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Socialist Leads U.S. Senate Race in Vt.
Associated Press ^ | 5/29/05

Posted on 05/29/2005 4:51:47 PM PDT by Unam Sanctam

BARRE, Vt. - Bernie Sanders jabs at the air, his flushed face a sharp contrast to his unruly white hair. Yet again, he pummels Washington, the Congress and the president.

"The government that we have today in the White House, the House of Representatives with Tom Delay, the Senate with Bill Frist, is the most right-wing, extremist government, perhaps in the history of the United States," he tells labor activists at a May Day celebration in the century-old Labor Hall.

"Time after time they pass legislation that benefits the rich and the powerful, and they pass legislation that hurts the middle class, working people and low income people."

The crowd roars. They have come to hear this unlikely man who is likely to be the next U.S. senator from the Green Mountain State, and they love what they hear. This is Bernie at his best: one part revivalist preaching, two parts theater, all served up with a biting sarcasm.

It is vintage Bernie — literally. The words and the message have not changed in more than 30 years. Millions of times, he has decried — in a strong Brooklyn accent — what he sees as an outrageous, growing gap between the rich and the poor.

For half of those years, though, Sanders has been part of the Washington he loves to attack.

In his eighth term in the U.S. House, the independent socialist has carved out a career in Congress as a Congress-basher. Now he is setting his sights on the Senate, and everyone agrees he is the man to beat for the seat now held by the retiring Jim Jeffords.

"He is the front-runner. Absolutely," said Del Ali of Research 2000 of Rockville, Md., which has conducted political polls in Vermont for many years. "He has high favorability ratings, high name recognition and lots of money."

This is an astonishing position for a man who spent the 1970s as a political gadfly and the 1980s as the independent mayor of Burlington, a man who seemed destined for disaster when he first arrived in Congress in 1991.

He was the odd man out: an independent in an institution that revolves around the two-party system; a socialist in a chamber dominated by moderates and conservatives; a freshman in a world that favors seniority. His style was abrasive in an institution that rewards collegiality.

Yet somehow — after some bumps at the beginning — he has made it work.

Over the years Democrats who denounced him have accepted him, and he has caucused with their party and voted for its candidates for House leadership. Republicans who ridiculed his socialist philosophy now sign on as occasional co-sponsors of his legislative initiatives.

In 1991, Rep. Barney Frank (news, bio, voting record), D-Mass., complained of Sanders' "holier-than-thou attitude, saying in a very loud voice he is smarter than everyone else and purer than everyone else." Now the two are close allies on the House Financial Services Committee.

"Do I work better with people than I used to? Yeah, I do," said Sanders, who is 63. "That's simply a learning curve, knowing how to reach out, how to put together coalitions, getting to know people in a way perhaps that I now do better than I did before."

An example, he said, was the formation of the Patriot Act Reform Caucus, designed to ensure civil liberties are protected in the reauthorization of the Patriot Act. The caucus will be chaired by Sanders, a Democrat and two Republicans.

Speaking of the two Republican co-chairs, Sanders said, "We disagree on 98 percent of the issues, but it just so happens that on the issue of civil liberties and the USA Patriot Act, we have a lot in common."

Sanders remains a socialist, although not a member of the Socialist Party.

"What does it mean to me? I want government to stand up for working people, for the middle class, rather than representing, as is currently the case in the United States, multinational corporations and wealthy people.

"I also believe that as citizens in a democratic society people are entitled to certain inherent rights — and those rights include the right to health care, the right to form a union, the right to breathe good air, the right to send your child to college.

"There is something fundamentally wrong and very dangerous about a society in which so few have so much and so many have so little," he said.

Jim Barnett, the chairman of the Vermont Republican Party, is fervently dedicated to ensuring that Sanders never arrives in the Senate. As often as Sanders uses the word extremist to describe Republican leaders in Washington, Barnett uses it to describe Sanders.

"The Senate race will give Vermonters a new opportunity to more closely scrutinize Bernie Sanders' extremist record in Congress," he said. "Extremism, futility and abrasiveness are not qualities that Vermonters have traditionally looked for in their senators."

