Starkville Daily News

Five years ago, Bernie Sanders asked national Dems for Mississipp­i attention. This week, he scrapped a visit here

- By ADAM GANUCHEAU Mississipp­i Today

U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, a candidate for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination who pulled out of a scheduled Mississipp­i campaign visit earlier this week, previously asked national party leaders to focus efforts in non-early states like Mississipp­i in order to “awaken activism at the grassroots level.”

Sanders wrote in a 2015 letter to the Democratic National Committee that the national party should host debates “not only in the early states but also in many states which currently do not have much Democratic presidenti­al campaign activity.” In the letter that was posted to his campaign website at the time but later removed, Sanders listed Mississipp­i as one of those states.

“While a number of these non-target states have not in the past had much organized campaign presence, I believe it is critical for the Democratic Party and progressiv­e forces in America to engage voters in all 50 states and the District of Columbia,” Sanders wrote.

He continued: “By expanding the scope geographic­ally of debates beyond the early calendar states we can begin to awaken activism at the grassroots level in those states and signal to Democrats and progressiv­es in places like Texas, Mississipp­i, Utah, and Wyoming that their states are not forgotten by the Democratic Party.”

Sanders is one of three remaining candidates vying for the 2020 Democratic presidenti­al nomination, including former Vice President Joe Biden and U.S. Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii.

After Biden's Super Tuesday surge and endorsemen­ts from several key political figures, the Sanders campaign cancelled a scheduled March 6 visit to Jackson, instead opting to go to Michigan, where 147 delegates are up for grabs. Mississipp­i has just 41 delegates.

Sanders, who has not visited Mississipp­i as a 2020 presidenti­al candidate, told national reporters on Thursday that his scrapping the Mississipp­i event did not mean his campaign had given up on the state.

“We are bringing more staff into Mississipp­i,” he said. “If possible, I will try to get to Mississipp­i. But within a short period of time, I think as any candidate will tell you, you have to make a decision where you go and you can't go every place.”

Biden will make his first 2020 Mississipp­i

visit on Sunday. He has plans to visit New Hope Baptist Church in Jackson, as well as a stop at Tougaloo College, a historical­ly black college near Jackson.

The Sanders campaign may also have calculated the candidate's Mississipp­i chances based on his poor results in the 2016 Democratic primary. Sanders was soundly defeated in the state's 2016 Democratic primary by Hillary Clinton. Mississipp­i delivered Clinton her highest vote share of any state in the nation that year, with Clinton winning 83 percent of the popular vote to Sanders' 17 percent.

Biden has received key endorsemen­ts from most Democratic lawmakers in the state and landed an endorsemen­t from Congressma­n Bennie Thompson, Mississipp­i's only Democrat in Washington.

In explaining his decision to skip his Mississipp­i visit this week, Sanders also highlighte­d a key Mississipp­i endorsemen­t he received last week from Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba, who had been courted by several Democratic candidates before he publicly backed Sanders. Sanders on Thursday told national reporters that Lumumba would play an “active role” before the primary.

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