NEWS

Sanders makes Halloween swing in N.H.

April McCullum
Free Press Staff Writer
Bernie Sanders begins a presidential campaign event in Warner, New Hampshire on Saturday by speaking to more than 100 people who did not get a seat inside the town hall.

WARNER, N.H. – Bernie Sanders brought his presidential campaign back to New Hampshire on Saturday for the first time since the first Democratic debate, leading an event that featured his three grandchildren in Halloween costumes and some serious questions on gun control and police brutality.

Vermont’s independent U.S. senator spoke first to the overflow crowd of people who had failed to get seats and stood outside the packed town hall building in Warner.

A live band led a singalong of “This Land Is Your Land” as the seated crowd waited for Sanders. When the band had gone, attendees began to sing “America the Beautiful.”

It was Sanders’ first appearance during the so-called “persuasion phase” of the campaign, when staffers say Sanders is trying to draw a deeper contrast between his ideas and those of his opponents.

It was also Sanders’ first New Hampshire visit since Vice President Joe Biden announced he would not enter the race, leaving former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as Sanders’ only serious rival.

While the New Hampshire primary is still months away, Sanders must convince even his supporters that he can go the distance.

“I don’t believe in my heart that he could run this country,” said Charles Evan of Newton, Massachusetts, who said he and his wife Phyllis were nonetheless supporting the Sanders campaign to keep his ideas in public discussion for as long as possible.

"A lot of people we know really like him but then they say he doesn't really have a chance," Phyllis Evan said.

Sanders continued to push against the argument that he is unelectable.

“Nothing that I am talking about is Utopian, is pie-in-the-sky,” Sanders said. “Virtually everything that I am talking about is supported by the vast majority of the American people, and virtually everything that I’m talking about, and my hopes and dreams for America, are being done in one or another country around the world.”

Later, Sanders backed up his views on increasing the estate tax by appealing to President Teddy Roosevelt — “a great communist revolutionary,” Sanders joked.

Sanders largely stuck to the stump speech about income inequality, jobs and campaign finance reform that has served him since the campaign kickoff in Burlington in May — with some additions.

Instead of merely talking about equality for all people, Sanders made a point to mention institutional racism. And instead of merely saying that the United States needs to fight climate change, in Warner he said that Republicans should stand up on the issue rather than acting in fear of losing campaign donors.

Sen. Bernie Sanders speaks at a campaign town hall in Warner, New Hampshire on Saturday.

As the event drew to a close, Sanders took a question about gun control from a 14-year-old middle school student who said he was uneasy about lockdown drills at his school every semester.

Sanders said he regretted that such drills are necessary, but pointed to his support in 1988 and 1990 for prohibition on certain types of assault weapons and his current proposal for expanding background checks.

"From way back when, I took an unpopular position against the gun lobbies," said Sanders, who to some extent has reflected the gun-rights strain in Vermont politics and has been criticized for being weak on gun policy.

The question gave Sanders a chance to refine a statement on gun violence that was turned against him from the Democratic debate with Clinton: “All the shouting in the world is not going to … end this horrible violence that we are seeing.”

Clinton later implied that this was a sexist remark about her passion on the gun issue. In Warner, Sanders made sure to add three key words: “as a nation.”

“Sometimes my words have been mischaracterized,” Sanders said. “I have said that as a nation, we have got to stop shouting at each other on this issue.”

Sanders surged in New Hampshire polls during the summer as he drew massive crowds across the country. The latest average of recent polls by RealClearPolitics puts Sanders ahead of Clinton by 2.4 percentage points.

Bernie Sanders speaks to supporters standing outside Warner Town Hall in Warner, New Hampshire on Saturday.

Karthik Ganapathy, a spokesman for the Sanders operation in New Hampshire, said the campaign has 12 offices and 53 staff members throughout the state.

First-time Sanders event attendee John Conant of Tyngsborough, Massachusetts, was energized after the Warner event.

“He pushed a lot of my buttons in the right way," Conant said. “I was very impressed that he seems to be a very well-spoken, educated person. He’s not talking down to us and went through a number of the issues, actually said some things, didn’t just rabble-rouse.”

Sanders rushed from the 1 p.m. town hall in Warner to a high school gymnasium rally at 4 p.m. in Lebanon, where the candidate was introduced by a local Democratic state representative who grew up in Vermont and a Native American college student who said Sanders is the only candidate who routinely talks about institutional racism.

Sanders played to the crowd in Lebanon, where campaign staff estimated more than 1,000 people in attendance.

“The media thinks I do not have a sense of humor, so I’ve gotta tell you a joke. You ready?” Sanders said.

“My name is Larry David and I am impersonating Bernie Sanders,” Sanders said, referring to the comedian who portrayed him in a Saturday Night Live skit about the first presidential debate. “So there it is. I have a sense of humor. OK.”

Bernie Sanders welcomes three grandchildren to the stage wearing Halloween costumes at a campaign event in Warner, New Hampshire on Saturday.

Sanders will air his first television advertisements in Iowa in the coming week, according to Michael Briggs, the campaign spokesman. Clinton has been spending large amounts on advertisements for months.

The next Democratic debate is Nov. 14, two weeks away. Briggs said Sanders has not yet begun to formally prepare.

After the packed day in New Hampshire, Briggs said Sanders planned to spend Halloween evening in Vermont with his grandchildren and have a break from Sunday television appearances.

Contact April Burbank at 802-660-1863 or aburbank@freepressmedia.com. Follow her on Twitter at www.twitter.com/AprilBurbank