With integrity and principle, the Vermont Senator is calling
Americans to a political revolution.
Americans to a political revolution.
By the Editors
Senator Bernie Sanders greets supporters at a campaign rally outside the New Hampshire State House on November 5, 2015. Reuters/Brian Snyder |
A year ago, concerned that ordinary citizens would be
locked out of the presidential nominating process, The Nation argued that
a vigorously contested primary would be good for the candidates, for the
Democratic Party, and for democracy. Two months later, Senator Bernie Sanders
formally launched a campaign that has already transformed the politics of the
2016 presidential race. Galvanized by his demands for economic and social
justice, hundreds of thousands of Americans have packed his rallies, and over 1
million small donors have helped his campaign shatter fund-raising records
while breaking the stranglehold of corporate money. Sanders’s clarion call for
fundamental reform—single-payer healthcare, tuition-free college, a $15-an-hour
minimum wage, the breaking up of the big banks, ensuring that the rich pay
their fair share of taxes—have inspired working people across the country. His
bold response to the climate crisis has attracted legions of young voters, and
his foreign policy, which emphasizes diplomacy over regime change, speaks
powerfully to war-weary citizens. Most important, Sanders has used his
insurgent campaign to tell Americans the truth about the challenges that
confront us. He has summoned the people to a “political revolution,” arguing
that the changes our country so desperately needs can only happen when we wrest
our democracy from the corrupt grip of Wall Street bankers and billionaires.
We
believe such a revolution is not only possible but necessary—and that’s
why we’re endorsing Bernie Sanders for president. This magazine rarely makes
endorsements in the Democratic primary (we’ve done so only twice: for Jesse Jackson in 1988,
and for Barack Obama in 2008).
We do so now impelled by the awareness that our rigged system works for the few
and not for the many. Americans are waking up to this reality, and they are
demanding change. This understanding animates both the Republican and
Democratic primaries, though it has taken those two contests in fundamentally
different directions.
At the
core of this crisis is inequality, both economic and political. The United
States has become a plutocracy—one in which, as Sanders puts it, “we not only
have massive wealth and income inequality, but a power structure which protects
that inequality.” America’s middle class has melted away, while the gap between
rich and poor has reached Gilded Age extremes. The recovery that followed the
2008 economic collapse has not been shared. Indeed, in the United States it
seems that nothing is shared these days—not prosperity, nor security, nor even
responsibility. While millions of Americans grapple with the consequences of
catastrophic climate change, fossil-fuel companies promote climate
skeptics so that they can continue to profit from the planet’s destruction.
While Americans have tired of endless war, the military-industrial complex and
its cheerleaders continue to champion the reckless interventions that have
drained our country, damaged our reputation abroad, and created a perfect storm
of Pentagon waste, fraud, and abuse. While Americans of every ideological
stripe recognize the need for criminal-justice reform, African-American men,
women, and children continue to be gunned down by police officers on the
streets, and mass incarceration continues largely unabated.
Americans
are fed up and fighting back. Seen in isolation, the Fight for $15, Black Lives
Matter, the climate-justice movement, the immigrant-rights movement, the
campaign for a financial-transactions tax, and the renewed push for
single-payer healthcare may seem like unrelated causes. Taken together, they
form a rising chorus of outrage over a government that caters to the demands of
the super-wealthy, while failing to meet the needs of the many. They share a
fury at a politics captured by special interests and big money, where pervasive
corruption mocks the very notion of democracy.
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