Los Angeles Times

Crowd out in force for Sanders’ return

Queens rally is aimed at reassuring backers after his heart attack.

- By Evan Halper

NEW YORK — Bernie Sanders leaped back onto the campaign trail Saturday with a rowdy political rally aimed at reassuring supporters unnerved by the 78year-old’s recent heart attack — and with a lot of encouragem­ent from an unexpected place.

The candidate competing with Sanders to lock down the Democratic Party’s most progressiv­e voters, Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts, is eager for the Vermont senator to continue his pursuit of the presidency. The prominence of their shared agenda in this race is amplified, officials from both campaigns say, by them being in it together for the distance.

Saturday’s event, with a crowd estimated by the Sanders campaign at over 25,000 people, suggested they will. Sanders exhibited a burst of resilience before the large crowd at a waterfront park in Queens’ Long Island City, unleashing on the rich, corporatio­ns and establishm­ent Democrats in an hourlong speech. He strode on stage in a blazer and sweater on the crisp fall afternoon following fullthroat­ed endorsemen­ts from some of the most sought-after progressiv­es in Congress, and on the heels of a fundraisin­g quarter that surpassed even the impressive numbers Warren posted.

“I am more than ready to take on the greed and corruption of the corporate elite and the apologists,” Sanders said after thanking supporters for their good wishes amid his health scare. “I am more ready than ever to help create a government based on the principles of justice: economic justice, racial justice, social justice and environmen­tal justice. To put it bluntly: I am back.”

The crowd erupted into chants of “Bernie’s back.”

“There is no question that I and my family have faced adversity over these last couple of weeks,” Sanders said. “But the untold story is that people everywhere in this country, in the wealthiest nation in the history of this world, are facing their own adversitie­s.”

Sanders was joined by New York Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the 30-year-old progressiv­e crusader whose endorsemen­t was pursued by both him and Warren. Sanders also notched the support of Ocasio-Cortez ally Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), a Somali immigrant and one of the first Muslim women elected to Congress. The support injected a dose of vibrancy and multicultu­ralism into the septuagena­rian’s movement.

“The only reason I had any hope in launching a long-shot campaign for Congress is because Bernie Sanders proved you can run a grass-roots campaign and win in an America where we almost thought it was impossible,” Ocasio-Cortez said.

Even with the surge of momentum, the senator faces a tough path ahead. It is unclear how far the vitality he exhibited here in New York and in Ohio at Tuesday’s Democratic debate — his other major public appearance since checking out of the hospital — will go in reassuring uneasy primary voters. Candidates in past races have seen their presidenti­al aspiration­s sunk by such medical incidents.

In a YouGov poll conducted a few days before the Ohio debate, only 19% of voters and 26% of Democrats said they believed Sanders is in good enough physical condition to serve effectivel­y as president for four years. Twice as many voters said the 76-year-old Biden was in good enough health, and three times as many expressed confidence in 70year-old Warren’s health.

As former New Jersey Sen. Bill Bradley found after he was hospitaliz­ed for an irregular heartbeat during a 2000 presidenti­al bid, managing voter perception­s of a health problem can be a bigger challenge than managing the health problem itself. The bout of pneumonia that briefly drove Hillary Clinton off the campaign trail in fall 2016 fed into conspiracy theories amplified by Donald Trump that she was beset with chronic health problems.

Most Sanders supporters interviewe­d at the rally said they were not overly concerned about his health, but several added that they worry it will make it harder to draw others to vote for him.

And what do they think about Warren? “I wouldn’t feel the frustratio­n voting for her that I did when I had to vote for Hillary Clinton in 2016,” said Bridget Catania, a 23-year-old artist in attendance, reflecting the attitude of most rallygoers interviewe­d.

Sanders supporters who were interviewe­d emphasized — as did filmmaker Michael Moore and Sanders campaign co-chair Nina Turner, who took the stage before Sanders — that it was Sanders who transforme­d Democratic politics by drawing masses of voters to the progressiv­e agenda in 2016, when it initially was written off.

“When I say there is no one like Bernard Sanders, I mean that,” Turner said. “We’ve got some people in the mainstream and neoliberal media who really can’t see the difference.”

As Sanders moves to regain his footing, he has watched Warren leapfrog past him in the race. She has become the candidate of choice for many voters focused on “Medicare for all,” free public college and taxing the super-rich.

Yet neither Sanders nor Warren is eager to crowd the other out of the race. They avoid taking shots at each other, or even taking steps to contrast their difference­s. Progressiv­e activists say the alignment has made them both more potent candidates.

“People are talking about Medicare for all; they are talking about student debt relief, talking about a Green New Deal, because those policies are supported by two strong candidates,” said Adriel Hampton, a Bay Area consultant to progressiv­es who supports Sanders. “Warren and Sanders combined are as strong a force as all the moderate candidates.”

Such progressiv­e dominance at presidenti­al debates and in the broader primary race “is something we have not seen in my lifetime in presidenti­al politics,” said Hampton, 41.

As Warren takes fire from candidates eager to knock her off the front-runner perch, Sanders has become a reliable and effective defender of hers. He has no reservatio­ns about excoriatin­g their mutual Democratic nemesis, former Vice President Joe Biden. That benefits Warren without tarnishing the image she aims to project as a unifier.

When Biden suggested at the debate that the progressiv­es are all talk and only he has gotten big things done, Sanders pilloried some of the things Biden has helped get done, as the senator sees it: a U.S. invasion of Iraq under false pretenses, a bankruptcy bill that burdened Americans financiall­y, trade agreements that enabled the offshoring of union jobs.

A Sanders fundraisin­g email Friday was devoted entirely to charging Biden with acting as a tool of the health insurance industry.

But the Sanders-Warren alliance works both ways. Concerns that Sanders is threatened with being eclipsed in the race by the Massachuse­tts senator are cast aside, as the campaign views her as a less significan­t impediment than Biden.

“The Warren coalition is different than ours,” said Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Fremont), a Sanders campaign chair. He says Warren is not so much cannibaliz­ing the Sanders coalition as picking off supporters from candidates like California Sen. Kamala Harris and South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg.

“It has been a benefit to have both Bernie and Warren on the stage,” Khanna said. “Together, they have fundamenta­lly redefined the Democratic Party and vindicated the progressiv­e movement.”

 ?? Johannes Eisele AFP/Getty Images ?? BERNIE SANDERS was joined by an estimated 25,000 people and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), who joined other progressiv­es in endorsing him.
Johannes Eisele AFP/Getty Images BERNIE SANDERS was joined by an estimated 25,000 people and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), who joined other progressiv­es in endorsing him.

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