海角大神

Road to 2020: The roots of Bernie鈥檚 revolution

Six months after his election as mayor of Burlington, Vermont's largest city, Bernard Sanders, pictured Sept. 11, 1981, is fighting in court for the right to hire his city appointees and finding tickets on his car when he parks in the mayor's spot. "It hasn't been easy," he says.

Donna Light/AP/File

May 31, 2019

It was a quixotic bid from the start. Bernie Sanders was what Vermonters derisively call a 鈥渇latlander鈥 鈥 someone who moved to the state after growing up elsewhere, in this case New York City.

True, Mr. Sanders had quickly immersed himself in the rural and rustic ways of Vermont. He lived his early years in a converted maple sugarhouse with no running water. He bathed in a cold stream outside. The ritziest thing on his property was a new outhouse.

He had no political experience. Although he had run for the U.S. Senate on the little-known Liberty Union Party ticket in 1972, he garnered only 2% of the vote. Four years later, he would run for governor, capturing a reed-thin 6% of the vote.

Why We Wrote This

Some see Bernie Sanders as too liberal and uncompromising to be president. But his track record as mayor reveals a pragmatic side.

Yet here he was again, in 1981, at the age of 39, seeking the mayorship of Burlington, the state鈥檚 largest city. A friend had convinced him that there was a reservoir of support for him in the city鈥檚 working-class neighborhoods. So he went door to door as an independent.

His competition was hardly intimidated. 鈥淎ll Bernie wants to talk about is Vietnam and the Third World,鈥 said Mayor Gordon Paquette, the five-term Democratic incumbent. Mr. Paquette miscalculated, however. When the ballots were counted, and recounted, Mr. Sanders had won by 10 votes.聽

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People walk Church Street Marketplace in downtown Burlington, Vermont.
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff

The mayor took out a yellow legal pad and scribbled out his inauguration address. It is, more or less, the same speech he has been giving ever since 鈥 and offers clues to his popularity 40 years later as he emerges as a front-runner for the Democratic nomination for president, capping one of the most improbable rises in modern American politics.

For decades, the man from Vermont with the self-described democratic socialist ideas was just as likely to be the subject of a punchline than a headline. Then came 2016. No one predicted that Mr. Sanders would almost topple a presumptive heiress to the Democratic throne. Now he鈥檚 back, an instant top-tier presidential contender, the leader of a broad-based progressive movement that seems remarkably less improbable than four years ago.

His prominence is rooted in part in his consistency, the trumpeting of the same issues since his days in Burlington City Hall. He has been talking about income inequality, a lack of affordable health care, and the follies of an over-interventionist U.S. foreign policy since before fellow presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg was born. Those convictions remain, independent of his new rock star status.

鈥淗e would be doing this even if he hadn鈥檛 made any progress [in politics] at all,鈥 says Terry Bouricius, who in the 1970s rattled around Vermont with Mr. Sanders in an old Volkswagen bug, dropping him off at AM radio stations for campaign interviews.

Yet his ideological purity is also a weakness. Many believe Mr. Sanders is too liberal for America and is tailor-made to be a crusader but not a chief executive.

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鈥淚n some ways he鈥檚 better as a standard-bearer,鈥 says Matthew Dickinson, a political scientist at Middlebury College in Vermont, who notes that supporters like that about him. Based on his legislative record, he adds, 鈥淗e鈥檚 much better at articulating the righteous indignation for the country鈥檚 failure to achieve what he believes in than making the compromises necessary to seeing [that] those principles are achieved.鈥

Yet Mr. Sanders does have a pragmatic streak that often gets overlooked. It was evident in his days fixing potholes as mayor, has surfaced from time to time in the U.S. Senate, and is infusing his stances on some key issues today.

Bernie Sanders wrote out his mayoral speeches on yellow legal pads, some of which have been archived at the University of Vermont.
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff

In many ways, his sudden rise says more about the country than him. A growing number of Americans are fed up with paltry paychecks and overpriced college and medical bills. It鈥檚 a principal reason he has raised more money and amassed more donors than any other Democratic candidate. He attracts concert-sized crowds from Berkeley to Brooklyn. He is polling better than all but one of his 20-plus opponents.聽

Yet he is hardly a shoo-in for the nomination. He鈥檚 still, in the eyes of many, an 鈥渙ld white guy鈥 at a time when many Democrats are yearning for youth and diversity. Many other candidates in the most crowded Democratic field in modern history are espousing the same left-wing views that he has championed for years. Why him instead of them? Indeed, the central question facing Mr. Sanders as the 2020 campaign ratchets up may be a simple one:聽

Has history passed him by, just when it seemed to be arriving?

