The Daily - The Candidates: Bernie Sanders
Episode Date: December 6, 2019Today: Part 2 of our series on pivotal moments in the lives of the 2020 Democratic presidential contenders. Michael Barbaro speaks with Bernie Sanders, the democratic socialist senator from Vermont. M...r. Sanders reflected on his early schooling in politics and how he galvanized grass-roots support to evolve from outraged outsider to mainstream candidate with little shift in his message.Guest: Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator and candidate for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination. We also speak with Alexander Burns, who covers national politics for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading:Mr. Sanders has staked his presidential campaign, and much of his political legacy, on transforming health care in America. His mother’s illness and a trip he made to study the Canadian system help explain why.We asked 21 candidates the same 18 questions. Hear Mr. Sanders’s answers.
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Discussion (0)
Hello.
Hello.
How are you?
Senator Michael Barbaro.
Nice to see you, Michael.
Great to see you.
Hi, Jessica Chun.
Jessica, nice to see you.
Where would you like me?
Nice to meet you.
Michael Barbaro.
So, Senator Sanders, my colleague Alex Burns told me that to understand your political
career and your presidential campaign today, we have to go back to the first time that
you won elected office as mayor of Burlington in 1981.
So, that's—
Hey, the New York Times got it right.
Everyone's in a while.
So that's what I want to ask you about.
All right, there you go.
What was happening?
From the New York Times, I'm Michael Bavaro.
This is The Daily.
Burlington is the largest city in Vermont.
Situated as it is on Lake Champlain with the Adirondack Mountains view.
It's a lovely, lovely spot. We'd like you to meet its new mayor.
Mayor Sanders got a lot of attention recently, not only with his 10-vote victory, but mostly because he is a socialist.
Part two in our series on pivotal moments in the lives of the top four Democratic candidates for president.
Today.
The people who are living in all of the Burlington Housing Authority developments, both the senior
citizen developments and the low-income housing projects, are going to be receiving the lowest
cable television bills in the state of Vermont.
Bernie Sanders.
Ronald Reagan and his billionaire friends do not represent America, but we do.
Lastly, I want to touch upon an issue that's dear to my heart, and that is the issue of affordable health care.
The people of Burlington voted overwhelmingly, overwhelmingly in support of Congress moving forward to establish a national health care system.
I think that that is exactly how this country is going to have to go on that issue.
It's Friday, December 6th.
Alex Burns, why this moment?
Bernie Sanders is such an unusual character in American politics as a lifelong socialist and left-wing activist
who has endured for decades as a major political figure
and who has become a leading presidential candidate.
And to understand how he got from
really the fringes of American politics
to the absolute forefront,
you have to go back to this moment in the early 1980s
where he becomes mayor of Burlington, where he figures out how to take those ideas and actually win elections with them and
then govern. This is a period I've been spending a lot of time on in my own reporting because it's
just such a vital formative experience for Sanders. And so the story starts with the turn of the
1970s as Bernie Sanders arrives in Vermont with a whole lot of left-wing ideas,
not a whole lot of local connections, and links up with a new marginal political party called
the Liberty Union. And that party had been formed around opposition to the war in Vietnam and in the
fight for economic justice. It's a very small party in a very small state. Bernie Sanders starts
showing up to Liberty Union meetings,
and the party identifies him as the man they want to run for a U.S. Senate seat in 1971.
And it was a very interesting campaign and so forth and so on.
I got 2% of the vote.
He loses that election, but then he has gotten the electoral bug.
A year later, there was the general election.
I ran for governor of the state.
I got 1%.
He loses again.
And then I ran for Senate again against Pat Leahy, as Leahy often reminds me.
And I got 4%.
And again, he loses.
I'm seeing a pattern here.
Yes.
It is loss after loss after loss.
And while he's running and losing, he has a series of odd jobs.
I was doing some writing.
I was banging nails, doing a little bit of carpentry work.
He also had a job putting together newsreels and educational film strips about history for school kids.
That's before video. For younger people, there was a thing called film strips. I won't go through what they were. Photographs and sound.
And I did most of the work myself, had a little bit of help, photography and so forth.
It was a lot of fun, actually.