Sanders says his greatest value in Congress has been to highlight issues before others even identify them: He notes he was the first congressman to lead a bus tour to Canada to help seniors get cheap prescription drugs and he is proud of his efforts to bring attention to a pension dispute at IBM.

Sanders is certainly one of the most visible congressmen. He is a regular guest on Fox News, especially "The O'Reilly Factor." Once, when he accused Fox of having a conservative slant, host Bill O'Reilly countered by asking, "Congressman, is there any other news organization on this planet that gives you more air time than the Fox News Channel?"

"You have been very generous to me," Sanders acknowledged.

And one of the most anticipated exchanges of any year — for its theater, if nothing else — is Sanders' semiannual grilling of Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan when Greenspan appears before the House Financial Services Committee.

He once asked the Fed chief if he gave "one whit of concern for the middle class and working families of this country?"

National Democrats, including former Gov. Howard Dean, now the party's chairman, are urging Democrats to support Sanders. Leaders of the Vermont Democratic Party are not rushing to endorse Sanders, though no Democrat has moved to run against him.

His most likely GOP challengers are Lt. Gov. Brian Dubie and Richard Tarrant, chairman of IDX, a medical software company. In early May, a poll for WCAX-TV put Sanders ahead of Dubie, 59 percent to 23 percent, and ahead of Tarrant, 62 percent to 18 percent.

That support is evident at the Old Labor Hall in Barre.

"He is as good as they come," says Sue Lucas, a nurse in Morrisville. "He is about everything we believe in."

"He is not afraid to stand up to either party," said Jim Genovesi, a worker for an electric utility in Rutland. "He doesn't seem to be affected by political pressure or lobbyist pressure. He stands his ground."

Sanders' booming voice fills the hall as he nears the end of his speech.

"We know that our opponents have hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars that they put into the political process. We know they control much of the media. We know they have an attack machine that goes from Fox to Rush Limbaugh, the Drudge Report and all over the place.

"We know that is what THEY have," his voice thunders.

"But there is one thing they do not have. They do not have ordinary people prepared to knock on doors and organize all over America.

"That is what WE have.

"They have the money. We have the people.

"And when push comes to shove, the people are going to defeat the money."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; US: Vermont
KEYWORDS: 109th; berniesanders; berniesaunders; briandubie; dnc; electionussenate; radicalleft; richardtarrant; socialists
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What is my New England coming to?
1 posted on 05/29/2005 4:51:47 PM PDT by Unam Sanctam
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To: Unam Sanctam

Vermont was better off when the cows outnumbered the people.


2 posted on 05/29/2005 4:52:39 PM PDT by LibFreeOrDie (L'chaim!)
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To: Unam Sanctam
Socialist Communist Leads U.S. Senate Race in Vt.

3 posted on 05/29/2005 4:53:09 PM PDT by Paleo Conservative (Hey! Hey! Ho! Ho! Andrew Heyward's got to go!)
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To: Unam Sanctam

What's the big deal? Vermont has had two socialist Senators for years.


4 posted on 05/29/2005 4:53:57 PM PDT by Brilliant
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To: LibFreeOrDie; Unam Sanctam
Vermont was better off when the cows outnumbered the people.

The average IQ was higher then too.

5 posted on 05/29/2005 4:54:18 PM PDT by Paleo Conservative (Hey! Hey! Ho! Ho! Andrew Heyward's got to go!)
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To: Paleo Conservative

I say we start by nationalizing Ben & Jerry's.


6 posted on 05/29/2005 4:56:47 PM PDT by Brilliant
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To: Brilliant
I say we start by nationalizing Ben & Jerry's.

Ben & Jerry's, proof that Mad Cow disease exists in the US.

