USA TODAY US Edition

Dems in a bind over Sanders

Decisive win in Nevada could further split party

- Maureen Groppe and Christal Hayes

WASHINGTON – Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders’ decisive win in the Nevada caucuses Saturday is forcing the Democratic Party to reckon with the strong possibilit­y that a democratic socialist who views himself as fighting equally against the Democratic and Republican establishm­ents will be the nominee.

“No campaign has a grassroots movement like we do, which is another reason why we’re going to win this election,” Sanders said after he ran away with the caucuses.

His big win, after his capture of the popular vote in Iowa and New Hampshire, increases fears among some Democrats that a Sanders nomination could cost them both the White House and Congress.

And the results could further split the sharply divided party about the best way forward.

More moderate candidates were already fighting about who should step aside to allow one person to try to consolidat­e the vote against him.

In combative remarks Saturday night, Pete Buttigieg said the only way Democrats can deliver on the progressiv­e changes the party wants is with a nominee “who actually gives a damn

“I’ve got news for the Republican establishm­ent. I’ve got news for the Democratic establishm­ent. They can’t stop us.” Bernie Sanders In a tweet Friday

about the effect you are having” on races from the top of the ticket to the competitiv­e House and Senate races Democrats must win.

Buttigieg accused Sanders of ignoring, dismissing and even attacking “the very Democrats that we absolutely must send to Capitol Hill.”

“Let’s listen to what they are telling us and support them from the top of the ticket,” said Buttigieg, who won more delegates than Sanders in Iowa and collected the same amount as Sanders did in New Hampshire. “It is too important.”

Former Vice President Joe Biden, who had entered the race with the strongest potential coalition – African Americans, white moderates and older voters – to defeat Sanders, was far behind in Nevada for the third contest in a row.

Biden appeared to knock both Sanders and former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg on Saturday, touting that he is a Democrat, “and I’m proud of it.”

“I ain’t a socialist. I ain’t a plutocrat. I’m a Democrat,” Biden said.

Bloomberg has positioned himself to pick up Biden’s mantle by spending a record amount of money in states that vote after the first four. But his widely criticized performanc­e at Wednesday’s night debate raised questions about whether he’s up to the task.

Bloomberg’s campaign manager issued a statement after Nevada’s results, saying they reinforce the reality that a fragmented field is putting Sanders on pace to amass an insurmount­able delegate lead.

“This is a candidate who just declared war on the so-called ‘Democratic Establishm­ent,” said campaign manager Kevin Sheekey. “We are going to need Independen­ts and Republican­s to defeat Trump – attacking your own party is no way to get started.”

Entrance polls indicate Sanders carried a strong lead among Latino voters, as well as running almost even with Biden with black voters. Biden, who placed second in Nevada, has enjoyed strong support from black voters for much of the primary season.

But recently, polls indicated Sanders has cut into that lead in South Carolina, and if the trend in Nevada holds in the

Palmetto State, Sanders’ dominance could continue.

In addition, voting has already begun in the delegate-rich states of California, where Sanders campaigned Friday, and Texas, where Sanders was Saturday.

“It sure looks like he’s the guy to beat,” Democratic strategist Jim Manley said. “It’s clear if it wasn’t before that Sen. Sanders has a lot of momentum going into South Carolina and into Super Tuesday.”

On MSNBC, Chris Matthews said the race was “pretty much over,” detailing the “dangers” that lie ahead in November. Republican­s “are going to kill him,” Matthews said.

One-third of the delegates are up for grabs when 14 states and one U.S. territory hold nominating contests on March 3. A candidate who emerges with a significan­t lead would be hard to catch.

“I’ve got news for the Republican establishm­ent. I’ve got news for the Democratic establishm­ent,” Sanders tweeted Friday. “They can’t stop us.”

Sanders’ anti-establishm­ent battle cry is exactly why Lourdes Esparza, 38, of Las Vegas, who works two jobs, voted for him.

“He’s the best because he’s looking out for the people,” Esparza said. “He’s not establishm­ent, he’s not status quo.”

Sanders was viewed as the favorite in Nevada – the state where, in October, he suffered the heart attack that could have ended his campaign – with most of the speculatio­n centered on who would come in second.

The rest of the field needed a strong showing in the Silver State to give them a significan­t chance of having the energy and resources to keep their campaigns going into March.

In a memo posted Saturday by Axios, two of the co-founders of the center-left think tank Third Way urge the rest of the field to stand up to Sanders at next Tuesday’s debate. Otherwise, Jon Cowan and Michael Bennett write, they could doom the party – and the nation – to Trump and sweeping down-ballot GOP victories in November.

“Bernie Sanders is a socialist, and the political toxicity of his self-selected brand cannot be overstated,” they write.

A recently formed center-right group that opposes Trump had encouraged independen­ts and disaffecte­d Republican­s in Nevada to vote in the Democratic caucuses Saturday to try to keep Sanders from getting the nomination.

“Extremists have taken over the Republican Party,” the group said in one of their ads in Nevada. “Don’t let the same thing happen to the Democrats.”

Buttigieg has already gotten more aggressive against Sanders. After going after Sanders in Wednesday’s debate, he started airing in South Carolina his first ad criticizin­g Sanders by name as he continues his attack on Sanders’ signature health care plan: “Medicare for All.”

Sanders’ campaign accused Buttigieg on Friday of resorting “to the same lies about Medicare that we hear from Donald Trump.”

Center-left candidates had hoped Sanders’ health care plan would hurt him in Nevada with the powerful Culinary Union. The union, which represents about 60,000 housekeepe­rs, porters and bartenders working in Las Vegas casinos – warned members that “Medicare for All” would end the generous health care plans for which they had fought hard.

But while opposing the plan, the union chose not to put its considerab­le weight behind another candidate.

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 ?? BRIANA SANCHEZ/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Bernie Sanders and his wife, Jane O’Meara Sanders, rally supporters Saturday in El Paso, Texas.
BRIANA SANCHEZ/USA TODAY NETWORK Democratic presidenti­al candidate Bernie Sanders and his wife, Jane O’Meara Sanders, rally supporters Saturday in El Paso, Texas.

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