He sells these films to schools in the
region, and he also spends time putting together a project that he's personally quite invested in
and proud of. If you are the average American who watches television 40 hours a week, you have
probably heard of such important people as Kojak and Wonder Woman. Strangely enough, however, nobody
has told you about Gene Debs, one of the most important Americans of the 20th
century. Which is a film about the life of the legendary American socialist leader, Eugene Debs.
Debs was a very great American. He was one of the original founders of industrial unionism,
socialist body candidate for president six times. You know, somebody I've admired a whole lot.
The ruling class has always taught and trained you to believe it to be your patriotic duty to go to war and to have yourself slaughtered at their command. But in all the history of the world, you the people have never had a voice in declaring war.
educator who is running campaign after campaign and losing every time. He's not really developing a professional or political career for himself in Vermont, but in the city of Burlington.
In 1980 or so, some friends of mine came up to me and they said, you know,
there's going to be a mayor's election coming up in 81. And you know what? We checked the records
and you did pretty well running as a Liberty Union candidate. You got actually 12% of the vote in some of the working class districts in Burlington.
So 2% or 4% or 6% statewide.
That was statewide, but in Burlington, we did better.
You were doing better.
Yeah. So we had a bunch of people together, and they said, okay, we'll do it.
Bernie Sanders, a Brooklyn-born self--described socialist, running for mayor for the first time in 1981, running against a Democratic gold guard that had run the city for a decade.
When Sanders becomes a candidate for mayor, he is facing off against a powerful Democratic establishment.
Burlington at this point for decades has been essentially a one-party town with a relatively conservative Democratic ruling clique that has
just had a hammerlock on city politics. The incumbent mayor is not seen by anybody
as vulnerable to the point that the Republicans don't even field a candidate against him. He's
also up against just a culture of apathy when it comes to municipal elections. People generally
don't show up to vote for mayor or for other city offices.
So Bernie Sanders and this kind of ragtag group of academics and activists and intellectuals band together to try to figure out how to crack a city election in a place where nobody like them
has ever won before. You would literally would not believe if I told you how little we knew
about politics when we entered that, I mean, real politics.
It's one thing to run for statewide office knowing you're not going to win and get on a radio show and talk about issues, which I could do.
But the nitty gritty of politics, you know.
So as a newcomer to city politics, Bernie Sanders runs a different kind of campaign from the campaigns he's run before.
This isn't about 30,000 foot ideological issues like when he was a protest candidate for the Senate.
Ruth, you're a volunteer worker
at the Old North End Food Co-op here in Burlington.
Right.
We're on disability security.
You got cut from $131 to...
$48.
And what was the justification for that?
How do they expect you to live on that difference?
Well, they don't care.
This is a ground-level campaign that's waded over really concrete kitchen table issues that are relevant, he hopes, to a wide array of constituencies in the city that feel like they've been left out by the existing power structure.
We had a lot of support in, for example, low-income housing projects of people who were getting a raw deal from the city that ran the projects. We had support from environmental groups. We had support
from one group in the south end of the city. There was going to be a major highway going right
through their neighborhood, and they said, we don't like that. So Sanders is gaining some real
support in this race. He's not a trivial candidate, but still, the powers that be in Burlington do not see him as a threat to win this election.
Let me talk about election night.
What was the story of that night for you?
Well, when I walked in on election day, I was of the two opinions.
Number one, that we would lose very heavily.
And the newspapers, some guy, a newspaper writer, was covering it and said, the odds of Sanders winning are about 100 to 1.
That was literally what they wrote.
guy, a newspaper writer, was covering it, said, the odds of Sanders winning are about 100 to 1.
That was literally what they wrote. So either we were doing something magical,
or we would lose overwhelmingly. What I did not anticipate is that on election night,
I think the results were ahead by 14 votes. And after the recount, 10 votes. That I did not expect.
Many people in Burlington are still in a state of shock following that city's most stunning political upset in memory.
The press reports from election night describe him as stunned and then elated that he wins, and he wins by the absolute narrowest of margins, just 10 votes.
10 votes.
Bernard Sanders, one of the founders of the Liberty Union Party
and a consistent loser in previous quests for elective office,
was now the big winner. Considered by many to be unelectable because of his so-called
radical views, Mr. Sanders put together an unlikely coalition of supporters
and edged the 10-year incumbent Gordon Paquette.