Mr. Sanders may hate war, but he loves a good battle. Winning the Burlington mayoral election was just his opening salvo. Then came the real fight. The Democratic establishment, which had controlled the city for 30 years, still held most of the other important positions 鈥 including 8 of 13 seats on the Board of Aldermen. And they weren鈥檛 about to cede any more territory.聽

At Mr. Sanders鈥 first board meeting, his opponents fired his secretary. They blocked his nominees. They put his items last on meeting agendas and made sure time ran out before they could discuss them. The city clerk locked the door between Mr. Sanders鈥 office and the clerk鈥檚 office and intercepted the mayor鈥檚 mail.

Mr. Sanders pushed back, getting his secretary reinstated, taking the city to court over his nominees, and setting up volunteer committees to circumvent the stonewalling. 鈥淗is election brought into the public arena a basic conflict over the direction and purpose of urban life,鈥 writes Renee Jakobs in a 1983 Cornell University master鈥檚 thesis on Mr. Sanders鈥 first term. 鈥淗is opponents refused to acknowledge this as the cause of the conflict in City Hall. They blamed his 鈥榓brasive personality鈥 and 鈥榗onfrontational style.鈥欌

To be sure, Mr. Sanders could get fiery, stomping out of meetings or banging his fist on the table. But however much his opponents tried to thwart him, it had the opposite effect.

鈥淏ernie found the resistance in 1981 really energizing,鈥 says Mr. Bouricius, a progressive candidate who had gotten elected as an alderman that same year and was one of only two Sanders allies on the 13-member board. 鈥淚t was an exciting time. It was a political battle.鈥

Bernie Sanders records a tape of songs outlining his ideas while mayor of Burlington in 1987.
Toby Talbot/AP/File

He recalls Mr. Sanders holding Sunday night strategy meetings with allies in private homes 鈥撀 a group that was dubbed his 鈥渒itchen cabinet.鈥 鈥淭he powers that be were trying to completely obstruct the way he was trying to govern,鈥 says John Franco, his assistant city clerk who was part of the group.

Mr. Sanders and his team sought ways to circumvent the Democrats, setting up mayoral councils on shoestring budgets. He started free outdoor concerts, a Little League baseball team for low-income families, and a tree-planting program.聽

His attempts to promote civic engagement dovetailed with a strategy of building a progressive coalition to reform city government. And the Democrats helped, unwittingly. The Democratic chairwoman had called on voters to 鈥渉alt the socialist 鈥榝ungus鈥 growing in Burlington鈥; instead, they voted her out. Three more allies of the mayor got elected, giving the 鈥淪anderistas鈥 control of more than a third of the board. 鈥淚t was revolution,鈥 says Mr. Franco. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no other way to describe it.鈥

When he first won the mayoral race, fan letters poured in, not only from around Vermont but from across the country. One even came from China. Many of the supporters heralded the election of a socialist mayor as a light in the Reaganesque darkness.

But at least one man was not so enraptured. Antonio Pomerleau, a self-made millionaire and Burlington鈥檚 biggest landowner, had been castigated by Mr. Sanders in the campaign over plans to build waterfront luxury condos. Shortly after the election, the developer walked into the mayor鈥檚 office.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e the mayor, but it鈥檚 still my town,鈥 he declared. In the course of their three-hour conversation, though, Mr. Sanders assured the developer that 鈥渋f you get some good ideas for the city, I鈥檒l back you up.鈥澛

And he did. That unlikely partnership proved to be central to one of Mr. Sanders鈥 greatest accomplishments in Burlington 鈥 turning the unsightly industrial area along Lake Champlain into a public park. In fact, Mr. Sanders proved surprisingly pragmatic, for all his idealism.聽

He has cited Martin Luther King Jr. and Eugene V. Debs, a founding member of the Socialist Party of America, as having had the greatest influence on his political thinking.聽

