Pod Save America - 2020: Bernie Sanders on democratic socialism and Cardi B
Episode Date: July 26, 2019Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders sits down with Jon F. to talk about why he feels he's uniquely prepared to lead a movement for change in the 2020 presidential election, his Medicare for All plan, his stra...tegy for getting an agenda through Congress and whether Cardi B will perform at his inauguration.
Transcript
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Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau. I just spoke to Senator Bernie Sanders for the next installment of our presidential candidate interview series.
We talked about democratic socialism. We talked about health care and Medicare for all and single payer.
We talked about immigration. We talked about Israel. All kinds of good stuff with Bernie.
It was a great conversation. So tune in.
Senator Bernie Sanders, thank you for being here.
My pleasure.
I want to start with a version of a question that we ask all the candidates who come through.
You spend a lot of time talking about how real change doesn't happen because of any one candidate or leader, but because of a movement, which I
completely agree with. Why are you the candidate who's best equipped to lead such a movement
at this particular moment in history? Because I think, John, that's what we've been doing
for a number of years. Just as an example, right now we have two million people who have
two million individual contributors to our campaign. That's,
I think, an all-time world record, to be honest with you. And what we have done is establish a
grassroots movement all over this country. Now, after I ended my campaign last time, and after
the 2016 election, I did something a little bit different than what other candidates who lose do. What I helped do is start an organization called Our Revolution.
And the function of that organization was precisely to build a strong grassroots movement
of young people, working people, and people of color. And in many ways, it has succeeded.
people of color. And in many ways, it has succeeded. And in terms of the 2000 election,
what I am most proud of is the fact that we saw a significant increase in young people's political participation. And that's something we have. I'm not suggesting that we did that alone.
A lot of groups did it. But that's something we've been working on. So I believe in grassroots
organizing, we are about a political revolution bringing millions of people
to stand up and fight for justice. I know you first became politically active as a college
student in Chicago during the 60s. When for you did thinking and learning about politics
turn into activism and why? Why did you say, I need to actually do something about this? Let me back it up a little bit. My political consciousness was raised as a kid, and it was
raised in two fundamental ways. Number one, I grew up in a working class family, the son of a Polish
immigrant, Polish Jewish immigrant. We lived in a rent control department. So what I
learned as a young person is what lack of money does to a family. So I grew up in a good household.
We were not poor, but we were a struggling lower middle class. And all kinds of fights would take
place between my parents because of the lack of money. And that I remember very distinctly.
And of course, that is a reality that impacts tens of millions of families today.
And I've never forgotten that.
Unlike Donald Trump, I didn't get $200,000 a year allowance.
I got 25 cents a week.
Second of all, I'm Jewish.
And as a kid, I remember very, very well hearing from my parents about the Holocaust.
And I remember getting a phone call that came in the middle of the night, which never happened in our household, from some cousin of my father's, I guess the Holocaust, to a lunatic named Hitler,
you become aware, as I think African-American families understand, that politics is not
something abstract. It impacts whether you live or you die, whether you're treated with dignity
or not. Those are the two factors that shaped, I think, my willingness to engage in politics.
I thought your speech on democratic socialism made one of the
most compelling economic arguments I've heard in the race. I love the inclusion of FDR's second
Bill of Rights. My question is, FDR is a proud democratic capitalist. Your critique and your
solutions are in rough agreement with other progressive Democrats. So what is valuable
or important to you about the label democratic socialism? Fair question.
And the answer is, and to a large degree, what our campaign is about. It's not just fighting
for Medicare for all. It's not just about raising the minimum wage to a living wage. It's not just about combating climate change. It's not just about making public colleges and
universities tuition-free. What it is about, and I think we are unique, and I think that's where
the word democratic socialist comes in, is understanding that we do not accomplish any of
that unless we have the courage to do what has not been done and that is to stand up to an
incredibly powerful and wealthy ruling class in this country whose greed has wreaked havoc on the
working class of this country. So I can sit here and tell you, John, look, I want to do this and I
want to do that. And you'll nod. You'll say, that's great, Bernie. But at the end of the day,
this is what I will tell you. And we have to deal with this.
And if you disagree with me, tell me. I've been in black here. But at the end of the day,
why are we the only major country on earth not to guarantee health care to all people?
Why do we have three people in America owning more wealth than the bottom half of America?
Why are we a country, unlike many others, that doesn't guarantee our kids the ability to get a higher
education? Why do we allow the fossil fuel industry to make billions a year while they destroy the
planet? And what's the answer to that? The answer to that is these guys have incredible power. And
if you don't recognize the power structure in America, which I do, and the need to take them
on frontally, then a lot of the other ideas don't really mean a whole lot. Yeah. I do, and the need to take them on frontally, then a lot of the other ideas don't really mean a
whole lot. Yeah. I mean, back when you were mayor of Burlington, you called yourself just a plain
old socialist. You argued for nationalizing industries like energy industries and banking.
But let me correct you on that. That's not when I was mayor of Burlington. I was elected in 81.
Before that, I ran on a third party ticket, which had some of those ideas. That's not, you know, that's not when I was mayor of Burlington. I was elected in 81. Before that, I ran on a third party ticket, which had some of those ideas.
