The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

At Vatican, Sanders rips ‘immoral’ inequality

Democratic hopeful issues global call to action in speech.

- By Ken Thomas and Rachel Zoll

VATICAN CITY — Bernie Sanders issued a global call to action at the Vatican on Friday to address “immoral and unsustaina­ble” wealth inequality and poverty, using the high-profile gathering to echo one of the central platforms of his presidenti­al campaign.

The Democratic senator from Vermont cited Pope Francis and St. John Paul II repeatedly during his speech to the Vatican conference commemorat­ing the 25th anniversar­y of a landmark teaching document from John Paul on social and economic justice after the Cold War.

Sanders arrived in Rome hours after wrapping up a debate in New York Thursday night, saying the opportunit­y to address the Vatican conference was too meaningful to pass up. The roughly 24-hour visit precedes Tuesday’s crucial New York primary, in which Sanders must do well if he is to maintain a viable challenge to Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton.

Pope Francis apologized that he couldn’t personally greet participan­ts at the Vatican conference. No meeting with Sanders was expected.

But the trip gave Sanders a moment on the world stage, placing him alongside priests, bishops, academics and two South American presidents. Sanders has been at a disadvanta­ge during his campaign against Clinton, President Barack Obama’s former secretary of state, on issues of foreign policy, but at the conference he was peppered with questions from academics and ecclesiast­ics in a manner that might have been afforded a head of state.

Sanders trails Clinton in the Democratic primaries but the trip to the Vatican and his massive rally earlier this week with 27,000 people in New York City may have offered a glimpse of the senator’s aim to become a progressiv­e leader, win or lose.

The discussion­s gave him a chance to expand on his core campaign messages about the need to reform banking regulation­s, campaign finance rules and higher education. Asked about inequality in public education, he said it was “beyond disgracefu­l” and cited challengin­g conditions in Detroit’s school system.

He told the audience that rather than a world economy that looks out for the common good, “we have been left with an economy operated for the top 1 percent, who get richer and richer as the working class, the young and the poor fall further and further behind.”

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