RAW STORY
Independent Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders on Thursday advised
Republicans not to use their newly-won control of Congress to only serve
the wealthy donors that had financed their campaigns.
“The American people are extremely dissatisfied for good reasons at
the state of the economy,” Sanders told CNN host Wolf Blitzer. “The
middle class continues to collapse. That’s been a 30-year collapse. The
gap between the very, very rich and everybody else is growing wider.
Real unemployment is close to 12 percent.”
According to the self-described socialist, the Republicans won big in
Tuesday’s midterms because they were able to blame President Barack
Obama for the country’s problems.
“What they also managed to do — and a brilliant political strategy —
is not tell us what their agenda is,” he explained. “All over the
country in conservative states, people said let’s raise the minimum wage
to, at least, a living wage. What’s the Republican position on that?
They’re against that.”
“Is the Republican Party going to do what the American people want?”
Sanders asked. “The American people do not want more tax breaks for the
wealthy and large corporations. Is the Republican Party going to poison
the well by going forward at a time of massive wealth and income
inequality, giving more tax breaks to people who don’t need it?”
The senator agreed that bipartisan legislation on things like
immigration reform was the “preferable route” to executive action if
Republicans were willing to work with the president.
“But let’s not turn our backs on the middle class of this country and
ignore the enormous economic problems they’re facing,” he said. “Let’s
not simply work for the rich and the big campaign contributors who
control the United States Congress. If we can do that, and respond to
the needs and the pain of the American people, you know what, I think
you’ll suddenly find Congress is regarded a lot more favorably.”
Sanders said that he was seriously thinking about a 2016 presidential
run, but he wanted to be sure that his supporters were ready to take on
powerful conservative donors like the Koch brothers.
“I am giving thought to running,” he explained. “But for me and the
nature of the campaign that I’d be running, I’ve got to get a lot of
input from people all over this country. We haven’t made that final
decision yet.”
“When you take on the billionaire class and you take on the Koch
brothers and Wall Street and the drug companies and all these guys, you
don’t do that haphazardly, you’ve got to really think it through,”
Sanders added. “And I just want to know whether there is grassroots
support in this country for an agenda that is going speak to the needs
of working families and the middle class, prepared to take on the big
money interests. And I’ve got to determine that, and we’re not there yet
with that determination.”
“The American people today are very demoralized. One of the takeaways
of this last campaign is that in my state, by the way, and all over
this country, the vast majority of people didn’t vote. Young people
don’t vote, low income working people don’t vote. They’re disgusted,
they’ve given up on the political process. Is it possible to bring those
people back in so they stand up and fight for their rights and take on
the big money interests? I don’t know the answer to that.”...........
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