That's not what I advocated when I was mayor.
In fact, we got along.
I wouldn't say we got along with the business community.
But if you check my record of my eight years of Burlington, the entire city did quite well.
I guess what I was asking is, have your views on socialism and your politics in general
changed over time? How have
they changed over time? Or has it been the same since you first started? No, it's not been the
same. I think if you don't change over the years, something is wrong, right? You're not learning
anything. If I said exactly what I said 40 years ago. Look, this is what I think. And this is not
radical. And I don't want the word democratic socialism to get people upset or scared. Look,
have you been to Scandinavia? Yes.
Did you travel there? Okay. So what do we have? Just take a look at a country like,
say, Norway. All right. You have a baby in Norway. What do you get? You get, if my memory is correct,
you either get 12 months off paid leave, or I think you get 12 months off at 80% of your pay or 10 months off
at all of your pay. You have excellent quality and affordable childcare. You have a strong and
very good public education system. Do you know how much college costs in Finland or Denmark or
Sweden? It's free. It's free. Yeah, it's free. You can go to medical school.
You can become a lawyer.
It's free.
So is that really so radical?
Germany, public education is free.
So when I talk about these ideas which get people very nervous, guess what?
They're existing all over the world.
It's not so scary to say that we should not have three individuals
owning more wealth than the bottom half of America.
We should not have the top 1% earning 49% of all income.
Maybe, just maybe, we want an economy and a government that works for all.
And that means we end.
I'm just going to come back to health care.
I know we'll discuss it in a minute.
We are the only major country on Earth that doesn't guarantee health care to all people.
I live 50 miles away from the Canadian border.
You go into Canada.
You have a heart transplant.
Do you know what you cost you when you come out of the hospital?
Nothing.
All right?
Yeah.
So you and I have the common experience of being part of campaigns
that took on Hillary Clinton.
You won, I lost.
That's the difference.
It was close.
What did that primary teach you about yourself?
It's funny that you ask that because we learned, obviously, an enormous amount.
And as you well know, being part of a presidential campaign, being staff or the candidate is an extraordinary experience.
I come from a small state.
candidate. It was an extraordinary experience. I come from a small state. And to be honest with you, I mean, during the course of this campaign, going all over the country and meeting all kinds
of people, diverse communities that I had really never spent a whole lot of time with was a
beautiful experience. And seeing so many beautiful people, especially a lot of young people out there.
Now, you know, people ask me, they say, Bernie, you do really well with young people, right? That's what we do. And what was your brilliant plan? How did you
figure this thing out? And the answer is zero plans. We just did it and went on as the God.
And it turns out, you know, that among the young people, and this is what I learned,
there is a sense of idealism. And I think it is fair to say that the
younger generation today is probably the most progressive generation, young generation in the
history of the country, anti-racist, anti-homophobic, anti-sexist, et cetera. And that also these young
people for the first time may end up having a lower standard of living than their parents.
So what I learned is there are a lot of beautiful young people out there who want to stand up and they want to fight for justice.
There are a lot of old people out there who are hurting
because they can't afford their prescription drugs
or their housing or whatever it may be.
There's a lot of pain out there.
And that's what we recognized in this campaign.
Between 2016 and 2020, what was your plan
and what is your plan to grow the movement that you began in 2016?
Because obviously you need to add more people to win.
Yes.
Well, I think it's a multi-pronged approach.
Number one, I think for our campaign and frankly to defeat Donald Trump, what we have got to do is grow the voter turnout.
Yeah.
Okay. The very good news for us is that two out of three young people are progressive.
The bad news is young people don't vote at the kind of levels that they should be voting. Now,
they're doing better. In 2018, it was good. We got a long way to go. So I would say
one of our focuses is to do everything we can to register young people and get them involved in the
political process. Number two, I believe we got to expand our base. A lot of people in
African-American communities did not come out to vote for Hillary Clinton. You know
that in Milwaukee, Detroit, elsewhere. And we got to create an agenda which speaks to the needs of working class people, black and white and Latino, Asian American and Native American.
And we've got to get them engaged in the political process.
This is my fear.
Anybody who thinks that Donald Trump, you know, the polls came out I think today had me six points out of Trump.
I don't take that all that seriously.
Trump is a very formidable opponent. He lies all of the time. He will use the power of government to help his campaign. Obviously, this man has no scruples at all. And the billionaire
class will be behind him in endless amounts of money. So what we need is an energized population
of young people, of working class people, of people of color in order to beat them.
We need the largest voter turnout by far in history.
I think our campaign can do it.
The other thing that we need to do, and I think, you know, people disagree with me on this, but I think there is a part of the Trump constituency, a part that can be won over.
That is not racist or sexist or homophobic or xenophobic.
