Bernie Sanders' Secret Sauce | The Source Weekly - Bend, Oregon

Bernie Sanders' Secret Sauce

How a Vermont socialist improbably won key elections — and a national stage

Matthew Thorsen

Bernie Sanders' presidential campaign is surging. In July, nearly 10,000 supporters gathered in Madison, Wisconsin, to hear the 73-year-old socialist senator denounce the Koch brothers and corporate greed. Another 7,500 came to hear him in Portland, Maine. He fired up a crowd of 11,000 in Phoenix, Arizona and, last week, proved as popular as the Trail Blazers, filling Portland's Moda Center with an estimated 28,000.

A politician who had been an outlier for decades—the only Independent Party candidate in the U.S. Senate—has quickly become a mainstream attraction; the wild-haired and grumpy grandfather who never strays from his message and who rails against income inequality and the corruption of U.S. politics wrought by the Supreme Court's Citizens United decision. Sanders comes across as stern and sincere, shaking a crooked finger as he insists that only a "political revolution" can save ordinary Americans from the predations of the "billionaire class."

Although Sanders' sudden popularity has surprised many pundits trapped inside the Beltway and even political proponents for the Democratic Party, he is not a newcomer—and has long had a strong base of support from Vermonters and independent-minded voters nationwide. He first stepped into the political arena in 1972 as a fringe candidate of the far-left Liberty Union Party in the governor's race and, nine years later, evolved to the wildly popular mayor of Burlington, the state's largest city. From there, he moved into the U.S. Senate, where, in 2012, he won reelection with a solid 71 percent of the vote.

Sanders-watchers say many of the attributes now becoming evident to voters outside Vermont are the same ones that have helped him assemble ever-broader majorities in the Green Mountain State over the last 35 years. A look at the factors behind his first electoral victory—as mayor of Burlington in 1981—and his subsequent ascent to the national political scene in the 1990 race for Vermont's sole U.S. House seat helps explain his growing appeal.

Underlying all of Sanders' electoral successes is his ability to win the support of white working-class voters, a voting block that matches many of the interests and concerns of communities in Central Oregon like La Pine and Redmond. Sanders' friends, former campaign staff, and academic analysts who have watched him over the decades agree on the elements that comprise his political repertoire: charisma, authenticity, trustworthiness, and simplicity and consistency of message. Sanders wins respect among moderates and even some conservatives, these sources add, by abstaining from ideology and by taking a pragmatic, but always principled, approach to governing and legislating.

"Bernie doesn't talk in terminology laden with Marxist lingo," says Terry Bouricius, a Burlington activist who helped Sanders achieve his upset mayoral breakthrough. "His socialism is more like liberation theology. He speaks about economic injustice as something 'immoral,' not as 'the inevitable product of capitalism.'"

As a candidate who has lost six elections, Sanders has always displayed doggedness and "political fearlessness," adds University of Vermont religion professor Richard Sugarman, Sanders' longtime friend. Sanders is unintimidated by the forces arrayed against him, adds Erhard Mahnke, another Sanders ally who now lobbies for the Vermont Affordable Housing Coalition. "People see that Bernie has a fighting spirit, that he means it when he says he's on the side of vulnerable, low-income, ordinary Americans," Mahnke observes. "He's not packaged."

Sanders also has been a beneficiary of sheer good luck, especially in the two pivotal races of his career.

Perfect Storm

By 1980, Bernie Sanders had earned a reputation as a perennial loser at the ballot box. But University of Vermont political science professor Garrison Nelson recalls that as the Ronald Reagan decade was dawning, "a perfect storm" was gathering in Burlington.

Sanders' friend Sugarman felt the wind shift. He pointed out to his then-39-year-old friend and political soul mate that Burlington had been the source of Sanders' highest vote percentages in the statewide races he had run in the 1970s as a Liberty Union candidate. Sanders, he suggested in 1980, should run for mayor against four-term Democratic mayor Gordon Paquette. "I told him he had a chance, a small chance, to actually win," Sugarman recounts.

Burlingtonians had already assembled a progressive political infrastructure. Lawyer John Franco, another longtime Sanders confidante, points to a food co-op, a community health center, and grassroots antipoverty groups such as People Acting for Change Together, as local expressions of a movement rooted in the antiwar politics of the Vietnam era.

Many residents involved in those causes were also mobilizing in 1981 behind a ballot item calling for a freeze on nuclear weapons deployment. About 1,500 Burlingtonians had signed a petition to put the freeze referendum on the same ballot topped by the Paquette vs. Sanders contest, notes veteran peace campaigner and Assistant City Attorney Gene Bergman. That amounted to a significant show of strength, considering that Burlington's population numbered roughly 38,000, and fewer than 9,000 voters would decide the outcomes of the election that year.