So your strategy had worked. When you take office, how did becoming an elected official, the day-to-day reality of it,
match your expectations of the power of winning this office and being mayor?
Well, we had a very unique experience.
Bernie Sanders has pulled off an extraordinary feat.
He has upended the city establishment. He has become a socialist mayor in the United States at the height of the Cold War. But what happens next is he runs into a brick wall of political opposition. There is a body in Burlington, the Board of Aldermen. We would call it a city council. There are 13 members. 11 of them are either Democrats or Republicans, but their party label matters less
than the fact that they're opposed to Bernie Sanders. He comes in, the powerful Democrats
and the powerful Republicans both essentially say he should not be the mayor of the city,
and he will not be the mayor of the city for very long because we're going to make sure that he can't
get anything done. People were trying to sabotage you? Trying to sabotage me? Yes, they were trying
to sabotage me. The first thing they did was to fire my secretary. They had the power to fire
your secretary? Yeah, they did. So they reject his secretary. They take it back pretty quickly,
but the damage to the relationship is kind of done, not only did the board of aldermen mess
with his ability to hire a secretary, they reject all of his nominees for the top jobs in the city, city clerk, city treasurer, city attorney.
And they made me run the city for the first year with exactly the administration of the guy I had
beaten. You know, it's like... You're being neutered.
Yes. So it's like, you know, Donald Trump running his administration with Barack Obama's appointees.
So for really his first full year as mayor, he has a somewhat ornamental role.
How are you thinking about this?
Well, their attitude, what they had said, and one of their leaders said, well, look, Bernie Sanders is a fluke.
That was the word they used. And they said.
Your brand of politics, everything about you they thought was just a fluke.
This is an accident. It should never have happened. And we will stonewall him in the
first year. People see that he can't accomplish anything. Then we'll go back to... They're going
to drive you from office. Yeah. Well, it was a brutal year. So what we had to do was literally
form a parallel city government without any money. I mean, we couldn't pay anybody, but we brought together
a group of strong supporters, and we had them helping us working on legislation and ideas.
And we did everything that we could while we were being absolutely opposed by the Democratic
and Republicans on the Board of Aldermen. So we organized at the grassroots level. We mobilized
people. Our job was to get people involved in the political process.
How did you do that?
I'll tell you how we did it.
Even before I took office, we had meetings on issues that people were concerned about
that had been ignored for a very long time.
We said, we believe in arts.
You know, a city has got to be vital and alive.
What do we do about the arts?
What do we do about economic development? What do we do about women's rights? So we ended up starting a council
on arts, a council on women, a council on youth. We started what we call neighborhood planning
associations, which meant we gave local neighborhoods, each ward had a certain amount
of money and they spent it however they wanted. So we tried to democratize it and we brought people into the process. So it wasn't me saying
we're going to do A, B, and C. These were people who themselves were now empowered.
So you're finding a way to essentially circumvent these aldermen who think you're a fluke and think
they can block you by literally tapping into more voters, more people. When did you know that this strategy
was actually working? Well, when hundreds of people would show up at city council meetings
and demand our agenda, we were fighting for an agenda. It was being blocked by the city council.
So people were upset about it. And here's the interesting thing.
We have elections for mayor then every two years, but half the Board of Aldermen comes up
on the odd year. So in 1982, one year after Sanders becomes mayor, seven of the 13
members of the Board of Aldermen are up for re-election. Essentially, there was a referendum
on my administration. These elections become a chance
for Mayor Sanders to go directly to the voters and ask them to replace these intransigent members
of the board of aldermen with people who are friendly to him and supportive of his ideas.
We ran candidates in almost every ward in the city. I probably have never worked so hard in my
life. I knocked on almost every door in the city with the probably have never worked so hard in my life.
I knocked on almost every door in the city with the candidates that we're running with.
And this is the wintertime in Vermont,
so we're talking about 10 below zero and zero weather.
And on election night, the turnout was phenomenal
for a non-mayors race.
It was just off the charts.
In five, if my memory is correct,
in the five wards that we ran in,
we won outright three of the wards
in all the working class areas.