And those are people that you know, I mean, correct me if I'm wrong here, that you have people out
there who voted for Obama not once but twice, and then they're voting for Donald Trump,
all right, because they felt that the political establishment had failed them, all right? They're
working two or three jobs going nowhere. Right. Their kids can't
afford to go to college. They can't afford health care. And they're saying, hey, what did you guys
do for me? Did you remember me? You know, I live in the Midwest. I'm not in Los Angeles and I'm not
in New York City. Help me out. I think we can appeal to some of those people. So this this is
my next question. I mean, there was a study out of Iowa after 2016 that said the most significant
factor in that state flipping to
Trump was not his economic promises, but his nativist appeals. And there's a bunch of other
studies like that. You've probably seen them that racial resentment was one of the main factors in
switchover. Do you buy that? And do you think that the Democratic Party can win those kinds of voters
back with a progressive economic agenda, even if some of those voters have been motivated in the past by racist or nativist appeals?
The answer is yes. And I think they're not, I understand what you're saying, and I do
agree with that, those studies. But they're not unrelated in this sense. Okay. If you are
somebody in Michigan, in Iowa, Pennsylvania, your job went to China.
You're making $12 an hour.
Your standard of living is lower maybe than it was 20 years ago.
Your kid is still living in the house because your kid can't go out and get a decent paying job.
Kid can't afford to go to college.
You can't afford health care.
You're
angry and you're resentful. And what Donald Trump said, and Trump may be crazy, he may be disgraceful
and disgusting. He's not stupid. And he said to those people, what's happening to your life?
Democratic establishment has ignored you. I hear your pain and I'm going to take on everybody. I'm
the anti-establishment candidate. And he
combined that with saying, let me tell you what the problem really is here. And then he goes into
his divisiveness and his racism and his xenophobia. So I think that he's playing on people's economic
resentment. And instead of saying, we're going to take on Wall Street and we're going to take
on the insurance companies and the drug companies who are ripping you off, we're going to take on Wall Street and we're going to take on the insurance companies and the drug companies who are ripping you off. We're going to take on the undocumented people.
That guy in California makes $10 an hour picking strawberries. That is your enemy. That little girl
who goes to high school, who was undocumented, we're going to throw her out of the country.
Those are your enemies. And that's where I think the two become related.
Do you think that we can win those voters back, even with a lot of the positions that you all in the primary have proudly taken?
Like, can you win those voters back by talking about decriminalizing border crossings, by talking about reparations for slavery?
How do you feel about that?
I'm not saying we can win them all back.
Right.
All right.
Please don't hear me say that.
All right. But you don't need to win them all back. You don't need to.
The way we win this election is grow the voter turnout, the basic democratic base,
that is the African-American community, the Latino community, the trade union community,
the working class community that is still voting Democrat, make sure we get them out to vote. We greatly expand voter turnout among young people, and we get a part of the Trump base.
You do that, you not only win, but you win big. And that, you know, as you know, what we're talking
about is 15 or 16 states, really. You're not talking about California or New York. And I think
if you look at states like Michigan think if you look at states like
Michigan, if you look at states like Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, other states, we can win those states
by doing just that. But here is my point. I happen to think that good policy, i.e. policy that speaks
to the needs of the working class of this country, a working class that has been decimated for the last 45 years.
And they know they have been decimated.
And our job is to make them understand that Donald Trump is a liar and a fraud.
You remember, correct me if I'm wrong here, this is a guy who campaigned about giving health care to everybody.
Well, that's pretty good.
I support that.
And then he tried to throw 32 million people off the health care that they had.
All right. So I think we expose Trump. I'm not going to tell you that we win all of his voters. I think we can win a chunk you know, she probably wants to talk about her economic message.
He says something crazy racist.
You've got to respond because it's wrong not to respond.
And now the news cycle is about Trump and what he said about Trump.
How do you, do you pivot to an economic message?
Do you take on his racism and xenophobia directly?
How do you handle that?
I'm going to hire you to figure that out. Okay, great.
Perfect, perfect.
I mean, who the hell knows?
You are dealing with a guy, you know, I probably missed the major news of the day because I haven't seen his latest tweet. I haven't either, actually. So I don't know what his latest tweet said. And
you're right. And then the media goes crazy and that's what you're forced to respond to.
So look, you cannot ignore Donald Trump and his tweets and his lies. But if you become obsessed with them, I guarantee
you will lose the election. I don't intend to do that. All right. So what we have got to do,
and here's what I want to get back to, because this is the key point.
There are tens of millions of people who are hurting very badly as we speak, even in a so-called
good economy where unemployment is relatively low. You got half this country living paycheck to paycheck. And the Democratic leadership for too damn long
has ignored that reality. Okay. I believe that in 2016, I've said it before and I'll say it again.
It wasn't that Trump won the election. It was the Democrats who lost the election.
You cannot turn your back upon people who are struggling every day in terms of low wages,
lack of health care, inability to send their kids to college, people who are in debt because they
come down with cancer. You cannot ignore those people. They are America and they're as important
as anybody else. We got to talk to their issues. Do you think it was the Democratic agenda in 2016
that ignored those people or is it a message issue? It's not a message issue.
I think for too long, for too long, going way back.
Because Hillary's agenda was pretty progressive.
Yeah, but it's not just an agenda.
It is the perception that the Democratic Party was hanging out with the rich and the powerful, all these wonderful fundraisers and Hollywood stars.
