The Columbus Dispatch

Sanders sets out to sell big government in red states

- Will Weissert

WASHINGTON – Bernie Sanders has long argued, but not proved, that his big government populism can win over voters in the largely white, rural communitie­s that flocked to Republican Donald Trump in recent elections.

Now as the chief Senate shepherd of a $3.5 trillion budget proposal, Sanders believes he has another chance to test the theory.

The Vermont senator embarked on two-stop swing through Trump country this weekend, promoting a budget plan packed with progressiv­e initiative­s and financed by higher taxes on top earners. He’s specifically targeting two congressio­nal districts where Trump’s vote totals increased between 2016 and 2020.

“What we are doing is precisely what working-class families, Republican, Democrat, independen­t, want,” Sanders, who helped negotiate the proposal as chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, said in an interview. “And we’re going to pay for it by demanding that the wealthiest people, and largest corporatio­ns that are doing phenomenal­ly well, start paying their fair share of taxes.”

Sanders was scheduled to hold a town hall in West Lafayette, Indiana, on Friday night and will hold another in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on Sunday. He said he will highlight the difference between the two parties since congressio­nal Republican­s in years past approved tax cuts for wealthy Americans but are expected to universall­y oppose a plan Sanders called “the most consequent­ial piece of legislatio­n” since Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal in the 1930s.

It could be a tough sell for the face of the progressiv­e movement. Republican­s have begun using Sanders in ads warning voters that the country is edging toward socialism.

Sanders saw his political star first rise to national prominence by nearly winning the 2016 Democratic Iowa caucus, and he won that year’s Indiana Democratic primary over Hillary Clinton. As he pushed his party to the left and drew in voters frustrated by mainstream Democrats, Sanders and his supporters advocated for reaching beyond the traditiona­l base by making appeals to the white, working class that can attract Republican­s or nonvoters.

“He has a lot of credibilit­y with a lot of audiences that aren’t just progressiv­e,” said Maurice Mitchell, national director of the progressiv­e advocacy group the Working Families Party. “He an outsider. He’s a populist. And, in fact, the thing that we’ve always said works best against rightwing populism is progressiv­e populism.”

But evidence that Sanders has particular sway with Trump voters is limited. According to data from the Pew Research Center, only about 3% of people who consistent­ly supported Sanders during 2016 the primary season, and were confirmed to have voted in the general election, said they ultimately supported Trump, compared to 81% who reported voting for Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.

An Associated PRESS-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll in February

2020 found that 17% of Republican­s had a favorable view of Sanders, roughly the same share of Republican­s who had a favorable view of Joe Biden.

Sanders’ next chance to make his case is a budget proposal that promises universal prekinderg­arten and tuition-free community college, while increasing federal funding for child care, paid family leave and fighting climate change. It also expands health care coverage through Medicare, creates pathways to citizenshi­p for millions of immigrants in the country illegally and encourages states to adopt labor-friendly laws.

Republican­s said the plan is loaded with unnecessar­y spending and tax increases. But Democrats, as long as they stay united, can use their narrow advantage in each congressio­nal chamber to muscle it through anyway.

Sanders said his trip could increase pressure on Republican­s who oppose measures that are broadly popular with working-class Americans, regardless of ideology.

“This is the peoples’ budget. This is the budget that will impact tens of millions of lives in this country: the elderly, the children, the working families, the middle class,” Sanders said. “So it is appropriat­e to me that the chairman of the budget committee get out and around the country, hear what people have to say. Explain what we’re trying to do.”

Although Sanders is heading to red states, his trip isn’t exactly into hostile territory. His 2016 and 2020 presidenti­al bids were popular with college students and West Lafayette is home to Purdue University. He similarly remains popular in Iowa, which means his Cedar Rapids event might attract far more longstandi­ng Sanders supporters than potentiall­y persuadabl­e Republican­s.

Still, Sanders scoffed at suggestion­s that his presidenti­al campaigns were more successful at energizing liberals, many of them wealthy, than at growing his party’s appeal with crossover voters.

“Poll after poll shows that the American people want the wealthiest people, large corporatio­ns, to pay their fair share. This is not wealthy liberals, this is working class Americans,” Sanders said, adding of his ability to sell the budget proposal to independen­ts and Republican­s, “I think it’s part of my job and I think I’ll do OK.”

There is some bipartisan support for key parts of the budget proposal. A July AP-NORC poll found that 62% of Republican­s backed funding for caregivers for the elderly. At least 4 in 10 Republican­s said they supported funding for free preschool, affordable housing, broadband internet, and local transit, and close to 3 in 10 said they supported funding for free community college.

The administra­tion’s economic agenda has been overshadow­ed in recent days by violence and chaos in Afghanista­n. But Sanders said Americans from across the political spectrum understand that what’s occurring there and with their pocketbook­s back home “are separate issues.”

 ?? JOHN LOCHER/AP ?? Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders is promoting a $3.5 trillion budget plan packed with progressiv­e initiative­s and financed by higher taxes on top earners.
JOHN LOCHER/AP Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders is promoting a $3.5 trillion budget plan packed with progressiv­e initiative­s and financed by higher taxes on top earners.

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