Sanders’ bid kept left wing in game
WILMINGTON, DEL. » Bernie Sanders is in a familiar position: runner-up.
But as Democrats gather virtually to formally select Joe Biden as their presidential nominee, the Vermont senator is perhaps at the height of his power, despite twice losing his White House bid.
Sanders, who was to speak at the Democratic National Convention later Monday, was the last primary challenger standing against Biden. He retains the party’s largest cohesive constituency in a progressive base unwavering in its support. And his signature ideas on single-payer health care, tuition-free college and remaking the economy to combat climate change are now part of the mainstream debate.
“In response to the unprecedented set of crises we face, we need an unprecedented response — a movement, like never before, of people who are prepared to stand up and fight for democracy and decency and against greed, oligarchy and authoritarianism,” Sanders plans to say, according to excepts released by the Democratic Party. “My friends, the price of failure is just too great to imagine.”
Sanders, 78, almost certainly won’t mount another White House bid. But he’s solidifying a legacy as he helps Biden build ties with the left to prevent the type of internal divisions that helped President Donald Trump win in 2016. And he’s basking in victories that progressives have recently notched in Democratic congressional primaries in Missouri, New York and Illinois, many of which he helped engineer.
“Electorally we are doing very well,” Sanders said in an interview. “Most importantly, young people in this country, whether they’re Black or white or Latino, Native American, Asian American, young people strongly support the progressive agenda.”
The progressive movement is still far from the driving force of the Democratic Party. Biden won the primary largely as a centrist who relied heavily on his decades of experience working within the Washington system — not promising to tear it down. His vice presidential pick, California Sen. Kamala Harris, is similarly aligned with the Democrats’ traditional establishment.
“They are going to get a seat at the table but Joe Biden is very much a creature of Washington,” said Colin Strother, a Democratic strategist who works with Rep. Henry Cuellar, a conservative Texas Democrat who in March narrowly defeated a primary challenger from the left who had been endorsed by Sanders. “They want a revolution. That’s not how Washington works.”
Maurice Mitchell, the national director of the Working Families Party, conceded that the former vice president “is not a progressive.”
“But the conditions have been set by progressives and, even though progressives did not prevail in the presidency, our issues and our movement surely have,” said Mitchell, whose group initially endorsed Elizabeth Warren before siding with Sanders and eventually backing Biden last week.
Indeed, Biden’s campaign has spent recent months working closely with top Sanders supporters and advisers to devise a joint collection of policy goals and promote party unity ahead of November’s election.
Their finished product includes things like renewed calls for a $15 minimum wage, sweeping overhauls to decrease racism in the criminal justice system and reducing student loan debt for millions of Americans. But Biden has remained opposed to fully government-funded health care under Sanders’ signature “Medicare for All” plan and hasn’t signed onto the Green New Deal climate package.
RoseAnn DeMoro, a Sanders confidant and former executive director of the National Nurses United union, dismissed the work of the BidenSanders “unity task forces” as too little, too late.