No offense to Hollywood stars.
I'm in California.
fundraisers, and Hollywood stars. No offense to Hollywood stars. I'm in California. You know, but, you know, Southampton and Los Angeles are not necessarily all that there is
to America. Maybe we've got to get into Kansas and into Mississippi and into rural Wisconsin
and to talk to family farmers who are being driven off of the land, to talk to the kids who are making $11 an
hour and trying to pay off their student debt. All right. So this is what I'm saying. We need a
candidate who speaks to what people are feeling in their guts. And getting back to the very first
question you asked me, they understand that there is something wrong when over the last 30 years, the top 1% have seen a $21 trillion increase in their wealth, while the bottom half of America have seen a $900 billion decline in their wealth. economics. They know the system is thoroughly rigged. They want a presidential candidate who
doesn't hobnob at fancy mansions with the rich and the powerful, but is prepared to take them on.
And I think I am that candidate, by the way. Just in passing.
Just in case.
Just in case anyone had a doubt.
So I think it's a credit to you and to the movement you helped build that
the healthcare debate in this primary is between a public option and single payer.
And quite a few major candidates have followed your lead on single payer.
Last week, a new mayor's poll showed that 41 percent of Americans support Medicare for all,
defined as a national health insurance program for all Americans that replaces private insurance.
70 percent support Medicare for all that want it, defined as allowing all Americans to choose
between a national insurance program or their own private health insurance. So I'm a voter at a town hall
who's fine with my current health care plan. I don't love it, but I'm fine. I like the ability
to choose, and I'm worried about my taxes going up. Why should I support your Medicare for all
plan versus the Medicare for all who want it? Okay. And John, you're right. That was one poll.
There are other polls which have different results, which show overwhelmingly that Democrats do support a
Medicare for All single-payer program and the ending of private insurance in this country.
So thanks for the question. And here's the answer.
Number one, the goal is to provide health care to every man, woman, and child as a human right, not a privilege.
Now, when we talk about health insurance, you know and I know that there are a whole lot of people out there who do have health insurance, but they have huge deductibles and copayments, and they can't afford their premiums.
And we are spending about twice as much per person on health care as the people of any other country.
spending about twice as much per person on health care as the people of any other country.
Meanwhile, you've got over 80 million people uninsured or underinsured, and we pay by far the highest prices in the world for prescription drugs. In a couple of days, Sunday actually,
I'm going to be going to Windsor, Ontario with a busload of folks who are dealing with diabetes.
We're going to buy insulin there for one-tenth the price that is being charged in America.
The current function
of the healthcare system is not to provide quality care to all people. It is to make
billions in profits for the drug companies and the insurance companies. That is the fact.
So you can talk about, well, I want healthcare for all, but if I have a large co-payment and a large
deductible and I have to pay out of my own pocket, I may still not
be able to get to a doctor. So let me be clear. I don't want to be disingenuous with folks.
What our plan says is kind of similar to what Canada is about, is you walk into the doctor's
office, any doctor you want. And by the way, there's some confusion about this. And that is
under Medicare for all, you have absolute freedom of choice regarding the doctor or the hospital that you go to.
You walk into that doctor's office.
You come out of the hospital after heart surgery.
You don't have to take out your wallet.
It is covered through public funding.
And that is an essential difference to what we're trying to do and what others are trying to do.
And I talk about health care for all.
It means no deductibles, no copayments.
It means, by the way, expanding Medicare for seniors to cover dental care, hearing aids, and eyeglasses.
And we can do this because we eliminate all of the waste and bureaucracy.
You know this.
This is an incredibly complicated system.
Hundreds and hundreds of different insurance companies, doctors are going crazy, hospitals are going crazy.
We eliminate all that. We have a simple system expanding Medicare over a four-year period to
cover everybody. Can you guarantee that no middle-class families' taxes will go up by
more than they're currently paying in premiums? Yes, we can. And thank you for making that distinction.
What the Republicans will say, Bernie Sanders wants to raise your taxes.
Right.
What they forget to tell you is you're not going to do any more out-of-pocket expenses for health care,
no more premiums, no more copayments.
So at the end of the day, if you weigh the two, yes,
the overwhelming majority of the American people will be paying less for health care than they are right now. So I guess sort of a larger question on this is, why to you is Medicare for all and single
payer so important to spend a lot of money on making the transition, right? Because you could
imagine a situation where you have a very robust public option, where you throw a lot of money
into making the subsidies more generous,
into making sure we don't have these high deductible plans. And, you know, there's some
countries that have universal health care that isn't completely, you know, government-run single
payer. When, you know, there's other problems out there, there's wage stagnation, there's food
insecurity, there's poverty, like, this is going to be a huge price tag, right, to move the health
care over. I mean, in taxes, right?
And obviously we're going to have a lot of savings in health care costs as a nation.
But why to use it so important to focus on sort of redoing the entire system?
Well, first of all, I personally don't think it's quite as difficult an undertaking as other people do.
I'll tell you what was difficult.
