Albuquerque Journal

Still feeling the Bern with ‘Our Revolution’

- AMY GOODMAN & DENIS MOYNIHAN Columnists

We hadn’t seen Bernie Sanders in Philadelph­ia since last July, when he watched his primary opponent, Hillary Clinton, win the Democratic Party’s nomination. Sanders joined the “Democracy Now!” news hour this week at the Philadelph­ia Free Library for a widerangin­g discussion.

“I am deeply concerned about the future of American democracy,” Sanders told the enthusiast­ic standing-room-only crowd. Millions of Americans voted for Sanders in the primaries. He transforme­d the 2016 presidenti­al election, inspiring and engaging people with a progressiv­e vision for the future, with little help from the media.

The networks have engaged in endless “mea culpas” in the election’s aftermath, contrite about their reliance on faulty polls. Rarely do you hear a news personalit­y on television admitting that they failed miserably in covering the Sanders campaign. The media effectivel­y iced out a major-party candidate who consistent­ly held the largest rallies.

Donald Trump received blanket coverage. His every move, every tweet, almost all his speeches were covered across the networks. Estimates of the free airtime he received vary from $1 billion to as high as $3 billion.

What about Bernie Sanders? The Tyndall Report analyzed major network campaign coverage in 2015. In over 1,000 minutes of national broadcast television airtime devoted to all the campaigns, Donald Trump received 327 minutes, or close to one-third of all the coverage. Bernie Sanders received just 20 minutes. Hillary Clinton got 121 minutes, six times the amount Sanders received. “ABC World News Tonight” aired 81 minutes of reports on Donald Trump, compared with just 20 seconds for Sanders.

I asked Sanders what he did to warrant a full 20 seconds of coverage on ABC and he threw his head back, laughing out loud. “We had the misfortune of actually trying to talk about the problems facing America and providing real solutions,” he said, offering his take on the media’s failure.

While the media may not have been interested in Sanders’ message, the voters were. Despite the media blackout, Sanders won 23 primary contests and 46 percent of the pledged Democratic delegates.

After President Barack Obama leaves office, Sanders may well become the most powerful Democrat in the country, even though he is not technicall­y a Democrat, but an independen­t socialist. His success has catapulted him into the Democratic leadership of the Senate.

“I accept this responsibi­lity as outreach chair with a lot of trepidatio­n, but also with excitement. The current approach clearly is not succeeding and we need a new approach ... to create a 50-state strategy. That means we start playing ball in states that the Democrats have conceded decades ago. But more importantl­y, we create a kind of grassroots party, where the most important people in the party are not just wealthy campaign contributo­rs, but working people, young people, people in the middle class.”

Bernie Sanders has transforme­d his campaign into a group called “Our Revolution,” to continue organizing.

“Where we are now is in a difficult moment,” he summed up as our Philadelph­ia conversati­on was ending. “But throughout history, serious people have fought back . ... Think about 120 years ago. There were children working in factories, losing their fingers. People fought back. They fought to create unions. Think about the women’s movement. Think about the civil rights movement. Think about the gay rights movement. Think about the environmen­tal. Think about all of the hurdles that those folks had to overcome . ... Nobody in this room or in this country has a right to say ‘I give up.’ You’ve got to jump in and start fighting.”

Bernie Sanders has spent his life fighting for progressiv­e causes. As the world braces for the Trump presidency, Sanders shows no signs of slowing down.

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