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Indybay Feature

The Sanders Campaign Was About “Us” -- Not Bernie -- Remember?

by Norman Solomon
Time for leadership from the bottom up

During the five weeks since Bernie Sanders suspended his campaign, many fervent supporters have entered a “WTF?” space. The realities of disappointment and distress aren’t just about dashed hopes of winning the presidential nomination. Much of the current disquiet is also due to a disconnect between choices made by the official Sanders campaign in recent weeks and his statement on April 8 that “we must continue working to assemble as many delegates as possible at the Democratic convention, where we will be able to exert significant influence over the party platform and other functions.”

There are scant indications that the remnants of the Bernie 2020 campaign are doing anything to win “as many delegates as possible” in the 20 state primaries set for the next two months. That fact has left it up to individuals as well as independent groups and coalitions to do what they can to gain more Bernie delegates for the Democratic National Convention.

If the total number of Sanders delegates goes over the 25 percent threshold required by party rules -- a goal that’s within reach -- progressives will get appreciable leverage over convention decisions. While top-level negotiations between the Sanders and Joe Biden camps have led to agreements that are a bit murky, there’s no doubt that the best way for Bernie forces to gain clout is to win as many delegates as possible.

But -- while Bernie has continued to provide valuable forums and town halls via livestreams, such as “Saving Our Planet from the Existential Threat of Climate Change” on Wednesday night -- what remains of the Sanders campaign is not urging supporters to vote in the presidential primaries this spring.

That choice not only makes it harder to win more Bernie delegates in primaries. It also has an effect of depressing turnout from left-leaning voters overall, to the detriment of progressive candidates in important down-ballot races in a score of states.

On Tuesday, the Nebraska primary netted zero delegates for Bernie. But next week the Oregon and Hawaii primaries are more promising to gain substantial numbers of Sanders delegates.

To get a grip on the torch that Bernie is implicitly passing to the grassroots -- now more than ever -- we should take heed of a passage from his painful statement five weeks ago suspending the campaign: “Let me say this very emphatically. As you all know, we have never been just a campaign. We are a grassroots, multiracial, multigenerational movement which has always believed that real change never comes from the top on down, but always from the bottom on up.”

From the bottom up, it’s up to us. In effect, that now means the leadership for the Bernie campaign and what it stands for must come from the “movement which has always believed that real change never comes from the top on down.”

We should take Bernie at his words, and take them to heart: “Not me. Us.”

That means grassroots activists in upcoming primary states should take the initiative and get out the vote for Bernie. It also means that progressives around the country should jump into the fray, connecting with organizations that are working to maximize turnout for Bernie such as Our Revolution , People for Bernie Sanders , Progressive Democrats of America , RootsAction.org (where I’m national director), and the new coalition Once Again.

No leader is infallible, and the best ones -- like Bernie Sanders -- don’t claim to be. Bernie’s deeply progressive and visionary leadership has been extraordinary, with inspiring ripple effects nationwide. The rest is up to “us.”

______________________________

Norman Solomon is co-founder and national director of RootsAction.org. He was a Bernie Sanders delegate from California to the 2016 Democratic National Convention. Solomon is the author of a dozen books including “War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death.”

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by At Home Watching TV
Today, May 14, 2020, we saw an object lesson on TV as to the utter bankruptcy of the Democrat-Republicans and the necessity of supporting the only 2 parties that support HR 1384, Medicare for All, a form of socialized medicine that exists in the rest of the industrialized world, the only 2 parties that are always pro-labor, pro-socialized medicine and anti-war and demand that the rich, namely the millionaires and billionaires, be taxed with the progressive income tax to pay for all our needs, and more. These 2 parties are Peace & Freedom Party and the Green Party on the California ballot.

In the morning, here in San Francisco, on C-Span Cable Channel 24 and on CNN, we saw the very partisan circus of a House committee, chaired by a California anti-HR 1384, congresswoman, Anna Eshoo, interrogate a whistleblowing Dr. Bright, explain his position on COVID19, with the Republicans acting like quacks promoting an anti-malaria drug that is not good for COVID19 patients, and the Democrats acting as Dr. Bright's cheerleaders, without admitting that their party leadership does not support HR 1384, among them, San Francisco's millionaire Rep. Nancy Pelosi. The best statement Dr. Bright made is that the 18 month schedule for a vaccine promoted by Dr. Fauci can only happen if everything works, and that never happens, and his schedule for a vaccine is 10 years. No one questioned the efficacy or safety of vaccines, which always need taxpayer indemnity to proceed.

For the 118 co-sponsors of HR 1384, see https://www.congress.gov/bill/116th-congress/house-bill/1384/cosponsors?q={%22search%22:[%22HR+1384%22]}&r=1&s=1&searchResultViewType=expanded
218 co-sponsors are need for it to pass.

By noon, on NBC, Cable Channel 3, we had millionaire California Democratic Governor Newsom, tell us that his solution for closing the budget gap, in lieu of federal support, is to cut workers' wages. The Democratic Party claims to represent labor so it will be instructive to see how the Super Majority Democratic Legislature reacts to this non-existent solution. The obvious solution is to tax the rich. In California, we have 663,000 millionaire households including 124 billionaires.

Then, in the afternoon at 1 p.m., on Cable Channel 26, we saw the San Francisco Health Services Board discuss all the premium increases being proposed by Kaiser, Blue Cross and the other profiteering health insurance providers with whom the City & County of San Francisco contract to provide medical coverage for the City's employees. You can see this circus online at https://sfgovtv.org/program-schedule. The public comment was the best, with one city employee breaking down in tears as she cannot afford any medical premium increase. To anyone looking at this from outside the United States, this is insanity and fascism. Medical care must be socialized and free to all upon demand. This is why we say there can be no political democracy without economy equality.

You cannot make a silk purse out of a sow's ear. The Democratic Party is a capitalist party, paid by the same corporations as pay the capitalist Republican Party, to carry out the same warmongering, anti-labor, anti-socialized medicine agenda.

On May 12, 2020, Democracy Now informed us that millionaire Democrat Joe Biden is the same as billionaire Republican Donald Trump when it comes to being anti-Cuba and anti-Venezuela. See https://www.democracynow.org/2020/5/12/headlines

"Joe Biden said last month that as president he would engage with Cuba, but that U.S. sanctions over its support for the government of Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela could remain in place. Joe Biden also recently expressed support for Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó and his “efforts to restore democracy.” Guaidó has been trying to gain support for the ouster of Maduro since last year’s unsuccessful coup attempt."

"In related news, Venezuela says it arrested three more mercenaries suspected of being involved in a failed coup against President Nicolás Maduro, and seized three abandoned Colombian combat vessels, reportedly equipped with machine guns and ammunition."






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