Sanders sympathizers were also galvanized by the election four months earlier of archconservative Ronald Reagan as president. "There was a strong feeling that there had to be a local response to that," Mahnke says.

Like Bend and Redmond, Burlington is a city that long has been isolated, separated, and even overlooked, by the more populous urban centers—and, as such, has grown a prideful independence.

Paquette, a working-class Democrat who had compiled a partly liberal record, had meanwhile alienated big chunks of the electorate by calling for a steep rise in residential property taxes. And in what would become an incongruous characteristic of his socialist politics, Sanders was opposed to raising taxes.

In the run-up to the 1981 election, Paquette "managed to piss off tenants, the cops, and firefighters," political science professor Nelson notes, by failing to address the issue of rising rents and by opposing pay raises for members of the police and fire departments. Sanders supported those wage demands, again departing from left-wing orthodoxy—this time by refusing to view the police with suspicion, let alone outright animosity. Sanders would never adopt the '60s leftist rhetoric of cops as "pigs." He instead viewed them as "workers," Sugarman points out.

The Burlington police union rewarded the Jewish socialist from Brooklyn—Sanders had moved to Vermont as a young man—by endorsing him for mayor of a mostly Catholic and WASP-y city. "That was the key to the race," says Huck Gutman, Sanders' friend of four decades, who would later serve as his chief of staff in the U.S. Senate. Bouricius, who would become one of Sanders' two initial allies on the 13-member city council, agrees on the significance of that endorsement, saying, "It said to people that if the cops think Bernie is okay, he must be okay."

Also, at the time—much like some of Bend's current debates over rising housing prices—Burlington was experience growing pains with a steady influx of New Yorkers leaving the city and moving to the more bucolic Burlington, and bringing with them high-end development. That insurgence was simultaneously adding to Paquette's political pain by portraying the mayor as a tool of real-estate interests seeking to build high-rise, high-priced condominiums downtown on scenic Lake Champlain. Sanders' slogan of "the waterfront is not for sale" proved powerful, Sugarman says, because "the condos would not only have diminished the aesthetics but would have deprived people of an important piece of the city that many viewed as their backyard."

But even with all these civic concerns converging, Paquette might have survived the Sanders storm if he had seen it coming. "The Democrats didn't pull out all the stops in that race," recalls Bouricius, who has made a career of analyzing election reform. "They couldn't imagine that someone like Bernie could actually win."

A mano-a-mano bout might likewise have ended in a Paquette victory. But as luck would have it, Sanders benefited from a spoiler.

Richard Bove, a local restaurant owner and erstwhile ally of Paquette's, had secured a spot on the mayoral ballot out of pique at a perceived slight by the local Democratic establishment, Nelson says. Bove got about 400 votes, and "all those votes would have gone to Paquette," Nelson reckons. Instead, Sanders managed to squeak out a 10-vote victory.

Champion of the Underdog

Sanders became a hands-on mayor who practiced the principles of "Sewer Socialism." In keeping with the precedent set by a series of progressive mayors of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in the first half of the 20th century, he focused on effective and efficient delivery of basic municipal services. Voters also affirmed the radical mayor's affordable-housing initiatives, as his three reelection victories would attest.

"He couldn't be portrayed as a tax-and-spend liberal," Mahnke says. "He was all about making government more efficient and more effective. For him, plowing the streets was a vital responsibility."

Bitterly opposed by the city's Democratic establishment, Sanders succeeded by attracting a set of bright staffers. They were fiercely dedicated to the causes championed by a mayor who was often irascible with staff behind the scenes.

He was soon looking to advance to higher offices. Sanders ran for governor in 1986 and the U.S. House in 1988 but lost both races.

His stage-left entry on the national political scene in 1990—when he finally managed to win a statewide race—was made possible, in part, by his opponent's blunders.

Incumbent Republican House member Peter Smith, who had beaten Sanders by four percentage points in a six-way race in 1988, alienated many conservative Vermonters, Nelson suggests, by insulting President George H.W. Bush and by casting a vote that caused the National Rifle Association to campaign against him, in a state where hunting is a primary pastime for many.

Bush flew into Burlington in the fall of 1990 to help Smith stave off Sanders' challenge. But the intended beneficiary of Bush's benediction proceeded to criticize the president's tax policy on the stage they were sharing.

Smith had also voted for a ban on assault weapons after pledging his allegiance to the NRA's policy of opposing any and all gun-control measures. That spawned a negative ad campaign in hunter-friendly Vermont: "Smith & Wesson, Yes. Smith & Congress, No."