And let's think about
this. Back in 1965, on the LBJ and the Democratic Congress, they passed Medicare. And you think back
to 65, they didn't have the technology that we have today. In their first year, they started a
brand new program. They said everybody over 65 was going to have health insurance. Started a brand
new program. They got 19 million people into the program in one year.
Now, do we really think it is that hard in the period that we're living in now with all of the sophisticated technology that we have to simply expand that program? We're not starting a new
program. We did have a tricky time with that. I heard about that. I do remember that.
Computers didn't work so well. From experience, it was not all that easy.
I do remember that very well.
It is a serious point because, look, I lived through that, and a lot of people got these cancellation notices.
And we could try to say, look, you're having a different insurance plan, but you're still going to get more generous benefits.
I think people's faith in government is so shaken that it is, for reasons that we could talk about too,
so shaken that it is, you know, for reasons that we could talk about too. But I think it is hard for average people to look at a change this big and sort of embrace it. Yes or no. Okay. How's
that for a man? Yeah, that's good. All right. And the yes or no is this. For better or worse,
I'm not inventing a brand new program. We got a program. By the way, Medicare today
is the most popular health insurance program in the country, far more popular than any private health insurance company program.
And all we are trying to do over a four-year period, and people say, Bernie, it shouldn't take four years.
Here it is, okay? You got Medicare right now. You're 65, you get into Medicare.
We're going to expand Medicare benefits, and I mentioned that.
And then the first year, we're going from 65 down to 55. Really? Is that really so difficult? And the next year, down to 45, and the next year,
down to 35. It is more gradual than people probably assume. Yeah. People criticize me for,
you know, actually the House bill moves it more rapidly than I do. So I honestly don't,
I think we're starting with a strong program, which is well-respected and popular.
We're strengthening that program, and we're expanding it to everybody.
And that may be actually even simpler than coming up with even more complexity to the existing health care system.
You know, John, when people get upset about the health care system today, and as you know, they are very upset about it,
it's not just that they're spending, in many cases, far more than they can afford to pay.
You're working class people are spending a fortune. You know, small businesses have gone
crazy trying to figure out how they can get insurance for their workers. It is the complexity
of the system. Every human being that I've talked to has had to sit down and fight with the insurance
companies. I thought, just a good friend of mine was telling me, he thought he had a colonoscopy
covered. Turns out he has to come up with $3,000 to pay for it.
Everybody in America has had that experience.
This is a simple system.
It is a public system.
You walk into any doctor you want, you don't take out your wallet.
It is the right thing to do.
It'll ease the pain of millions of people who are trying to negotiate with the drug companies
and make life easier for doctors, by the way, and nurses as well, and hospital administrators.
What are the top two or three legislative priorities that a President Sanders would want to get done or at least start before the 2022 midterms?
Medicare for all, certainly.
Would that be number one?
I don't like this number one. I mean, I think you...
Up there.
Yeah, it's up there. And how could anyone run away from climate change? I mean, we're talking about
scientists telling us that we have fewer than 12 years to fundamentally transform our energy system
or else there will be irreparable damage done to
this country and to the rest of the world. So you can't run away from that.
And I think the third one, if you want me to limit it to three or four or five.
Sure.
Or 16. All right, we can go on.
Well, you know how the Senate works. We don't have too much time before the midterms.
You know, and the third one is to deal with an economy today that works
extremely well for private, for large multinationals and for the wealthy, but it's not working well for
working class people. And we got to create an economy and decent paying jobs for all Americans.
And that's why we have what we call a guaranteed jobs program. If you want to work,
you're going to work and you're going to earn a decent wage. And we're going to expand unions to
make it easier for workers to engage in collective bargaining. And then you got education. I mean,
the difficulty with answering your question, all these issues are so important,
is, you know, you know, and I know, I mean, in many parts of this country, our educational system,
often in minority communities, is failing the kids.
Teachers are leaving the profession because they're overwhelmed with the problems and the lack of resources that they have.
So it is not a radical idea to say that we're going to put, instead of expanding military spending, instead of giving tax breaks to billionaires, we're going to put money into public education.
We're going to attract and pay the best and the brightest young people to get involved in education. We make public colleges and universities tuition free. And
by the way, we cancel student debt in this country and we pay for it with a tax on Wall Street
speculation. So you've said in the past that you would try to get Medicare for all done through
the reconciliation process and keep the filibuster in place. Could
you explain to people what that means? Look, at the end of the day, I think everybody knows that
the Senate historically functions very differently than the House. The Senate is a more conservative
body, moves slower than the House. House, you got the majority by one, you move it. Senate,
not the case. You have filibuster and so forth. So this is what I believe. Do I believe that the Senate should simply become a majority-based institution like the House? No,
I don't. But on the other hand, I will not allow, as President of the United States, one person
to block what tens of millions of people need. So what we need for a start is filibuster reform.
All right. That means people are going to have to be on the floor of the House talking. They have a right to express their opposition, but they're not going to do it by, you know, sending them to have a staff member sending a piece of paper to the leader. That's number one. Number two, I believe that we can use, you know, as you well know, Bush used budget reconciliation to get his huge tax breaks for the wealthy, right? We can use budget
reconciliation. And by the way, if I'm president, my vice president will be the president of the
Senate, who I suspect will be in agreement with me in interpreting Senate. Because the vice president,
the president of the Senate sets the rules. Right, exactly. So if someone says, oh, that shouldn't be
in budget reconciliation, that he or she can say, yes, it can. That's right.
