Bernie Sanders: I'm behind because 'poor people don't vote'
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Bernie Sanders says he is trailing Hillary Clinton in the Democratic presidential primary “because poor people don’t vote.”
When asked why he consistently lost contests in states with the highest income inequality gaps, the populist Vermont senator said on “Meet The Press” Sunday that he wouldn’t trail front-runner Clinton by 275 pledged delegates – and 750 total delegates – if more low-income voters showed up to the ballot box.
“I mean, that’s just a fact,” Sanders said. “That’s a sad reality of American society. And that’s what we have to transform.
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“We have one – as you know – one of the lowest voter turnouts of any major country on Earth. We have done a good job bringing young people in. I think we have done – had some success with lower income people. But in America today – the last election in 2014, 80 percent of poor people did not vote.”
Sanders has cited that statistic before as his insurgent candidacy has taken hold with disaffected Democrats who want someone with an ideology to Clinton’s left. A Politifact examination found the number to be an overestimation by anywhere from 10 to 15 points.
Sanders’ primary assertion that low-income voters would support him en masse also underwent a fact check on Sunday’s “State Of The Union.” Host Jake Tapper told Sanders comprehensive exit polls showed Clinton won Democrat voters with household incomes below $50,000 by a margin of 55-44 percent. Sanders chalked up that figure to apathy born of frustration.
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“So many people have given up on the political process, including a whole lot of low-income people where the voting rates are low,” Sanders said. “Young people who are not voting in large numbers. Our job is to bring people into the political process, to create a government that represents all of us, not just the one percent.”
The majority of Sanders’ policy proposals have been aimed at lower income Americans, including efforts to secure a higher minimum wage, ensure more family leave time and provide free college tuition. Echoing President Obama’s 2008 rhetoric on “fundamentally transforming” America, Sanders said on “Meet The Press” that higher turnout rates were crucial to change.
“If we can significantly increase voter turnout so that low income people and working people and young people participated in the political process, if we got a voter turnout of 75 percent, this country would be radically transformed,” he said.