music in the park san jose

.The Summer of Sanders

As Senator Bernie Sanders barnstormed the Midwest, progressive Democrats started to believe that he might actually have a chance against Hillary Clinton.

music in the park san jose

As the summer of 2015 began, US Senator Bernie Sanders, I-Vermont, became impossible to ignore. On July 1, as 10,000 people cheered and chanted his name, the 73-year-old senator summited a stage in a Madison, Wisconsin arena and took his place behind a wooden podium. He raised his right arm to wave at a sea of supporters and embraced his wife, Jane, with his left. Then, peering up at the distant nosebleed seats, Sanders did something unusual: He grinned. “Whoa,” he said.

Whoa, indeed.

In the 43 years since Sanders first ran for office, skeptics have doubted him at every turn. They never believed he could serve as mayor of Burlington, defeat an incumbent congressman, or chair a senate committee. Well before he entered the presidential race in April, Beltway pundits had long since written him off as an also-ran — a latter-day Dennis Kucinich.

But by the time Sanders arrived in Madison at the start of a three-state, four-day tour of the Midwest, CNN had declared it the “summer of Sanders.” By the time he departed, new polls and fundraising reports showed him gaining on Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton. And in perhaps the clearest validation, reporters who’d been asking Sanders about Clinton in every last interview started asking Clinton about Sanders.

At Wisconsin’s Veterans Memorial Coliseum, the senator let loose a few more “whoas” as he scanned the crowd of mostly white faces holding blue and white “Bernie” signs.

“In case you haven’t noticed,” he said, “there are a lot of people here.” He grinned again.

But Sanders’ smile quickly faded. As he launched into an hour-long stump speech, any hint of optimism was supplanted by his dour assessment of modern America.

The economy, he said, was rigged by greedy billionaires more interested in tax breaks than in feeding hungry children. Republicans held a “warped view of family values” and had “gotten away with murder for too many years.” His opponents would exploit a corrupt political system to defeat him, while a shallow news media treated the democratic process like a popularity contest.

“The greed of corporate America and the billionaire class has got to end, and we are going to end it for them!” he shouted.

“Ber-nie! Ber-nie! Ber-nie!” the crowd chanted.

No matter how Sanders fares in the nation’s never-ending presidential tryouts, this was the moment his campaign became real. No candidate to date had attracted so many supporters under one roof, as the senator himself triumphantly observed.

“It’s clear to us that there’s something going on out there,” said Sanders campaign manager Jeff Weaver.

In the nine months since we last traveled through Wisconsin and Iowa, the mood had changed entirely: Democratic activists were no longer pining for US Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, and a surprising number said they were convinced Sanders could — and should — win.

“God knows the nation needs him,” said Donna Butler, a retired church secretary from Madison, whose husband died in Vietnam. “The nation is going downhill real fast. We just need this man.”

But with success comes scrutiny. A super PAC allied with third-place Democratic rival Martin O’Malley, the former Maryland governor, had already trained its sights on Sanders, airing a negative television ad focused on the Vermonter’s mixed record on gun control. And now that Sanders has gotten Clinton’s attention, he’s sure to face incoming fire from perhaps the most formidable campaign apparatus ever assembled by a nonincumbent presidential candidate.

“I think they’re going to recognize that the support for Bernie is real — that in places like Iowa and New Hampshire, he can succeed because he’s got a very powerful message,” Sanders senior strategist Tad Devine said of the Clintons.

The real test for Sanders is whether he can withstand the scrutiny, scale up his fledgling organization and keep the energy alive. It’s a long road to the Iowa caucuses next winter and a longer road still to the Democratic National Convention next summer.

But Sanders, a former long-distance runner, has been training for this race all his life. His sneakers are laced — and he’s ready to run.


Sanders should’ve been pleased the next day when he reached Fort Dodge, Iowa — a 25,000-person town with an economy based on corn and gypsum. This was, after all, one of the most successful weeks of his three and a half decades in office.

After filling the Madison arena the night before, he had lured six hundred people to a breakfast speech that morning in Rochester, Minnesota. Hours earlier, Quinnipiac University had released a new poll showing that he’d more than doubled his support in Iowa in the previous month, from 15 to 33 percent. And his own campaign had announced he’d raised an impressive $15 million in his first two months in the race.

