http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2016/jan/5/bernie-sanders-campaign-bets-on-black-voters-in-so/

By Kelly Riddell <http://www.washingtontimes.com/staff/kelly-riddell/> -
The Washington Times - Tuesday, January 5, 2016

It may seem a strange partnership: Mattie Thomas
<http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/mattie-thomas/>, a 66-year-old black
woman in South Carolina going out of her way to gin up support for Sen.
Bernard Sanders, a man born and raised in New York to Jewish immigrant
parents, and who spent the majority of his life representing a state where
19 out of 20 residents are white.

But Mr. Sanders’ message resonates so much with her that Mrs. Thomas
<http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/mattie-thomas/>, 66, is knocking on
every door in her neighborhood in Florence and planning trips to remote
corners of South Carolina to make the case to fellow Democrats that the
Vermont senator is the candidate their party needs.

“I’m not scared of ISIL, as African-Americans we see a cop car and we’re
afraid — we’re afraid of that one cop who’s afraid of a 12-year-old boy
with a toy gun,” Mrs. Thomas
<http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/mattie-thomas/> said. “I’m scared of
going to a movie theater or a shopping mall. I do all of my shopping
online. I fear that, it’s real to me.”

Mr. Sanders addresses the black community’s fears and proposes solutions to
improve their lives, she said. Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary
Clinton <http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/hillary-clinton/> offers
less clarity, and seems more ingrained and invested in a political system
that’s clearly broken, Mrs. Thomas
<http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/mattie-thomas/> said.

“Fifteen dollars an hour minimum-wage would lift so many people in South
Carolina who are really struggling,” Mrs. Thomas
<http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/mattie-thomas/> said. “I’ve worked
and paid into Medicare my entire life and still I have to pay for medical
care. Health care for everybody would be a great improvement. The
school-to-prison pipeline needs to stop. Privatizing prisons was the first
mistake this country ever made. It’s amazing to me how many people in this
state need help. You have no earthly idea how much. Bernie Sanders speaks
to them.”

Mr. Sanders needs to reach more people like Mrs. Thomas
<http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/mattie-thomas/> in order to have a
shot at winning South Carolina, and his campaign knows it’ll be tough
given Mrs.
Clinton <http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/hillary-clinton/>’s roots in
the state, stretching back to her husband’s campaigns in the 1990s and her
own run for the Democratic nomination in 2008.

South Carolina is the fourth state in the Democratic primary calendar, and
the first real test of strength among black voters, who make up more than
half of the primary electorate in the state.

And early polling suggests Mrs. Clinton
<http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/hillary-clinton/> is preparing for a
triumph, leading Mr. Sanders by 36 percentage points in the most recent CBS
News/YouGov poll taken last month. Among blacks she leads 86 percent to 11
percent, according to a Public Policy Polling survey conducted in November.

“We know it’s an uphill climb,” said Chris Covert, the Sanders campaign’s
South Carolina state director. “But we’re taking a very pragmatic approach.
We know it’s going to take some time, and rather than rush to build an
infrastructure, we’re working to build long-lasting relationships across
the state, not only with party activists, but with students and within the
African-American community in more rural areas. We’re aggressively trying
to build strong relationships.”

The campaign has 40 field staff in the state, part of a total team of 60
people, Mr. Covert said. There are another 120 paid part-time canvassers
traveling the state, and in the three months they’ve been on the job
they’ve made more half a million attempts at voter contacts, he said.

The campaign has also opened six offices across South Carolina — more than Mrs.
Clinton <http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/hillary-clinton/> or
presidential contender and former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley.

Mrs. Clinton <http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/hillary-clinton/> however,
has the backing of the Democratic political establishment. She’s received
more than 80 endorsements including two former governors, party leaders and
state lawmakers. She has more than 2,500 active volunteers, and both the
first and second vice chairs of the South Carolina Democratic Party support
her, bucking the usual practice of state party officials staying neutral.

That’s of no matter, says Bryanta Maxwell, who is the unpaid chair of Young
Leaders for Bernie in South Carolina, and who was until November
supporting Mrs.
Clinton <http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/hillary-clinton/> as well.

“You know, I was supporting Hillary
<http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/hillary-clinton/> at first, but then
Bernie came and spoke at Allen University and addressed criminal justice
reform and the Black Lives Matter movement, and his words resonated with
me,” said Ms. Maxwell, 31 and black. “It was a matter of words and passion
and the passion he spoke about when he addressed criminal justice reform —
well, I think he will be a major champion of it.”

Ms. Maxwell is traveling to universities across the state to help mobilize
students to vote for Mr. Sanders — a key demographic Mr. Sanders is relying
on in other states as well.

Ms. Maxwell said her first challenge is to introduce students to Mr.
Sanders and his message — his name recognition and policy positions are
much less known than Mrs. Clinton
<http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/hillary-clinton/>‘s.

“After Iowa things will pick up because people will take him serious,
that’s how it worked with Obama. Sometimes people need to be made a
believer,” Ms. Maxwell said. “People don’t know him, Obama won
African-Americans because he was an African-American male so the
African-American community embraced him. They don’t know [Sanders] yet. I
tell his platform, how he will bring jobs, equal pay for women and health
care to South Carolina, and they start listening.”

Mr. Sanders also appears to have overcome early stumbles on race issues —
including being forced off the stage in Seattle this summer by protesters
from the Black Lives Matter movement — with black voters warming to him,
particularly as he tailors his economic inequality message to their
everyday lives.

In October, Mr. Sanders met with DeRay McKesson, an active member of Black
Lives Matter, among other civil rights leaders, to speak about the barriers
to success within the black community. The meeting was well received.

“It was important that Sen. Sanders noted that Black Lives Matter and that
he highlighted institutional racism and the need to reform the criminal
justice system,” Mr. McKesson wrote in a Medium posting after their
meeting, and after hearing Mr. Sanders in the first Democratic debate.
“Also, his statements during the debate reflected the presence of a strong
initial platform that I look forward to see expanded in the coming months.”

Mrs. Thomas <http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/mattie-thomas/> agrees.

“I want a president for all of the people,” she said. “How many small towns
has Hillary <http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/hillary-clinton/> been
to? How many people in rural communities has she spoken with? Does she
support $15 minimum wage? What really are her positions? She says a lot,
but really nothing at all.

“What I’m looking for as a President Bernie Sanders has already said and
it’s a consistent message with him,” Mrs. Thomas
<http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/mattie-thomas/> said.
===

Robert Naiman
Policy Director
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]
(202) 448-2898 x1
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