And here is the most exciting thing about all of this.
If you go back to the basement of City Hall
and check the old records in Burlington,
what you'll find is that between 1979,
that was the previous election before I won, and two years later when I was running for re-election,
we doubled voter turnout. He's right. Voter turnout really did rise in Burlington when Sanders got
involved in city politics. And some of that is about him and his
message and his political organization. Some of it is just having contested elections, elections
where people file to run against the people who are already sitting in public office. When you
have two choices rather than one, then yeah, more people show up to make a choice. Good evening.
We're recording this on Friday, March 5th, and we've decided to get out of City Hall, get out of the office, and we're here on the first floor of the Burlington Square Mall.
And he continues to engage and attempt to inspire voters in this same way, getting out in the community. He's a highly visible mayor. And I think what we'll do is have some informal discussions with Vermonters as they walk past us and as we can grab them.
And we'll see if we can get their views on some of the important issues of the day.
He even creates a local television show called Bernie Speaks with the Community, where he is just out there and connected to your average voter.
Oops, oops, here we go.
Hi, Shannon.
Shannon, do you live in Burlington, Shannon?
Yep.
Okay, so how are things going with you?
Pretty good.
I was just wondering, my mother had this idea for an indoor-outdoor amusement park by the waterfront,
an indoor-outdoor amusement park by the waterfront,
and I want to know if there's anything going to be done about it.
Well, I can't say for sure that something will be done immediately.
I think it is a good idea, and interestingly enough, your mother mentioned... It's a highly unusual approach for a municipal politician,
and especially in a city where the mayor had not been that kind of man about town previously.
Okay, the next person that we've kidnapped here off the streets, for a few words, is Jody Baggerly.
Jody, welcome.
Well, thank you.
One thing I want to appreciate being a disabled person is the little discount we get on our cable TVs
because I think it's a positive point to have educational programs to be able to watch
and fill our minds at periods when we are unable to get out.
Let me just jump in and remind our viewers what Jody is talking about is the city negotiated with the Mountain Cable Company.
So, Senator Sanders, in brief, what are the lessons of this moment for you?
Lessons of this moment is that winning politics is grassroots politics. That winning
politics is developing coalitions of working people, of low-income people, of women, of
environmentalists. So coalition is, we do it from the bottom on up. And we ended up, in my years as mayor, taking on everybody.
We'll be right back. To Kill a Mockingbird has not played to a single empty seat, reports 60 Minutes.
It is the most successful American play in Broadway history.
Rolling Stone gives it five stars, calling it unmissable and unforgettable.
All rise for the miracle that is Mockingbird on Broadway.
It's a New York Times Critics' Pick.
Jesse Green calls it a mockingbird for our moment. Beautiful, elegiac, satisfying, even exhilarating. So Alex, in Sanders' telling,
in the face of total political opposition
and stonewalling,
his solution is to essentially do
what got him political power in the first place, which solution is to essentially do what got him
political power in the first place, which is go to the people, talk to the people, always the people.
That's his political brand as mayor, much as it's his political brand now. And in Burlington,
it's an approach that really works for him. It establishes him as a legitimate city executive
with an independent power base who cannot just be treated as an interloper in city hall.
It's also the first of a couple stages in Mayor Sanders' campaign to reinvent Bur with city politics at the ground level. The next stage, after he's been mayor for a couple years,
is to look way beyond Burlington
and take on big national and international political issues
and connect them back to the local level.
If I were the president of the largest bank in Burlington,
I'd be real nervous about you.
Well, they may be. They may be.
But I think, and they are,
but I think what we've often talked about also is that my powers as mayor are in many ways limited.
And I have my visions as to what life should be in Vermont, in Burlington, and in the United States,
but we are going to speak out, though, on national and international issues which affect the city of Burlington.
For example, obviously we're very concerned about Mr. Reagan's policies, which are impacting devastatingly on low-income and working people.
But we know what our powers are within the city of Burlington.
So, Senator Sanders, during this period, you start talking about national issues.
You start talking about President Reagan, his economic policy.
You start talking about foreign policy.
You send letters to the leaders of Japan expressing regret for the two bombs that were dropped on that country by the U.S.
