Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Joe Biden Has Won Some Early Super Tuesday States—but Sanders Supporters Aren't Worried

ARLINGTON, Virginia — Minutes after polls closed across this Virginia and it appeared that Joe Biden had won the commonwealth, but also North Carolina and Alabama, Bernie Sanders’ supporters were still casually trickling into a Super Tuesday election return watch party just outside of Washington, D.C.

Among volunteers who had been out canvassing for Sanders, the mood was dour, in part because many heard Hillary Clinton ripping on Sanders in an NPR interview on the way over. But their message was clear: just wait for Texas and California.

Biden may be headed for a southern sweep on Super Tuesday, but more than half the delegates await in those two mega-states where Sanders has robust organizations and strong Latinx support.

“I need a drink,” 60 year-old nurse Fran Sanderson sighed as she signed in to this watch party after spending more than six hours canvassing for Sanders.

READ: Will the South stop Bernie — again?

Before Sanderson could grab that much needed drink, she unloaded on the Democratic National Committee which she says is once again working to derail Sanders’ meteoric rise in national politics. “I’m not a conspiracy theorist — I’m not — but it’s a little fishy smelling,” Sanderson said of the party establishment’s coalescing around Biden and not Sanders.

As we chatted, the room soon ballooned from a mere eight to more than 40 attendees, with more supporters still trickling in every 15 or so minutes. That’s because attendees are banking on a late night and their eyes are all on Texas and California where they plan to crush Biden who supporters fear is too old to take on the president.

“Trump’s going to eat him up in a debate. He's an animal,” said Sanderson, who is also planning to canvass in nearby Washington and also in Pennsylvania for Sanders.

The crowd roared as early returns from Texas flashed on the TV screen.

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Matt Laslo/VICE News

“It won’t be until like midnight or so where we’ll start hearing some good news, and it will balance some things out,” said Andrew Parr, a 58-year-old volunteer Northern Virginia (or NOVA) for Bernie, which is hosting this event. “And things won’t look so bleak.”

READ: Joe Biden just won the North Carolina Democratic primary

It’s not just Sanders’ faithful volunteers feeling the Bern this eve. One of his top surrogates in Congress is also not on the edge of his seat. Actually, he may be — just not for the reason Biden’s team is.

“I’m confident he’ll have a lead coming out of Super Tuesday — a fairly significant lead,” Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) told VICE News at the Capitol Tuesday afternoon. “I think the question is just what's the size of it's going to be?”

Like many Sanders’ volunteers, Khanna also questions why the party’s establishment is once again moving away from Sanders, even as he’s exciting millions from coast to coast.

“I think what you're seeing is Sanders has a popular message in terms of policies and a lot of the activism and energy of the younger generation,” Khanna said. “Instead of attacking him and shunning him, I think what the party really needs to figure out is, how do we harness this energy and adopt and embrace the ideas that he’s talking about.”

Cover: Campaign buttons for sale during a Super Tuesday night rally with Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) at the Champlain Valley Expo March 03, 2020 in Essex Junction, Vermont. 1,357 Democratic delegates are at stake as voters cast their ballots in 14 states and American Samoa on what is known as Super Tuesday. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)



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