Despite the good news, the senator sounded like he had an ax to grind. He repeatedly ripped into the news media that afternoon during an eighty-minute town hall meeting in an auditorium at Iowa Central Community College (ICCC).

“The media regards politics as either a baseball game or a soap opera,” he began. “And the baseball game is who’s winning, what are the polls today, how much money did somebody raise? The soap opera is what happened in your life 87 years ago, this, that, and the other thing.”

It’s possible the senator was bent out of shape over a story The New York Times was about to publish on his writings in the Vermont Freeman newspaper in the early 1970s. In one essay from that era, according to The Times, he suggested that cancer might be caused by unresolved hostility toward one’s mother or having too few orgasms.

Or perhaps he’d heard from friends and family members that several news outlets were digging into his early love life. A week later, VTDigger.org, the Daily Mail, and Politico would all disclose on the same day the heretofore unreported fact that Sanders’ son, Levi, was born out of wedlock to a woman he never married.

“My wife and I thought long and hard about whether we should [join the race], and she was not all that crazy about it. Is that a fair statement, Jane?” Sanders told the crowd of 150 at ICCC, nodding toward his second wife at the back of the room. “For all of the reasons that you could understand: because we have media that is much more interested in gossip than in issues, and so on and so forth.”

The press, he had frequently suggested before entering the race, would seek to destroy him and his family.

“Will the media allow a serious discussion about the issues?” he asked his audience. “Maybe they will. Maybe they won’t. I’m not sure that they will.”

Sanders’ hostility toward the media is nothing new. In a 1979 essay for the Vermont Vanguard Press, he argued that television “is the major vehicle by which the owners of this society propogate [sic] their political points of view (including lies and distortions) through the ‘news.'”

Leaving aside the fact that Sanders now eagerly courts cable news networks and issues press releases about polls and fundraising, he is probably wise to treat the media warily.

Most recent coverage of his ascendant campaign — stories about his family notwithstanding — has been fawning and uncritical. The national political media has appeared eager to replace the tired storyline of Clintonian dominance. But Sanders surely understands the cyclical nature of a long presidential nominating contest, and he knows that what goes up must come down.

On his way out the door of the community college, Sanders tolerated a few questions from a handful of local and national political reporters before abruptly cutting them off.

“All right, thank you very much,” he said, pushing past them toward a waiting car.

I followed him and tried one last time to ask about that day’s fundraising announcement, but Sanders looked straight ahead, as if he hadn’t heard the question, and continued walking.

“Guess we’ll go with the statement,” his spokesman, Michael Briggs, offered with a shrug as the candidate hopped in the car.


As Sanders has drawn more and more fans to rallies in Minneapolis, Denver, and Portland, Maine, skeptics question whether such support exists outside the nation’s liberal metropolises.

But in the three days Sanders spent crisscrossing the corn belt of rural, western Iowa, excitement was palpable even in the tiniest burgs. When he drove two hours due west from Fort Dodge to Sioux City — just shy of the Nebraskan and South Dakotan borders — the candidate found more than four hundred people waiting to see him at Morningside College, a small, liberal arts institution affiliated with the United Methodist Church.

Introducing him that evening was a graduate student named James Johansen, who praised Sanders for daring “to stand up for the LGBT community” decades earlier, when “it was neither safe nor required for him to do.” Johansen did not mention Clinton, who waited until 2013 to embrace gay marriage and whose husband signed the Defense of Marriage Act into law. But his point was clear.

“As a gay man myself who was recently married, I do not take that kind of courage lightly,” he said. “I know that it is because of the courage of people like Bernie Sanders that my family today can be recognized and treated equally under the law.”

Sanders’ Iowan supporters frequently describe him as consistent and authentic — particularly in comparison to Clinton, who they see as opportunistic and scripted.

“He seems to be honest and believable,” Steve Harding, a South Dakotan retiree, said outside Morningside College. “He’s a breath of fresh air.”