What was your thinking?
As you're building this coalition locally, you start talking about issues beyond the
borders of Burlington.
And what is your thinking about why that's—
Well, let's be clear.
Ninety-plus percent of our energy was dealing with local issues like reforming the police
department and paving the streets.
We brought a minor league baseball team into Burlington, Vermont.
and paving the streets.
We brought a minor league baseball team into Burlington, Vermont.
95, 98% of our work was locally,
doing what mayors are supposed to do.
But as part of empowering people,
what we also believed is it was important
to think globally and act locally.
So if we were spending a whole lot of money
in Washington under Reagan,
investing in military spending
or giving tax breaks to the rich,
that impacted the city of Burlington.
We are mayors.
We need money to help us with housing.
We need money to help us with roads and infrastructure.
And yet Washington is spending this money
on the military or the busy invading another country
or whatever they're doing.
We should be speaking up on those issues.
The question is whether we use the incredible wealth
and natural resources and intelligence of our society
to create a decent standard of living,
a decent life for all of our people in this country and abroad,
or do we develop the greatest military machine
for killing in the history of the world?
That's what the choice is.
This was in the middle of the Cold War,
and we started a Sister City program.
I know some of the right-wing media misinterprets this,
but what we did is I took a group of about a dozen people from Burlington
to Yaroslavl in the old Soviet Union.
We had hockey teams coming about, we had doctors coming in and out,
we had kids coming in and out.
Really, I loved the idea of sister city programs.
It worked phenomenally well.
And involved a lot of people.
So the kids began to learn about Russia.
And I happened to believe then, and I believe now,
that if we're going to bring peace to the world,
we need a lot of cultural exchanges.
We need a lot of youth exchanges.
In fact, I recently proposed taking one-tenth of 1% of the military budget
and putting it into cultural exchanges,
which I think was a very good investment.
This land is mine.
From California to the New York Islands.
I had an experience this last summer.
I was invited by the government of Nicaragua to attend the sixth anniversary of their revolution.
And they must have had four or five hundred thousand people out there listening to speeches.
And the horrible thought that I had, really sunk my stomach, was that kids in my own city, young kids, working class kids,
might be asked by this president to go to Nicaragua to kill and get killed.
And it was a horrible thought.
Some of these endeavors were relatively bold.
At a certain point, you go to Nicaragua.
You end up meeting with the leader of the Sandinistas.
And I...
Oh, no, I'm not worried about any...
No, no, I'm just...
Oh, you're about time?
Yeah, we're running.
Yes, we are running.
How are we doing on time?
Five more minutes?
I think we're probably going to have to end it right now.
Oh, no, no, no.
This is not a...
Don't end it on this question, if that's the issue.
Well, you know, the issue is...
Trust me, this is not an...
All I was going to ask you was,
how do events like that connect to voters in Burlington?
Good, absolutely.
Very good question. How does meeting with an international leader like that connect with others in Burlington? Very good question.
How does meeting with an international leader like that connect with voters?
Because I believe we have to empower people.
One of the things we did is we said to people, speak out on national and international issues.
Yes, the mayor of the city of Burlington can't determine the defense budget. But if we rally people all over the country speaking out
on these issues, then the members of Congress and U.S. senators will hear that. So to answer
your question, this is just another mechanism that we had to say to people, you have a voice.
Do you think we should be spending more money on nuclear weapons? Vote on it. Talk about it. So all
of this has to do with empowering people to understand that in a democracy, they can determine the future.
Alex, what do you make of that?
That is really the essence of the Bernie Sanders approach to politics, that the most important thing a political leader can do is give voice to people's deepest concerns and frustrations and encourage people to give
voice to it themselves. And if there's a gap between what that political leader is expressing
or channeling and what he can actually accomplish, it's almost irrelevant that the act of expression
and engagement is the most important thing. And what happens when you draw people in
on an issue like climate change
or the Reagan administration's policies in Central America
is they become politically activated
in a way that then transforms politics
closer to home at the local level.
And Sanders did eventually articulate
what you're describing,
but not before he got frustrated with me
and seemed to indicate
he might end the interview when I mentioned Nicaragua. What do you think that that's about?