Okay.
So that is essentially getting rid of the filibuster in another way. Not completely.
Because I do believe, you know, look, I do believe, you know, sometimes it's easy when
you're in the majority, but when you're in the minority, you want the opportunity.
I was on the floor a number of years ago for, I don't know, it was eight and a half hours
or longer, you know, talking about my concerns about legislation. Oh, it was Obama's tax bill. Tell me to think of it. Just you may remember
that. I do. I do remember that. But, you know, I think people have the right to be in opposition
and get their voices heard. And I don't want to do away with that. But you're not expecting any
you're not expecting any Republican votes for any of your agenda in the Senate, at least, right?
You know, because it does then it does seem like it's 51 votes or nothing.
No, that's right. So, I mean, I think we use budget reconciliation. We move aggressively
to filibuster reform. People have the right to voice their opposition. They have the right to
gain control over the Senate floor and talk, but they don't have the right to stop progress
in this country. What would you do differently from President Obama to keep the movement alive and active once you're in the White House? This was
our challenge, right? Why do you ask that question? I discussed that with President Obama.
Oh, good. Okay. Well, what advice did he give? He was very kind. We were in the Oval Office on a couple of occasions talking about many, many issues.
And here's what I will do if elected president.
And I say this not out of generosity of spirit, but because I think it has to be done.
When we talk in our campaign, and our central
message is a political revolution, our central message is us, not me. What do I mean by that?
What I mean by that is I happen to believe that there will never be real change in this country
unless we take on the incredible power of Wall Street. All right? And I know that was an issue I suspect.
I was in the White House along with a number of other senators talking to the president about that issue.
You recall that point back in 2009?
Very well.
Okay.
And you've got to take on the insurance companies and the drug companies and the fossil fuel industry and the prison industrial complex and the military industrial complex.
And you know what?
No president, not Bernie Sanders, not Barack Obama, not anybody else can do it alone.
Now, I know that during the 2008 campaign, which you were involved in, I happen to believe that
Obama ran one of the great campaigns in American history. That's my view. But I think, and this is
what the president and I talked about, is how do
you continue that grassroots activism? How do you do that? And what he said is, and I remember
exactly what he said, he said, Bernie, it's harder than you think. I will agree with him there,
because I saw it too. It is harder than you think. But I think that's what has to be done.
So when I talk about us, not me, this is my understanding.
I'm not running for president simply to get elected president.
I'm running for president not only to defeat the most dangerous and ugly president in the history of this country.
I'm running for president to help transform this country, and it cannot be done alone.
It is absolutely imperative that we figure out a way to maintain millions of people in the political process.
How you do it, I can't give you the script right now, but it has to be done.
It has to be done, and that's what the political revolution is about.
Because you asked me, will we have Republican support for this and that?
Well, you know what?
If we go to Kentucky and tens of thousands of people tell Mitch McConnell, you know what?
We're working for $9 an hour.
We can't make it.
You are going to vote to raise that minimum wage to $15 an hour.
Can we have that impact?
I think maybe we can.
All right.
So we need to mobilize millions of people to stand up for justice.
And as president of the United States, I would be part, you know, you'd be commander in chief of the military, but you're commander in chief of a strong grassroots movement as well.
You've said you want to pass comprehensive immigration reform, dismantle cruel and inhumane
deportation programs and detention centers. You do that. How would enforcement in a Sanders
administration differ from the Obama administration, immigration enforcement, or would
it? I think the first thing that we do, and I know Obama was sympathetic to this, is the need
to go forward with comprehensive immigration reform. And you know what I think? I think that's
what the American people want. Yeah, very popular. You know, Trump talks about throwing millions of people out of this country. Thank God, very few Americans think that that is the right or
decent thing to do. So I think you rally the American people and you sit down with some sane
Republicans. Now, one of the things that we have to be imagining is that right now we have a racist
president who is trying to divide the country up.
And sadly and tragically, I don't know if you were planning to talk about this, we have seen
the essential collapse of the Republican Party around this guy. People are afraid to stand up
to him. He can say or do anything and you don't hear more than a whimper out of Republicans.
But if you have a president who talks about justice, who is rallying the American people, some of these Republicans who today are too afraid to stand up may start coming forward.
Can't guarantee it, but they may.
So I think we move toward comprehensive immigration reform.
We stop these terrible raids, which are terrorizing communities.
I was just the other day here in L.A. talking to teachers.
And as you know, the L.A. school district is largely people of color, kids of color.
And you got kids, Latino kids, scared to death that they're going to come home from school and their parents are not going to be there.
Do you know what this means to kids?
How do you live under that stress and anxiety?
So we stop these raids.
We move forward with the support of the American people and I think some Republicans in passing comprehensive immigration reform.