7 posted on 05/29/2005 4:57:58 PM PDT by Paleo Conservative (Hey! Hey! Ho! Ho! Andrew Heyward's got to go!)
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To: Brilliant

"What's the big deal? Vermont has had two socialist Senators for years"

Yup, and whiny Howie Dean recently confirmed that there are no significant differences between Sanders and lots of liberal Demagogues - Dean says they're all liberal Democrats, I say they're all socialists. The Democratic Party has lots of senators with voting records nearly identical to Sanders' record....


8 posted on 05/29/2005 4:59:54 PM PDT by Enchante (Kerry's mere nuisances: Marine Barracks '83, WTC '93, Khobar Towers, Embassy Bombs '98, USS Cole!!!)
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To: Unam Sanctam

The only thing from Vermont that isn't nutty is the maple syrup.


9 posted on 05/29/2005 5:10:34 PM PDT by putupjob
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To: Unam Sanctam
"a socialist in a chamber dominated by moderates and conservatives"

Right...

10 posted on 05/29/2005 5:17:09 PM PDT by Tarkin (St. Maximilian Kolbe (1894-1941))
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To: putupjob

Believe it or not this is an opening to my favorite complaint. Republicans by and large have failed to stand up to the left, and they have allowed leftism to drift more and more into the accepted mainstream. Of course you can forget the democrats, they ARE the leftists. But republican politicians long ago stopped shaming the leftists into the fringe where they belong.


11 posted on 05/29/2005 5:17:27 PM PDT by Williams
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To: Paleo Conservative

But Howard Dean said just last week that Sanders is not a Socialist, he's a liberal Democrat.


12 posted on 05/29/2005 5:20:29 PM PDT by mak5
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To: putupjob

That's why the United States should sell Vermont to Canada :-).


13 posted on 05/29/2005 5:24:47 PM PDT by Tarkin (St. Maximilian Kolbe (1894-1941))
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To: Unam Sanctam
the right to send your child to college

This was also a theme of John Edwards presidential primary bid.

Lessee--if the gubmint pays for everyone to go to college how will that affect the effective demand for college? What will that do to the cost of colleges for those who pay their own way?

Effective demand exceeds supply--uh, I guess the price might go up a bit, eh.

Isn't socialism grand?

:-(
14 posted on 05/29/2005 5:25:13 PM PDT by cgbg (When do I wake up from this socialist nightmare?)
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To: Brilliant
I say we start by nationalizing Ben & Jerry's.

Yep.

If you want people to realize just how stupid their ideas are, sometimes you have to put them into practice.

15 posted on 05/29/2005 5:27:11 PM PDT by mc6809e
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To: mc6809e

Having the first socialist in the Senate will make it easier for socialism to be accepted in the US. This is the first step toward the Europeanization of the US. We must try to defeat him before that happens so that we could say that open socialists cannot win.


16 posted on 05/29/2005 5:36:09 PM PDT by winner3000 (part)
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To: Unam Sanctam

"What is my New England coming to?"

While New England annoys me currently, I think that if the Left actually came to power and raised taxes, increased regulations and govt. spending, etc... New England would become one of the first regions to turn against them. They are higher income and less amendable to populism


17 posted on 05/29/2005 5:36:35 PM PDT by Betaille (Capitalism is the unequal sharing of blessings; Socialism is the equal sharing of miseries)
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To: LibFreeOrDie

"Vermont was better off when the cows outnumbered the people."


And I am sure they are smarter, than the current Vermont voters too. How stupid do they have to be to elect a socialist, when socialism has been proven to be a failure all around the world.


18 posted on 05/29/2005 5:36:47 PM PDT by FairOpinion (McCain: Leader of the New Democrat Senate Majority (aided by 6 dwarves).)
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To: Unam Sanctam

I love the part where Bernie takes off his shoe, pounds the podium with it and screams, "We will bury you."


19 posted on 05/29/2005 5:40:43 PM PDT by Doctor Raoul (Support Our Troops, Spit On A Liberal Reporter)
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To: winner3000

There is already a socialist caucus in the House with about 50 members. About one fourth of house Dems are members.


20 posted on 05/29/2005 5:42:45 PM PDT by CGTRWK
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