Well, first of all, this is a really charged moment in his early career and in American
politics. There has been a revolution in Nicaragua. Daniel Ortega and the Sandinistas
are a left-wing revolutionary movement that overthrows a repressive
regime.
They are seen as dangerous by the Reagan administration because they are so left-wing, and the Republicans
in Washington prop up a brutal right-wing militia to fight the Sandinistas.
Bernie Sanders is one of many Americans on the left who get involved at that point in demonstrating in favor of the Sandinistas or against Ronald Reagan, except Sanders takes it considerably further when he actually goes to Nicaragua, shakes hands with Ortega himself.
proposition probably ought to be able to explain, or at least you would think he would feel comfortable explaining it. And what I find somewhat confounding as a reporter is how much he resents
even the prompt to go into his thinking at the time and to reflect a little bit on some of the
things about his support for the Sandinistas that may not look as justifiable in retrospect. He doesn't want to do
that. My sense is that at the heart of it for him is this sense that even asking the question is
a kind of red baiting, that it reflects the way the political establishment and he very much lumps
the media in with the political establishment is out to get him, much as it was
in Burlington, much as he believes it was in the 2016 campaign. This is a guy who, in his early
days as mayor, was described by a fellow elected official as representing the fungus of socialism.
He is somebody who is very, very sensitive to anything he perceives as the charge that he is
not just a populist, not just very liberal,
but this wildly outside the mainstream, dangerous radical. And when you raise Nicaragua,
I do think that's the nerve that it hits. So that there's no misunderstanding,
those who listen and ask about Nicaragua, I want to give you a chance to make sure that there's no
confusion for any listener who's casually checking in. So the question is, was there anything about Daniel Ortega that you knew at the time that gave you pause?
Well, what gave me pause was that the United States at that time, as you may recall, I don't know,
do you remember who the president was before Ortega?
A dictator named Smoza, who was a dictator, a very bad guy, supported by the United States of America.
Then Ortega came to power, the Sandinistas came to power,
and the United States intended to do what it had done in many instances.
You are aware that the United States has a habit
of overthrowing governments in Latin America.
I didn't think that was a good idea.
Didn't think it was a good idea then,
and I didn't think it was a good idea now.
So we worked against American
intervention. So we went there to say, as part of a national movement, that the United States
should not be involved about overthrowing small governments. And for the record, in 85,
were you aware of any human rights issues or abuses by Ortega? Well, we were aware that this was a very controversial moment, having taken over from a dictatorship.
We were also aware that the United States at that time was supporting many governments
in Latin America who were much more brutal than Ortega was.
What you hear there is such an evasiveness about assessing the Ortega government on its
own merits that he really wants to talk about his advocacy
around Nicaragua exclusively as a repudiation of Reagan and not as an endorsement of what was
going on there. And if you look at his comments and activities at the time, that's not quite right.
He was more explicitly supportive of what the Sandinistas were doing than just going there as
a sort of anti-interventionist advocate.
But in fairness to Sanders, this was not a fringe position at the time.
Support for the Sandinistas has obviously not necessarily aged as well as Bernie Sanders might have expected it to politically.
And that's, I think, where you hear his real discomfort talking about it in the context
of this campaign.
But in taking this trip and in talking about it the way he does, he's living his creed,
essentially.
Exactly.
It is using all the levers
of his power
and public influence
as an elected official
to weigh in on this subject
that is about as distant,
literally,
from Burlington
as you can get.
As this strategy is being deployed, you're winning your fourth term as mayor.
And you go on, successfully this time, to run for a statewide office, the House, the Senate.
And then, of course, you run for president in 2016, now again in 2020.
In each of these campaigns, in each of these moments, you're building larger and more powerful coalitions of voters. And given that history and your success in doing that, what do you think is the big lesson from this early phase?
Why do you think it is that when we went to Alex Burns and asked him this question, and he said, you have to go back to 81, you have to go back to Burlington to understand Senator Sanders and this campaign and this moment.
Why is he right?
Why do we have to go back to that race and that moment?
Politics in America has been very much from the top on down.
I mean, you still read articles in the New York Times where wealthy donors gathered today in a hotel to express concern about the Democratic candidates.