Mr. Sanders was among those in 1963 who heard King give his 鈥淚 have a dream鈥 speech in Washington. The same year, he worked on an Israeli kibbutz, which often flew the Soviet flag.聽

Back in America, red-baiting was still popular. But Mr. Sanders openly identified himself as a socialist and chose red for his campaign color. 鈥淲e just owned it,鈥 says Mr. Bouricius.聽

As mayor, Mr. Sanders established sister city relationships with municipalities in the Soviet Union and Nicaragua and was one of the only mayors in the United States to have a foreign policy. But his attention to practical details, such as keeping the budget in check and repairing roads, garnered him support well beyond his liberal base. Republican aldermen increasingly voted with him.聽

Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders speaks during a rally in Warren, Michigan. The Vermont senator is running second in the polls, behind Joe Biden.
Paul Sancya/AP

鈥淚 think a lot of the myth about Bernie Sanders is 鈥榯his is a guy that鈥檚 just yelling in the back of the room,鈥欌 says Tad Devine, chief strategist for Mr. Sanders鈥 2016 campaign. 鈥淏ut his track record as a chief executive of the largest city in his state is to the contrary.鈥

One of Mr. Sanders鈥 early appointees saved the city $20,000 in his first six months by centralizing purchasing. His administration moved the city鈥檚 cash into higher interest-bearing accounts, yielding an additional $70,000 a year. He initiated a competitive bidding process for the city鈥檚 insurance contracts, cutting costs by 40%.聽

Mr. Sanders also led a national search for a new city treasurer, replacing the incumbent who was overseeing $50 million in city finances despite having no experience in accounting, according to Ms. Jakobs鈥 thesis. The new treasurer discovered a budget surplus of $1.9 million that had gone unaccounted for amid the city鈥檚 poor bookkeeping. Mr. Sanders used half a million dollars of it to repair city streets.

The man who championed the plight of the poor, who wrote letters admonishing the Reagan administration to end its military adventures in Latin America, was embracing fixing potholes and plowing roadways.

鈥淵ou can talk all you want about El Salvador and the international problems of capitalism, but [if the] sidewalks [are not] plowed we are not doing the job we were elected to do,鈥 said Mr. Sanders at the time. 鈥淏ut, if one becomes just more efficient, we could lose the reason we were elected.

鈥淵ou have to have a vision. You have got to talk about what society, what life, can be like,鈥 he added.

On a winter day after he became a congressman, Mr. Sanders and his team were traveling to an event at the state capital when they crested a hill and dropped down into Elmore, population 855. 鈥淗ey! There are ice fishermen out there! Stop the car!鈥 Mr. Sanders said, according to an aide who was with him at the time.

His staff pointed out that they were going to be late for their meeting, but Mr. Sanders insisted and they all trudged out onto the frozen lake, in dress shoes, to talk to them.聽 The vignette is indicative of why, across Vermont, almost everyone has a Sanders story.聽

鈥淗e鈥檚 our guy, he鈥檚 Bernie, he鈥檚 our crotchety old uncle 鈥 you see him every Fourth of July or Memorial Day parade and he scowls at you and you say, 鈥楾here goes Bernie,鈥欌 says Professor Dickinson of Middlebury College. 聽

Mr. Sanders鈥 crusading style and gruff demeanor endear him to many Vermonters, who have always valued a sense of independence dating back to Ethan Allen and his Green Mountain Boys in the Revolutionary War. At the entrance to his Senate office in Burlington, Mr. Sanders keeps a Norman Rockwell painting, 鈥淔reedom of Speech,鈥 that was inspired by a town meeting at which one man 鈥渞ose among his neighbors and voiced an unpopular view.鈥澛

鈥業 always thought he was a man ahead of his time.鈥 鈥 Mike Isham, a fifth-generation Vermont farmer and owner of the Isham Family Farm in Williston, who hosted a pig roast fundraiser for Bernie Sanders and other politicians last fall
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff

Sanders is known for attracting an effective and responsive staff and working them hard, which is something he demands of himself as well. As a runner, he once clocked a 4:37 mile. The 77-year-old senator鈥檚 idea of a vacation is driving around West Virginia talking to coal miners.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not a job 鈥 it鈥檚 a calling,鈥 says Mr. Bouricius, describing Mr. Sanders鈥 attitude. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e not here to help me get elected, you鈥檙e here to change the world.鈥