Sanders won the election by a 16-point margin.

The Burlington mayor benefited from the statewide recognition he had gained from earlier unsuccessful runs for governor and the U.S. House, according to then-campaign adviser Franco. In 1988, Sanders, an independent, got twice as many votes as the Democratic U.S. House candidate. He had proven he was more viable than the mainstream liberal.

"It was the Democrat, not Bernie, who was seen as the potential spoiler in 1990," Franco says. In 1990, Democrat Dolores Sandoval received just 3 percent of the vote.

From there, Sanders would go on to win seven more elections to the House and to score easy victories in races for the U.S. Senate in 2006 and 2012.

Throughout all of his campaigns, the once-obscure outsider never departed from his central themes of fighting economic inequality and calling for reforms that would benefit working-class Americans. Voters who seldom support liberal Democrats, let alone radical independents, have responded by standing with Sanders.

Franco doesn't doubt anecdotal evidence that some Burlingtonians who voted for Reagan in 1980 and 1984 also cast ballots for Sanders. Similarly, Mahnke remembers seeing in the 2000 election campaign "Bernie for Congress" signs on many of the same lawns in the state's rural Northeast Kingdom—a geographic zone similar in remoteness and political attitude to Eastern Oregon—that were also displaying "Take Back Vermont" posters signifying opposition to a controversial same-sex civil union law enacted earlier that year.

How could this be? Why would many anti-gay rights residents of Vermont's poorest and most conservative region simultaneously support a socialist?

It isn't as though Sanders sends coded signals on cultural and social issues hinting that he's on the right's side. His record in Congress gets a thumbs-up from groups focused on gender equality and freedom of sexual identity.

It's that Sanders "doesn't foreground those issues," Gutman observes.

Nelson agrees, framing Sanders' approach this way: "His politics are horizontal, not vertical. Bernie's class-focused arguments cut across the usual racial and ethnic lines. He's seen, first and foremost, as the champion of the underdog, and no part of the state is more of an underdog than the Northeast Kingdom."

Veteran Politician

During his 25 years in Congress—by far the longest tenure of any independent—Sanders has raised his Brooklyn-accented voice to call for bank reform, a higher minimum wage, and steeper taxes on wealthy Americans. But he has also fought hard for a group rarely associated with socialist views: military veterans.

Although he voted against the war in Iraq, Sanders chaired the Senate veterans' affairs panel for two years—the first time, political science professor Nelson says, that an independent has headed a U.S. Congress committee. Throughout his full nine-year tenure on veterans affairs, he has worked to safeguard and improve federal services for former members of the U.S. armed forces, including healthcare delivered via the Veterans Administration. Sanders cites the VA's coverage as a successful example of single-payer health insurance.

This involvement with vets is consistent with Sanders' career-long advocacy for the interests of working-class Americans, Nelson notes. "Veterans are mostly working-class guys who depend on federal aid," he says. "It's a perfect cause for Bernie."

That unwavering willingness to stick up for the little guy has won over plenty of conservative voters, Bouricius says. "I've got in-laws who always vote for Republicans—and for Bernie," the former city councilor notes. "They say he's their guy because he always speaks his mind."

"He doesn't do focus groups," Mahnke adds. "He doesn't raise his finger to see which way the political wind is blowing."

In addition to avoiding leftist jargon, Sanders talks about down-home concerns that many radicals ignore. Sugarman says: "They're into macro. Bernard is more about micro. He connects with people on the level of their lived experience—the quality of the schools their kids attend, for example."

Above all, suggests Burlington activist and lawyer Sandy Baird, "Bernie doesn't fight the cultural wars. He was never a hippie," she points out. "He can attract working-class votes because he is working class. He's from an immigrant family that didn't have a lot, so it's clear that he knows of what he speaks."

Sanders has approached legislating in Congress the same way he handled administering a city—by presenting issues as moral choices to be made on behalf of, and with the support of, his constituents.

Today, he's campaigning for the highest office of them all, having launched the Bernie for President drive on the Burlington waterfront, where condos were once proposed but which instead became a lakeside park.

Initially treated by national political savants as a figure for ridicule, Sanders has again shown that he can surprise those who underestimate him. As was the case 35 years ago in Burlington and 25 years ago in many parts of Vermont, big-dog Dems are saying Sanders has no chance of winning.

But his growing crowds haven't gotten the message yet.

This story was funded in part by Burlington, Vermont-based

newsweekly Seven Days, which is chronicling Sen. Sanders'

political career from 1972 to the present at BernieBeat.com.

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