Inside, Sanders picked up where Johansen left off on gay rights. “James well knows that that struggle has been going on for decades and decades and decades,” he said. “People had incredible courage standing up and saying, ‘I’m gay, and you’re going to know I’m gay. I’m not going to hide it anymore. And you’re not going to discriminate against me anymore.'”

Early in his standard stump speech, Sanders delivered a harsh indictment of conservative social beliefs.

“Many of my Republican colleagues talk about family values,” he said in Sioux City, drawing the usual guffaws. “Well, I’ve got four kids. I’ve got seven grandchildren. I have been married to my wife, Jane, for 27 years. We believe in family values.”

In contrast, Sanders said, “When the Republicans talk about family values, what they say is that a woman in America should not have the right to control her own body. I strongly disagree.”

Republicans, he continued, “are saying that women are not mature enough to be able to go out and buy the contraceptives they need” and that “same-sex marriage should not be allowed to happen.

“That,” he continued, “is their view of family values.”

Sanders said his idea of family values was to guarantee twelve weeks of paid family and medical leave.

In each of his appearances, that sizzling slice of red meat draws some of the loudest applause. But later in his stump speech, Sanders routinely contradicts himself, arguing that Americans must not let social issues divide them at the expense of economic ones.

“In a democracy, people are gonna have different points of view,” he said as he wrapped up his speech at Morningside College. “Yes, we may disagree on abortion. Yes, we may disagree on gay rights. Yes, we may disagree on guns. Yes, we may disagree on this issue or on that issue. But do not get deflected from the most important issues facing you, your kids and your parents.”


In his four days of rallies, town meetings, and parades, Sanders addressed foreign policy just twice — and only when audience members raised it themselves.

“You haven’t mentioned the Middle East yet,” one woman observed near the end of the question-and-answer period in Sioux City.

“That’s because you haven’t asked me yet!” Sanders exclaimed, drawing laughter from the crowd.

Before the woman could pose her question, Sanders interjected.

“Let me just deal with foreign policy and the Middle East in a brief statement,” he said. “Everybody knows that we live in a dangerous and very complicated world. And if I had a magic solution, I’d get on the phone with the president right now. I don’t. You don’t. Nobody does. And that’s the simple truth.”

After highlighting his votes against the Gulf War and the Iraq War, Sanders jumped to the present day.

“Now we are in a moment where we have this horrific, barbaric group called [the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria], and I don’t have to explain to you what they are,” he said. “ISIS must be defeated. My view is it cannot be the United States alone that defeats ISIS.”

Sanders approaches foreign policy much the way he does economic policy. The wealthiest nations, he argues, must pay their fair share. Just swap out the Koch brothers and swap in Saudi Arabia, and you get the gist of it.

In March, when the Saudis called on the United States to deploy combat troops to oppose ISIS, he issued a blistering statement calling the idea offensive and noting that Saudi Arabia “is controlled by a multi-billion-dollar family.” In Sioux City, he remarked, “You may or may not know, Saudi Arabia has the third largest military budget in the world.”

To destroy ISIS, he argued, “The Muslim nations themselves must lead that effort. They have got to get their hands dirty.”

The next day, during a lunchtime visit to Storm Lake’s Better Day Café, Sanders faced a question on a very different global conflict but delivered much the same answer. A woman, who identified herself as a naturalized US citizen originally from Central Europe, asked, “If you were the president at this point, what would you do about [Russian President Vladimir] Putin’s imperialistic tendencies and his annexation of eastern Ukraine?”

“Let me broaden that question,” Sanders said, meaning that he would answer a different one. “By the way, my family comes from Poland, as well.”

The woman smiled and said she knew that.

“Putin is a dangerous guy. ISIS in the Middle East is an extraordinarily barbaric organization, and both have got to be combated,” he said. “Nobody has any simple, easy solutions to a very complicated and dangerous world. Putin is one part of it. ISIS is another part. You’ve got Iran with concerns about a nuclear weapon there.”

But the lesson from Iraq, he argued, was that “the United States cannot do it alone.” It must “put together broad coalitions” to counter Russia and “mobilize the Muslim countries in the Middle East” to counter ISIS.

“Okay,” he said. “We’ve gotta get moving on.”