But there is also a sensitive side to Mr. Sanders that is not well known, says Phil Fiermonte, who worked for him for 20 years. At one point, Mr. Fiermonte was going through a bad experience and had to take some time off.聽

鈥淗e called me every day to see how I was doing at an incredibly stressful time politically for him,鈥 says Mr. Fiermonte. 鈥淎nyone from his political family 鈥 Bernie鈥檚 there.鈥

Mr. Sanders seems most in his element when he鈥檚 in places like Elmore, with salt-of-the-earth Vermonters. Though Jewish himself, he has credited Pope Francis鈥 focus on the world鈥檚 dispossessed with inspiring him to think about the need for a 鈥渕oral economy,鈥 channeling more of the world鈥檚 resources toward the common good. He took time off his 2016 campaign to visit with the pope and top leaders of the Roman Catholic Church at a Vatican conference on the subject.

Though he recently became a millionaire, he doesn鈥檛 flaunt it. His Burlington home is in a modest neighborhood, where neighbors see him out for walks or shopping at the local supermarket. He has been ranked one of the worst-dressed senators in Congress, although the rumpled lawmaker with the untamed hair jokes that he looks like a GQ model compared with his early days.聽

Mr. Sanders has won 15 elections in Vermont and today maintains a 64% approval rating among his constituents, the highest of any senator in the country.

鈥淗e maintained his popularity in Vermont because of his advocacy and how outspoken he was,鈥 says Rep. Peter Welch, who replaced Mr. Sanders in the U.S. House when he moved on to the Senate. 鈥淏ut his explosion in popularity was based on the success of his first [presidential] campaign where it became clear that his appeal extended beyond just the progressive elements of the [Democratic] Party.鈥

His presidential run has boosted the visibility of Vermont, not only in the U.S. but abroad. Burlington architect Carol Stenberg recalls introducing herself to colleagues in New Zealand who responded, 鈥淥h, you鈥檙e from Bernie-land!鈥 Now his appeal is being tested as more candidates in the crowded 2020 Democratic primary field echo the ideas Mr. Sanders has touted for decades.

鈥淚鈥檓 kind of bothered that the ... [other] candidates have co-opted his catch phrases,鈥 says Josh Martin, a lawyer in St. Albans.

鈥榌Bernie Sanders has] never done anything for me. I don鈥檛 believe in anything for free. ... Somebody has to pay for it. It鈥檚 going to come out of all our pockets, absolutely 鈥 all the working-class people.鈥 鈥 Chad Hale, owner of Back Country Sports gun shop in St. Albans, Vermont
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff

But some see Mr. Sanders鈥 call for things such as Medicare for all and free college education as pipe dreams 鈥 or worse. Just up the road from St. Albans, where coffee shops offer scones and maple lattes, Chad Hale owns the Back Country Sports gun shop. He stands in front of shelves brimming with ammunition as he runs a background check for a customer looking to buy a rifle.聽

鈥淗e鈥檚 never done anything for me,鈥 says Mr. Hale. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 believe in anything for free. ... Somebody has to pay for it. It鈥檚 going to come out of all our pockets, absolutely 鈥 all the working-class people.鈥

Others across the state question why people on heating assistance have a yard full of snowmobiles, or why taxpayers should bail out people who send their children to colleges they can鈥檛 afford.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a nice thought, but it鈥檚 not doable,鈥 says Keith Wolstenholme one morning at the Thetford town dump. 鈥淚 understand how [Mr. Sanders] wants to help people, but people also need to help themselves.鈥

It is that kind of sentiment that has made many analysts think Mr. Sanders could never beat Donald Trump. America, they say, just isn鈥檛 ready for a Socialist president. It鈥檚 also a reason many Republicans ardently hope the senator wins the nomination.

Despite such skepticism, Mr. Sanders has been able to win support across class and party lines in his home state. In the 2016 presidential primary, he won every town in Vermont, except for the ones without polling places, and beat Hillary Clinton by a margin of 22 points next door in New Hampshire. Across the country, Mr. Sanders won several conservative states, including Idaho, Utah, and Nebraska.聽

鈥淭hat was not a surprise to a lot of us, because he did well in Vermont in statewide elections in the most conservative part of the state,鈥 says Representative Welch.