And in terms of border policy, what we need is a rational asylum process which understands that if a mother takes a kid a thousand miles by foot in order to escape the violence in Honduras or El Salvador, that mother and child
are not criminals. They are desperate, desperate people. And we have to figure out how we create a
humane asylum process. We get the judges that we need to move that process along in a rapid way,
which we don't have right now. So those are some of the things I think we got to do.
You know, we didn't start off too well, but by the end of the Obama administration,
the deportation priorities were limited to dangerous criminals and recent arrivals.
Would you maintain those deportation priorities or enforcement priorities?
Well, I think also, if I may say, and I'll answer your question, is, you know, what Obama did
finally is develop a DACA program. Right. All program, which is no small thing. And Trump,
of course, has eliminated that program. And we would reestablish that and expand that program.
I think that I understand that Trump is going to be running his campaign for re-election
as they do in Europe right now, significantly on a racist, anti-immigrant basis. I'm not quite so sure that he succeeds. I
think the American people are much more sympathetic to the plight of immigrants. My own father came
to this country from Poland. Many other families are in the same boat. So I guess my question
longer term on immigration is you take Trump out of the picture, we're going to have climate refugees that are going to be
moving up from the South. We have, you know, we're looking at the problems in Venezuela right now.
We're going to have other refugees looking for not just escaping violent situations,
but looking for economic opportunity. How do we think about immigration in that context? Because,
you know, you talk about the Scandinavian countries all the time. Some of the countries that have, you know, generous socialist programs also have more restrictive immigration policies.
Having a multiracial democracy that welcomes immigrants and has very generous social programs hasn't really been tried anywhere or succeeded really well.
You know, John, that is an excellent question.
And it is not an easy question to answer. I mean, it's a question we have to wrestle with.
Is it my view, you know, Trump wants to accuse all Democrats and Bernie Sanders of open borders.
Right, right.
They'll open the border. Everybody in the world's going to come in here. Hundreds of millions are
going to flee. People are going to flee to the United States. Obviously, that's nonsense.
So long as we have nation states in this world called the United States of America,
Canada, the United Kingdom, Mexico, whatever it is, you know, there are going to be limitations.
And I think, first of all, you're absolutely right in suggesting that especially with climate change
and the incredible poverty that exists in so many countries in the world, this is going to be a
challenge not just for the United States, but countries, industrialized, wealthier countries all over the world. And we're going to have to
figure out humane policies to deal with. I would say probably the most effective way,
certainly in our hemisphere, is to try to address the reasons why so many people are fleeing
Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, and other poor countries. And the truth is,
these are small countries. And one of the points that I've made as president in the first week in
office, I will bring together the leaders of Mexico and Central America, other Latin American
countries, and say, look, we have a hemispheric problem. People are fleeing drug violence in your
country. They're fleeing poverty. How do we work together so that we can improve life in your
countries? Because everything being equal, I don't think a poor person wants to travel a thousand miles to
come to a country where they can't speak the language. So that would be the main goal. And
I think that's true all over the world. The industrialized countries of the world are going
to have to sit down and figure out how we improve lives in the poor countries so that people do not
have to flee. On that topic, you've talked a lot about the rise of right-wing authoritarianism fueled in part by tremendous global inequality.
What tools does the United States have to stop that and how would you address that as president?
It is an incredibly significant issue.
I think you've got 25, 30 or 100 people who own more wealth than the bottom half of the world's population.
And we have to sit back and say that is really not acceptable. 30 or 100 people who own more wealth than the bottom half of the world's population.
And, you know, we have to sit back and say that is really not acceptable.
And there are a number of things that we have to do.
One of the scandals, we learned this from the Panama Papers, you recall Panama Papers,
and other studies, is that large corporations and the wealthiest people in the world, including people like Mr.
Putin of Russia, are hiding unbelievable, we're talking about trillions and trillions of dollars in offshore banking systems in the Cayman Islands, Bermuda, Luxembourg, and other countries around
the world. We're talking about trillions and trillions of dollars that are escaping taxation while countries around the world are imposing austerity programs on working class people.
And we have to deal with that. We can't deal with it. Obviously, in the United States,
we can do what we can do. And I will do that. But it's a global problem impacting not only
our country, but the rest of the world. So as a planet, as a globe, the countries of the world
are going to have to work together to end the ability of the very, very rich and the powerful
to avoid paying their fair share of taxes. It's one thing that we have to do.
You've been very critical of Bibi Netanyahu and the Israeli government.
We spent a few billion dollars on aid to Israel. Would you ever consider using that aid as leverage
to get the Israeli government to
act differently? Absolutely. Absolutely. I mean, we are giving large sums of money. Look, let me
back it up before the tweets start flowing in. I lived in Israel. Actually, I worked in a kibbutz
for a number of months. I have family in Israel. I am Jewish. I am not anti-Israel.
I believe that the people of Israel have absolutely the right to live in peace, independence, and security.
End of discussion.
That is what I fervently believe.
But I think what has happened is in recent years under Netanyahu, you have an extreme right-wing government with many racist tendencies.
The role of the United States,
and this is not easy, you know, I believe me, Clinton tried it, Obama tried it,
Jimmy Carter tried it. This is not easy stuff, is to try to finally bring peace to the Middle East
and to treat the Palestinian people with the kind of respect and dignity they deserve.