For a guy who’s served in Congress since George H.W. Bush was commander in chief, Sanders doesn’t display much depth on international affairs. Asked last fall about his interest in the subject, he said, “It’s very easy for the Congress to get deflected away from the needs of tens and tens of millions of American people, and I don’t want to see that happen. But that’s not to say that foreign policy is not of huge consequence.”

His general philosophy — the United States ought to avoid unilateral military engagement whenever possible — mirrors that of many Democratic primary voters. And he’s wise to contrast his opposition to the Iraq War with Clinton’s support for it. But when Sanders faces the former secretary of state on a debate stage this fall, he’ll likely face tougher questions than “Is ISIS bad?” — and he’ll have to answer them.


After Sanders departed the Better Day Café, Lynn and Paula McCullen chatted with a friend while sandwich shop workers returned their focus to lunchtime stragglers.

Retirees who moved from California to nearby Fonda, the McCullens said they were glad to see so many people from such a conservative area turn out to see Sanders. They noted that their own representative to Congress, Representative Steve King, R-Iowa, is among the most conservative in the nation — and, according to Lynn McCullen, “a buffoon.”

“It’s heartening to see there’s that many people who have their head straight,” he added.

Other than the eponymous body of water just south of the city of Storm Lake, Buena Vista County consists almost entirely of corn fields, broken up only by spindly wind turbines jutting out of the landscape.

As in much of western Iowa, the Latino population has grown significantly in recent years, as immigrants have found work on farms and in processing plants. In Denison, fifty miles south, more than two-fifths of the population is Hispanic.

But when Sanders arrived in Denison later that afternoon to march in its July 3 Independence Day parade, the preponderance of those participating in and observing the festivities were white.

Sanders, who appears to abhor unscripted moments with rabid supporters, milled around awkwardly outside the United Food and Commercial Workers Local 440 union hall, gamely posing for selfies and hopping aboard a vintage John Deere tractor. He kept asking field director Phil Fiermonte for direction, but he didn’t receive any.

“Will you sign the back of my shirt?” asked Peggy Galletley of Lake City.

After assenting to the request, Sanders remarked, “When you’re running for president, you’re asked to do weird things.”

As he waited for the parade to begin, the candidate briefly entertained questions from members of the local media. Lorena López, editor of the Spanish-language newspaper La Prensa, based in western Iowa, was one of them.

“This town is 43.8 [percent] Latino, and it’s a small town,” she said. “Latinos trust in President Obama. Latinos talk a lot today about you. What do you have to offer Latinos?”

Sanders, who has faced criticism from some Latino leaders for failing to focus on their issues, dove right in.

“Well, we are going to fight as hard as we can to pass comprehensive immigration reform,” he said. “The bottom line is we have 11 million undocumented workers in this country, and they deserve a path to citizenship, and I believe that very strongly.”

Then he shifted to more comfortable territory: “When we look at economics in America, what we find is that Latinos and African Americans are often at the bottom of the line in terms of decent paying jobs and other aspects of our economy.” For that reason, he argued, providing free college tuition and raising the minimum wage would help Latinos more than most.

After the candidate walked away, López said that her community was paying close attention to Sanders.

“We had a meeting, and they asked me, ‘Is he going to talk about immigration? Do you think that he just wants our vote and he’s going to forget about us?'” she said. “People are just wondering.”

López, who said she interviewed Obama four times as he campaigned in Iowa, sounded unimpressed by Sanders and his peers.

“He and all the candidates need to focus on the pain of the people — the real pain, you know? People are suffering,” she said. “Hillary and Senator Sanders are talking about immigration reform, but they are not offering something. They are just talking.”

By the time the parade’s convoy of fire trucks, vintage tractors, and a Mustang convertible-riding mayor began chugging down Broadway, only a smattering of residents lined the route. In his traditional parade garb of a button-down shirt, chinos, and sneakers, Sanders worked the left side of the road, while Jane Sanders worked the right.

Thirty supporters followed behind the pair, one carrying a sign reading, “He marched in Denison … He marched with the king. MLK.” Behind them walked nine dispirited Clinton supporters, followed by a maroon pickup truck towing a sign that read, “Protect Life and the Unborn,” and a Pizza Ranch delivery car.

