Sanders says everything they care about is at stake
Bernie
Sanders has again urged his supporters to back Hillary Clinton, writing that "Donald Trump would be a disaster and an embarrassment for our
country if he were elected president."
In an op-ed published at the Los Angeles Times,
Sanders contrasts the two leading candidates on everything from tax policy to
climate change to healthcare, and says that the "immediate task" of
his political revolution is to make sure the real estate mogul doesn't end up
in the White House.
Sanders criticizes Trump's campaign for
being "based on bigotry," and says that his Supreme Court justice
nominees "would preserve the court's right-wing majority."
Clinton's
appointees, in contrast, would be "prepared to overturn" Citizen United and
"would protect a woman's right to choose, workers' rights, the rights of
the LGBT community, the needs of minorities and immigrants, and the
government's ability to protect the environment."
While "Clinton understands that
this country must move toward universal healthcare," Trump "wants to
abolish the Affordable Care Act, throw 20 million people off the health
insurance they currently have, and cut Medicaid for lower-income Americans,"
Sanders writes.
"On virtually every major issue
facing this country and the needs of working families, Clinton's positions are
far superior to Trump's," Sanders writes. "Our campaigns worked
together to produce the most progressive platform in the history of American
politics. Trump's campaign wrote one of the most reactionary documents."
As for the disappointment some of his
supporters may be feeling, he says that "being despondent and inactive is
not going to improve anything," and argues that the political revolution
"will continue after the election. It will continue until we create a
government which represents all of us and not just the 1 percent—a government
based on the principle of economic, social, racial, and environmental
justice."
Sanders formally endorsed Clinton
last month, and that, Cleveland.com wrote this
week, "splintered his backers into different camps: those who now support
Clinton, those who refuse to, and those who are still on the fence."
One Sanders surrogate who is now backing
Clinton is Tulsi Gabbard. She told the Honolulu Star
-Adviser, "Given
the remaining choices, like Bernie Sanders, I will be casting my vote for
Hillary Clinton."
"Moving forward, as a veteran and
someone who knows firsthand the cost of war, I am going to continue to push for
an end to counterproductive interventionist wars and lead our country toward a
path toward peace," Gabbard said.