Ronda Rousey endorses Bernie Sanders: Is she a socialist?
The MMA star, who has become one of the highest-paid female athletes in the world, has attracted attention for her stances on issues like the gender pay gap. But her support for Sen. Sanders comes on an unusual, bipartisan issue: campaign finance reform.
The MMA star, who has become one of the highest-paid female athletes in the world, has attracted attention for her stances on issues like the gender pay gap. But her support for Sen. Sanders comes on an unusual, bipartisan issue: campaign finance reform.
Ronda Rousey, the mixed martial arts star, actress, and Olympic medalist, recently endorsed self-proclaimed 鈥渄emocratic socialist鈥 Sen. Bernie Sanders (I) of Vermont for president for a reason that may surprise her fans 鈥 his stance on campaign finance reform.
"I鈥檓 voting for Bernie Sanders, because he doesn鈥檛 take any corporate money," Ms. Rousey told the magazine Maxim. 聽
"I don鈥檛 think politicians should be allowed to take money for their campaigns from outside interests,鈥 she said.
Rousey, who is currently the undefeated UFC champion, is well-known for her rapid-fire knockouts of opponents, once in 14 seconds. Her own story, of overcoming personal struggles to rise to prominence in the sport, seems to point toward a more pro-capitalist, possibly right-leaning worldview, making her endorsement of Senator Sanders appear at first to be all the more surprising, the Washington Post notes.
She鈥檚 sometimes seen as an icon to some on the right, as a series of videos featuring her answers to questions about her views on feminism, the pay gap, and gender equality have gone viral.
In August, responding to a question about the pay disparity between herself boxing champ Floyd Mayweather, who often earns millions from a single pay-per-view fight, she pushed back, saying she was 鈥渧ery comfortable鈥 with the amount she earns.
鈥淚f I got to a point where I had almost 50 fights, I would probably be making close to the same amount of money as Floyd does,鈥 Rousey told Yahoo News correspondent Bianna Golodryga.
鈥淏ut at this point, I have 11, so I can't expect it to be exactly equal yet, I don't think. I have to put more time in,鈥 she added.
In contrast, Sanders has said 鈥渋t鈥檚 not a radical idea鈥 that the government should step in to help boost women鈥檚 wages to make them equal to men, the Washington Post's Amber Phillips notes.
In a clip from one video that went viral, Rousey later expanded on her views, taking what might be described as a gender-neutral stance.
鈥淔ighting鈥檚 not a man鈥檚 thing, it鈥檚 a human thing, to say that it鈥檚 anti-woman I think is an anti-feminist statement. And UFC 鈥 I鈥檓 the biggest draw in the sport and I鈥檓 a woman, how is that anti-woman?鈥 she said.
But regardless of where Rousey鈥檚 views fall on a traditional political spectrum, her own stance in favor of limiting money politics points to a larger trend 鈥 campaign finance reform is increasingly a bipartisan cause.
In a New York Times/CBS News poll released in June, 84 percent of those surveyed said that money has too much influence in political campaigns today, the Monitor鈥檚 Jessica Mendoza reported.
Nearly 80 percent of those in the favored limiting the amount of money an individual can donate to a campaign, the poll found.
An electorate increasingly dissatisfied with traditional politicians has fueled the rise of candidates like Sanders, who recently netted $26 million this quarter through 650,000 primarily small donors, who each gave about $30.
The idea of an outsider politician has also fueled the rise of non-traditional Republican candidates like Ben Carson and Donald Trump, who previously said he thought he would win Rousey鈥檚 endorsement.
鈥淩onda Rousey is an example, who likes me,鈥 Mr. Trump聽told CNN last summer. 鈥淚鈥檇 take her on my side as a fighter.鈥 And Trump's views on the need for campaign finance reform are similar to Sanders. 聽
But Rousey quickly squashed the idea of a Trump endorsement, suggesting perhaps the conservatives鈥 assumptions about her own views are not quite accurate.
Instead, she told Maxim, she鈥檚 often found herself dissatisfied with the field of presidential candidates. In 2012, she says she voted for comedian Roseanne Barr, who mounted a third-party campaign for president.
鈥淚 was so unimpressed with the whole presidential campaign that I picked whatever third party I saw, and I saw Roseanne and thought, 'That鈥檚 awesome,鈥 she told Maxim.
Ms. Barr, was a critic of Barack Obama's candidacy, writing that聽鈥滺e has no ideas, no plan, and nothing to add other than the cynical pacification of the masses with bedtime stories about hope." 聽
But Sanders鈥 stance on campaign finance makes him stand out, Rousey says.
鈥淚鈥檓 really pulling for Sanders this time. I hope it works out,鈥 she told Maxim.