Who cares about wealthy donors?
We have over 1.1 million Americans who have made donations to our campaigns.
They're not wealthy.
These are working class people.
They're teachers.
They're workers at Amazon.
They're workers at Walmart.
What I believed then and what I believe now, the way you transform society is from the
bottom on up. You talk about issues that are relevant to working people, issues that are
relevant to low-income people, issues that are relevant to young people, and you grow
the voter base. So what I pointed out to you, maybe the most important thing that we did is from 1979 to 1983, we doubled, doubled the number of people voting.
What we're trying to do in this campaign right now is to significantly increase the voter turnout by talking to people who don't vote.
In Burlington, what happened is low-income and working-class people
saw that government could work for them. And they said, oh my God, I never knew that. My kids now
have a program. We have an after-school program they didn't have. We have a childcare center
they didn't have. Our streets are getting paved. Snow is getting moved. I didn't know that. We're
going to go out, we're going to support Bernie, and we're going to support the candidates that
he wants for Board of Aldermen. And now what we have to do in this country, which has one of the lowest voter turnout rates of any major country on earth,
is to reach out to those working people, reach out to those young people. And when they stop
participating in the political process, that is the political revolution.
If you become president, the question will be, sure, you talked about national and international
issues when you were mayor, but there was no real expectation that you could change the course of events as a single mayor of a town of Burlington.
If you become president, that expectation will be real and urgent and present. So are we to
understand that if you run into political obstacles as president, that your strategy
will be to call upon the expanded electorate that you have created and turn that
into a political force that you would then follow what you did in Burlington with the Board of
Aldermen? Well, it's not an if. That is exactly what is going to happen. When we talk about
the need to join the rest of the industrialized world and guarantee health care to every person
through a Medicare for All single-payer program, the only way that's going to happen is when millions of people stand up and take on the
insurance companies and the drug companies. When we talk about transforming our energy system to
save the planet from the devastation, absolute devastation of the global crisis regarding
climate change, the only way that happens is when millions of people stand up to take on the fossil fuel industry. So on all of the issues we are talking about, that's what
the political revolution is about. It's saying that we're going to mobilize millions of people
to stand up for an agenda that works for working families. And when they do that,
there will be no stopping them. We will be able to create a government and an economy that works
for all, not just the 1%.
Alex, what do you think of that theory?
Well, the coalition that he's trying to build as a presidential candidate is such an echo of what he accomplished in Burlington.
If you look at the people he has brought with him into the Democratic primary, it does look like a coalition of younger people, more working class people than almost any other candidate in the Democratic race.
And his theory is they are going to show up for him in a way they wouldn't show up for any other candidate because he is speaking to their concerns directly.
And Sanders has plenty of reason to expect that that might really be the case. He has charted this remarkable
ascent as a national political figure on the strength of this coalition and mainstreamed a
set of socialist and quasi-socialist ideas that were seen as really outside the mainstream when
he started campaigning on them decades ago into the center of one of the country's two major political parties.
The question for someone like Bernie Sanders is, does that theory work in a general election on
a national scale? Can you really bring in that many new people into the political process where
there already are a whole lot of people who vote and who have pretty vested interests in the context
of an American election?
Can you speak in the way he does to the concerns of working class people without alienating millions
of people who already vote for the Democratic Party and don't necessarily share that worldview?
And could you, as the president, use that exact same playbook, that exact same coalition to master Washington and break a Republican Senate in the
same way that he transformed Burlington and broke a city council.
Alex, thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I wish you the best.
Thank you very much. I wish you the best. Thank you very much for your time. Thank you. anthem of New York City, says The New Yorker. It's the groundwater of the modern American musical,
says New York Magazine, and an explosion of every imaginable idea of what a musical can be.
The New York Times calls it an indisputable boundary-busting masterpiece. Previews begin December 10th. Opens February 6th, 2020. Tickets at telecharge.com. West Side Story on Broadway.
Something's coming. Something good.
West Side Story on Broadway. Something's coming. Something good. Thank you. Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsberg of Wonderly.
Special thanks to Sam Dolnick, Michaela Bouchard, Stella Tan, Lauren Jackson, and Julia Simon. That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Bavaro.
See you on Monday.