingly, of her using a private email server while secretary of state. O’Malley often echoed Sanders’ progressiv­e message. The former mayor of Baltimore and governor of Maryland gets praise for his energy and newgenerat­ion pitch.

The good news for Sanders was uncharacte­ristically subtle: The audience didn’t belong to any single candidate.

Marsha Wildin, for example. Her husband, Dave, prefers Sanders.

“I want to see a woman in power,” said Marsha, an Algona real estate agent.

“Sanders has a better position on the minimum wage, and he voted against the Iraq war,” said Dave, who also sells real estate.

Clinton, however, may be falling victim to a weariness with politics as usual and the same familiar names. On the other side, Republican candidate Jeb Bush, whose brother and father were presidents, is in the middle of his party’s presidenti­al pack.

The public might also be tired of the drama that always seems to surround the Clintons. This time, it’s their family charitable foundation and Hillary Clinton’s email controvers­y.

A growing number of voters appears interested in Sanders’ unapologet­ic message and willingnes­s to challenge Washington orthodoxy. He moved ahead of Clinton in a recent poll in New Hampshire, site of the first presidenti­al primary next year.

Still, winning the Democratic presidenti­al nomination means capturing the party’s key elements, including women, blacks and Hispanics — voting blocs that have always given Clinton strong support.

What’s most encouragin­g for Sanders is that Clear Lake should be Clinton country. Halfway between Minneapoli­s and Des Moines, this part of northern Iowa would seem a good fit for the former New York senator’s message of experience and savvy. It’s a city that respects the past.

Clear Lake’s claim to fame is as the last place rock ’n’ rollers Buddy Holly, the Big Bopper and Richie Valens played before their plane crashed, killing all three, on Feb. 3, 1959. The Democratic presidenti­al beauty contest Friday night was held in the ballroom where the three performed.

Clinton supporters arrived early, pasted her stickers in the front row of the ballroom and made their case.

“She has a lot of experience, and she’s a woman,” said Lynel Helmers of Mason City. Like most Clinton backers, the controvers­y over her private email as secretary of state didn’t bother her.

Clinton didn’t disappoint, touching every political base. She joked about the email server. She made a passionate appeal to women, reminding them how Republican presidenti­al candidates are eager to curb abortion rights, oppose equal-pay laws and limit family leave.

“If calling for equal pay and paid leave is playing the gender card, then deal me in,” Clinton said. “If helping more working parents find quality, affordable child care is playing the gender card, then I’m ready to ante up.”

In the audience, though, Clinton loyalists sensed eerie echoes of eight years ago when a barelyknow­n Obama, then a U.S. senator from Illinois, came from seemingly out of nowhere and won the Iowa caucuses.

While people today concede that Sanders, with his socialist background and unpresiden­tial style — he’s also 73 — may be unelectabl­e, they also recall the summer of 2007 when Obama captured their political imaginatio­n and ultimately their votes. Clinton finished third in the 2008 Iowa caucus.

“It’s just like when Obama ran,” said Marjorie Bullen, a Nashua retiree and Clinton backer. “He said he was going to change things. If people are dumb enough to believe everything a candidate says, they’re going to get what they deserve.”

That’s not what Sanders backers are saying, and they were easy to find. John Ralls of Buffalo Center heard Sanders in Kensett. Clinton, he said, “seems a little out of touch.”

Sanders offers a different kind of energy, a passion borne of a lifetime’s worth of uphill struggles and a zest for intellectu­al combat. He got big cheers when he said he’d oppose the Keystone XL pipeline and reminded everyone that as a House of Representa­tives member in 2002, he voted against the Iraq War.

Clinton has declined to state her position on the pipeline. She voted for the Iraq war resolution while in the Senate and later said that was a mistake.

 ??  ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders speaks at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines on Saturday.
Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders speaks at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines on Saturday.

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