After ugly crying at the results of the Biden
coup last night, it was a tonic to breeze by a row of lawn signs on this
perfect Sacramento spring day--all of which trumpeted candidates & issues
that I voted for which seem to have prevailed in the March 3rd
election.
Perhaps not all “high propensity voters” had
such a good morning. I can’t remember a
better one pertaining to the actual ballot I cast. But it got me thinking how Bernie’s slogan
“not me, us” is really true. It’s not
just that Bernie’s campaign is about us and not him, that part is obvious in
everything about it. It’s that it’s also
about a lot more than who is elected president this fall.
No matter what happens, Bernie’s spirited
campaigns of 2016 and 2020 have changed the parameters of the possible through
engaging, enrolling and educating a vast new generation of voters. Some of them, like Sacramento environmental advocate
Katie Valenzuela, may have been inspired by Bernie to run for office. It’s too close to call yet but today Katie is
ahead in the race for City Councilmember against two term incumbent and
establishment corporate favorite Steven Hansen.
If she wins, I think there’s no question that Bernie’s coattails and
organization will have played an uncoordinated role in her victory.
It made me wonder how many other Katie
Valenzuelas ran across the country in the wake of Bernie yesterday or are on
the ballot in the states slated to vote on the second “Super Tuesday.” A reminder that every dollar we give, every
call we make, every door we knock on for Bernie Sanders in the coming weeks and months
ahead could help elect the new generation of leadership.
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