Our policy cannot just be pro-Israel, pro-Israel, pro-Israel.
It has got to be pro-region, working with all of the people, all of the countries in that area.
And it's a similar position. And Hillary Clinton and I had a bit of a disagreement on this in 2016.
Saudi Arabia is a vicious, ugly dictatorship.
That's what it is. You've got to call it out. That's what it is.
They do not tolerate dissent. They treat women like third-class citizens.
And yet they have been our wonderful ally.
We followed them into this terrible war in Yemen,
where I'm proud to say I helped lead the Afghani out of that terrible war.
So what we need to do is not say we're 100% pro-Israel,
we're 100% pro-Saudi Arabia,
we hate Iran, we hate the Palestinians.
That is not the role that the United States of America should be playing.
We've got to bring people together and say, you know what, we're spending a whole lot of money,
not only in aid to Israel and to Egypt, we have spent trillions of dollars on the war on terror.
We are going to sit down.
And by the way, I've been critical about Trump every single day since his
administration. But one area I'm not critical of.
He went to
sit down with Kim Jong-un.
And you know what? I think that's okay. I think that's the right
thing to do. And I, as President of the United
States, if I have to sit down in a room with
the leadership of Saudi Arabia, with the
leadership of Iran, with the leadership
of the Palestinians, with the leadership of Israel,
and hammer out some damn agreements, which will try to end the conflicts that exist there forever.
Do you think today, in 2019, the distance between the democratic establishment and the
grassroots activists, progressive activists, is as large as you might see on Twitter or in the news?
Do you think it's that big? I don't know if it's as big as you might see
on Twitter. It's pretty big. It is pretty big. What drives you craziest about the Democratic
Party? Is that they're not open to young people and to working class people. I'm not just simply
the truth. It is. And is that openness, would you say that people and to working class people. And that's just simply the truth.
It is.
And is that openness, would you say that's a result of what you said earlier,
which is too much time raising money from the wealthy?
Is that your main? I think it's what the establishment does.
The establishment hangs out with the wealthy and the comfortable and people in power.
And the establishment kind of forgets that as we speak,
there are millions of people living paycheck to paycheck who can't afford healthcare, who are paying 50% of their
limited incomes in rent, who are scared to death about an illness in the family that might bankrupt
them. I think the democratic establishment to a significant degree, and there's a lot of rhetoric
out there, but has really forgotten about that and has forgotten about the need to stand up to power. Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. talked about it. You got to truth to power. There's a lot of power in there. Maybe you can
disagree with me, but I'm not quite sure that the Democratic leadership said to Wall Street,
you know what? You're not going to charge 25% interest rates on credit cards after we bailed
you out to the pharmaceutical industry. We've dealt with that for a few years, right? You explain to
me how the hell they can charge 10 times more for insulin in this country than in Canada. And it's
drug after drug after drug. Has the democratic body stood up to these people? I guess my view is
at least a lot of the democratic politicians I've known and work with are in it for the right reasons they want to stand up to these industries um they're stuck in a very shitty campaign finance
system where uh sometimes you have to raise money from wealthier people um and they don't like that
but they do it but when it comes down to taking the votes to stand up to powerful interests they
take the votes but republicans have blocked progress for a long time.
And I mean, no one,
the insurance industry wasn't thrilled
with the Affordable Care Act.
Pharmaceutical industry was pretty happy.
Yeah, they were happier
than they should have been for sure.
I agree with you there.
So the answer to your question,
I agree with what you said.
Look, I get tired of hearing,
you know, politicians,
including the people I'm running against,
by and large,
are decent, honest people who are in it for the right reasons. And people don't understand that.
So I agree with you. But on the other hand, I think we would be hard pressed to really
state that the Democratic leadership has said to Wall Street, has said to the insurance companies,
has said to the drug companies, fossil fuel industry, you know, you can't destroy the planet.
You can't do it anymore. It's not only a question of making cars more fuel efficient. We've got to go further than that.
very badly, who want leadership to create, to take on the big money interests and create an economy that is fair, that is just, that will improve life for ordinary people. Democrats by
and large, with some exceptions, have not done that. And what do you think the left could be
doing better to be more politically effective? I think what progressives have got to do is to spend a great deal of their time and energy
in going out into distressed communities all over this country and knocking on doors and
doing a whole lot of educating and getting people who have given up on the political
process.
There are so many people, I'm sure you know, who are so disillusioned.
You can knock on the door, we need you to vote. I'm not going to vote. It's all bullshit. Don't
bother me. All right. We have somehow, and it is not easy, going to have to bring these people
into the political process. And I don't know the progressives. We're working on this in our
campaign. We have got to do better than we're doing. But that's really what the goal has got
to be. Get people involved in the political process and have our working class
and young people stand up to the 1% who have just unbelievable power and wealth in the country
today. Final and most important question, will you have Cardi B perform at the inauguration?
We are putting together a committee to take a look at that.
Okay. All right. That's good. Bernie Sanders, thank you so much for joining us.
Really appreciate it.
Thanks for having me. Thank you.