Houston Chronicle

Yang, ‘freedom dividend’ champion, ends campaign

- By Sara Burnett

Democrat Andrew Yang, an entreprene­ur who created buzz for his presidenti­al campaign by talking about his love of math and championin­g a universal basic income that would give every American adult $1,000 per month, suspended his 2020 bid on Tuesday.

“I am the math guy, and it is clear to me from the numbers that we are not going to win this race,” Yang said in front of a crowd of supporters as votes in New Hampshire’s first-in-the-nation primary were being counted.

“This is not an easy decision, or something I made lightly with the team. Endings are hard and I’ve always had the intention to stay in the race until the very end,” he added. “But I have been persuaded that the message of this campaign will not be strengthen­ed by my staying in the race any longer.”

The 45-year-old was one of the breakout stars of the Democratic primary race, building a following that started largely online.

Yang outlasted senators and governors, and after initially self-funding his campaign, he raised more money than most of his rivals, bringing in over $16 million in the final quarter of last year. It was a bigger haul than all but the top four candidates: Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, former South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg, former Vice President Joe Biden and Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren.

“We went from a mailing list that started with just my Gmail contact list to receiving donations from over 400,000 people around the country and millions more who supported this campaign,” Yang said before pledging to support whoever becomes the Democratic nominee.

Yang grew his outsider candidacy by campaignin­g as a non-politician, someone who mixed unconventi­onal campaign events — from bowling to ax throwing — with serious talk about the millions of jobs lost to automation and artificial intelligen­ce and the dark outlook for American jobs and communitie­s.

The graduate of Brown University and Columbia Law School gave campaign speeches full of statistics and studies that often resembled an economics seminar. His supporters, known as the Yang Gang, donned blue hats and pins with the word MATH — short for his slogan Make America Think Harder.

Yang promoted his signature issue of universal basic income, which he dubbed the “freedom dividend,” by announcing during a debate that he would choose individual­s to receive the monthly $1,000 checks. The statement prompted questions about whether he was trying to buy votes, but also generated a buzz online and helped the campaign build a list of possible supporters.

His poll numbers were high enough, combined with his fundraisin­g strength, to qualify for him for all of the debates, except the January debate in Iowa. His departure from the race almost guarantees that the Democrats, who once had the most diverse presidenti­al field in history, will have no candidates of color on the debate stage again this cycle.

 ?? Scott Eisen / Getty Images ?? “Math guy” Andrew Yang says it was clear he lacked the numbers to stay in the presidenti­al race.
Scott Eisen / Getty Images “Math guy” Andrew Yang says it was clear he lacked the numbers to stay in the presidenti­al race.

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