“Go get ’em, Bernie!” retired archaeologist Larry Abbott shouted as Sanders walked by a Hy-Vee grocery store.

“Everything I’ve heard him say is just right,” he explained to a reporter. “I just sent in my donation this morning.”

But Abbott’s support might not presage a landslide win. “Since the mid-1960s, Obama’s the only one I voted for that got elected,” he confessed.


When Sanders announced two and a half months ago that he was running for president, he had just one person on the campaign payroll. “I think it’s fair to say that we did not anticipate the speed with which these large crowds of people would come to the campaign,” said Weaver, Sanders’ campaign manager. “So it’s been a bit of a challenge, but it’s better than the opposite challenge.”

To the untrained eye, Sanders’ Iowa operation, which includes 27 of the campaign’s now 50 staffers, appeared surprisingly organized.

Volunteers and paid staffers swarmed every event, signing in audience members, handing out envelopes for donations, and marching beside Sanders in parades. Even after he reached the end of the Denison route, many Sanders volunteers kept working the crowd.

Clayton Christiansen, a Nebraska City property manager and newly minted volunteer, walked 16th Street, attempting to engage with residents. “Are you familiar with Bernie Sanders?” he asked an older couple and a younger woman sitting together on a porch.

The older man looked annoyed by the intrusion but offered, “We hope he beats Hillary.”

“We do, too!” Christiansen replied with a smile.

That night, more than 80 Sanders volunteers stalked the entrances to Council Bluff’s Mid-America Center, 65 miles southeast, as some 2,600 people streamed in. The volunteers would not let audience members pass without extracting their contact information.

“Signing people in is the key,” explained Pete D’Allesandro, a veteran of the Iowa caucuses and Sanders’ state coordinator. “You’ve gotta grab the names, because 2,600 people in a venue is exciting and it’s energizing and it helps, but you need to grab the actual names of the people who are going to volunteer, who are going to caucus.”

Clinton supporters have suggested that Sanders’ venue-busting hordes won’t necessarily translate to votes, noting that former Vermont governor Howard Dean, too, surged in the summer before the caucuses.

“Bernie’s huge crowds recall Howard Dean’s in ’04 when he rallied ‘Democratic wing of the Democratic Party,'” former Obama consigliore David Axelrod wrote on Twitter the morning after the Madison rally. “Dean was impactful, but Kerry won.”

Devine, Sanders’ consultant, disagrees.

“Number one, by getting these people in-house, by having them attend your events, you can ID them, get contact info, and become part of their social networks,” said Devine, himself a veteran of John Kerry’s and Al Gore’s campaigns. “Number two, I think momentum is something that builds in a campaign, and by demonstrating to people that there’s real momentum in a place like Madison, Wisconsin, I think it generates excitement in Iowa.”

Since Sanders supporter Neil Young called out Donald Trump for playing “Rockin’ in the Free World” at his campaign launch, the song has warmed up the crowd at most Sanders rallies. By the time it blared across the room, every seat in the Mid-America hall was filled.

The crowd skewed younger than at events elsewhere in Iowa, perhaps because it was taking place just across the Missouri River from Omaha. Cory Journey, a 20-year-old college student, said he and three friends had traveled 45 minutes from Lincoln, Nebraska, to hear Sanders speak. He said he’d learned about the event via Facebook.

“No one’s reading the paper anymore,” he explained to a newspaper reporter. “It sounded like a good thing to do on a Friday.”

After a self-identified transgender woman introduced Sanders, the senator took the stage and uttered words that have come to sound familiar.

“This is by far the largest meeting we have done in the state of Iowa,” he said to a roaring crowd. “Let me begin by telling you something I think other candidates will not do: that is basically the truth.”

And he was off.


Hours before Sanders packed the Mid-America hall, 850 people turned out to see Clinton in Hanover, New Hampshire, a liberal hub key to any Democratic candidate. The former secretary of state seemed to have Sanders in mind when she proclaimed in an outdoor speech at Dartmouth College, “I take a backseat to no one when you look at my record in standing up and fighting for progressive values.” Asked specifically about Sanders later that day at the Dairy Twirl in Lebanon, New Hampshire, Clinton said she “always knew this was going to be competitive.”