Bill Rowell, a moderate Republican and dairy farmer, won鈥檛 say whom he voted for. But he credits Mr. Sanders for being responsive to farmers like him, who are facing a prolonged downturn in milk prices.

鈥楨ven though Bernie鈥檚 political ideology differs from mine, I have to recognize him for his willingness to help the dairy farmers correct a dysfunctional system.鈥 鈥 Bill Rowell, a moderate
GOP dairy farmer in Vermont
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff

Mr. Rowell went to Washington to talk with his congressional delegation about fixing the problem, and Mr. Sanders sponsored a bill to stabilize milk prices. Though it didn鈥檛 become law, Mr. Rowell credits him for trying. 鈥淓ven though Bernie鈥檚 political ideology differs from mine, I have to recognize him for his willingness to help the dairy farmers correct a dysfunctional system,鈥 he says.

During his 16 years in the U.S. House, Mr. Sanders passed more roll call amendments (those in which the tally is officially recorded as opposed to a simple voice vote) when the chamber was controlled by Republicans than any other lawmaker.

When it comes to actually enacting laws, however, his track record over 28 years in Congress is far more limited. Of the 408 bills he has sponsored, only seven have become law 鈥 two of which involved naming post offices in Vermont, according to the website GovTrack.

But Mr. Sanders has had a hand in other key legislative victories. Most notably, he hammered out a bipartisan deal with Sen. John McCain of Arizona in 2014 on a $16 billion landmark bill to reform the Veterans Administration. More recently, Mr. Sanders got seven Republicans to support a measure he co-sponsored to end America鈥檚 involvement in the war in Yemen. 聽

鈥淲hen you鈥檙e a principled legislator and you don鈥檛 cut deals out of politics, what ends up happening is you find odd bedfellows,鈥 including principled conservatives, says Mr. Sanders鈥 campaign manager Faiz Shakir.聽

Mr. Sanders鈥 track record in Congress and in Burlington has fueled a debate over how he would act as president 鈥 whether he could temper his ideological purity enough to build alliances and forge broadly acceptable policies. Some see him as pragmatic, taking the occasional go-it-alone stands, yes, but also voting with Democrats on major pieces of legislation and now and then siding with Republicans as well.聽

He has also been signaling on the campaign trail in recent months that he鈥檚 not a rigid ideologue, offering tempered comments, for instance, on impeachment and declining to support reparations for descendants of black slaves.

Yet Mr. Sanders remains one of the most consistently liberal politicians of the past 50 years, a man who is a true oddity in American politics: a lifelong independent running for the nomination of the Democratic Party, whose establishment he has often railed against, espousing democratic socialist ideals that Republicans love to ridicule.

But at least everyone knows where he stands. Just look at that first speech.

***

Sanders bio

Born: Sept. 8, 1941, in Brooklyn, New York聽

Father: Elias Ben Yehuda Sanders, who moved to the U.S. from Poland and became a paint salesman. Most of his family was killed in the Holocaust.聽

Mother: Dorothy Glassberg, daughter of Jewish immigrants from Poland and Russia

Early penury: Grew up in a 3 1/2-room apartment in Brooklyn. His mother once yelled at him for not walking farther to a cheaper grocery store when she sent him out with a shopping list.

Spouse: Jane O鈥橫eara Sanders, whom he married in 1988 while mayor of Burlington, Vermont. They honeymooned in the Soviet Union. She has worked as a political adviser, college provost, and college president.

Children: Four, one (Levi) from a previous relationship of Mr. Sanders. The other three stepchildren are from an earlier marriage of Ms. Sanders.

Education: University of Chicago, Bachelor of Arts in political science

Religion: Jewish

Elections: Won 15, lost 8 鈥 including coming in last in an election for class president in high school聽

Political career: mayor of Burlington for 8 years, U.S. representative for 16 years, and U.S. senator for 12 years (so far)

Athleticism: Former competitive runner. Ran 4:37 mile in high school.聽

Early lesson in capitalism: The owner of Mr. Sanders鈥 beloved Brooklyn Dodgers, whom he would watch from 60-cent bleacher seats, sold the team to Los Angeles interests.