Editorial: Bernie Sanders Keeps Fighting the Good Fight
Saturday, May 26, 2018
Excerpt:
After eight years as mayor of Burlington, 16 years as Vermonts sole representative in the U.S. House of Representatives and nearly 12 years as a U.S. senator, Sanders outrage is undiminished when it comes to the struggles of working class families and the growing divisions in society between the few who possess extreme wealth and the many who do not. Indeed, his announcement last week that he intends to seek a third six-year term in the Senate was thematically of a piece with all that has come before: Our struggle to create a government which represents all of us and not just the 1 percent a government based on the principles of economic, social, racial and environmental justice must continue, the 76-year-old senator said.
And, as he did in 2006 and 2012, Sanders intends to seek the Democratic nomination in the primary, respectfully decline it if he wins, and run as an independent in the general election, meanwhile accepting the hearty endorsement of the Vermont Democratic Party. Thus are accommodations made to finesse the senators continued insistence on being identified as an independent, though he caucuses with the Democrats in the Senate.
What has changed remarkably, though, is the degree to which people outside Vermont take notice of what an independent democratic socialist (thats small d, small s) from a tiny, deep-blue state thinks. When, for example, Sanders released a video last week calling out Amazon and its fabulously rich CEO Jeff Bezos over low wages and exhausting working conditions for employees of its fulfillment centers, the company responded the same day with a defense of its policies and an invitation to Sanders to visit. Sanders in turn accepted the invitation with thanks and added for good measure, I remain deeply concerned about Amazon, an enormously profitable corporation, paying workers wages that are so low that they are forced to depend on federal programs like Medicaid, food stamps and public housing for survival.
This new-found influence stems, of course, from Sanders out-of-left-field bid to capture the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination. Although he did not ultimately succeed, he secured a remarkable 43 percent of the vote in Democratic primaries across the country, motivated millions of young people to engage in politics, shook up (and angered) the partys establishment, and, astonishingly enough, was transformed at an advanced age into a gruff, white-haired political rock star who now requires, as in his home state, no other identification than a single name an exalted status reserved for a relative few in all fields of endeavor.
http://www.vnews.com/Editorial-The-Inimitable-Bernie-Sanders-17757331