The next day, Clinton was pilloried in the press when two campaign staffers pulled out a rope at a Gorham parade and literally dragged along reporters who came too close to the candidate. Though the incident was surely overblown, it neatly illustrated the frustration national reporters feel about a candidate who has largely avoided the press.

Sanders is hardly warm and fuzzy to reporters. Other than a few liberal commentators, such as Thom Hartmann and Ed Schultz, he appears merely to tolerate them. But as he marched in Creston’s Independence Day parade on the final day of his Iowa excursion, his campaign left the rope at home. A handful of reporters and photographers roamed free along the parade route — and Sanders even took a question from me.

Asked how the parade compared to those back home, he said, “In many ways it’s similar. Very nice people. Yep.” Then he raised his hand as if to say, “Enough is enough.”

Jane Sanders, ever ready to smooth out her husband’s rough spots, jumped in.

“It’s different. I mean, everybody knows him there,” she said of Vermont. “But there’s a lot more folks that know him now.”

Often the biggest hit at parades in Vermont, Sanders attracted more than a few raised eyebrows from the Union County residents who lined the streets of Creston.

“Hey! Socialism doesn’t work, buddy!” one man yelled as the senator marched by. “Give it up!”

Sanders looked straight at him, then looked away, his tight smile unchanged. 

The man, sitting on a camp chair on a well-manicured lawn, declined to identify himself. But he argued that it was “offensive and rude” for a self-described democratic socialist to parade through town on Independence Day.

Most Crestonians appeared more bemused than offended by Sanders’ presence in the parade — and some seemed downright appreciative that he’d taken the time to visit this small town, population 7,887. As Sanders passed a parking lot in which two Confederate flag-adorned pickup trucks were parked, Creston High School band director Mike Peters jogged up to Sanders to ask for a selfie. The senator complied.

“Ever since I’ve seen this gentleman on Bill Maher … I’ve started identifying with the things that he likes to do,” Peters said. “He has a vision for what this country needs at this point.”

Later that day, the senator marched in one final parade — in the Des Moines suburb of Waukee. Thanks to Waukee’s close proximity to the state capital, the Sanders campaign managed to turn out an astounding 130 people to walk with him.

David Leonard was not one of them. The retired high school counselor, decked out in a purple Dallas County Democrats T-shirt, said that he “loves Bernie Sanders.” But he doesn’t plan to vote for him.

“I agree with everything he stands for, but I’ll probably end up caucusing for Hillary Clinton, because it’s high time we had a woman president. For another thing, she’s highly qualified — perhaps the most qualified. And I think she will beat any Republican they put up against her,” Leonard said.

“Whereas with Bernie, they’re going to throw the socialist label at him,” he said. “And there will be closet talk of his being a Jew. I don’t think he could be elected.”

Sanders’ fired-up fan club clearly felt otherwise. As he marched past the town green and a skyscraper of a grain elevator, they hoisted signs reading “Iowa Bern Stormers” and “End the Corporate Oligarchy.” Several young men wore signs on their backs that said “Bern Unit.”

A young boy in a purple shirt led the pack of Sanders supporters and every few minutes yelled, “When I say ‘president,’ you say ‘Bern!'”

“President!”

“Bern!”

Sanders, who argues vociferously in his stump speech against the deification of politicians, mostly ignored the mob at his heels. He focused instead on greeting and shaking hands with those who appeared receptive.

“Hi. Hello,” he said. “Hi. Hello. Bernie Sanders. Hi. Hello.”

This was a friendlier crowd than in Creston.

“That’s actually him,” one woman whispered.

“Thanks for coming to Waukee,” another shouted.

By the time he reached Waukee High School, a mile and a half later under a hot sun, the former runner was definitely feeling the burn.

“Oh, my god!” a red-faced and sweaty Sanders exclaimed to his wife.

Whether he was referring to the unending parade route or the number of supporters willing to follow him wasn’t quite clear. But for the first time since he addressed the crowd in Madison, he displayed visible signs of happiness.

“That was fantastic,” he said.


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