Bernie Sanders, byname of Bernard Sanders, (born September 8, 1941, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.), American politician who was first elected to represent Vermont in the U.S. Senate in 2006 and took office the following year. Previously he served (1981â89) as the mayor of Burlington, Vermont, and as a member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1991â2007). Formally âŚ
 ¡ Why a Bernie Sanders-Supporting Lawyer Was Smeared as a Racist Segregationist In Manhattan. Maud Maron committed one of the worst sins against the progressive movement. The irony is that Ms. Maron ...
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Bernard Sanders (born September 8, 1941) is an American politician and activist who has served as the junior United States senator from Vermont since 2007. He was the U.S. representative for the state's at-large congressional district from 1991 to 2007.
Bernard SandersBernie Sanders / Full name
Senator (VT) since 2007Bernie Sanders / Office
80Â years (September 8, 1941)Bernie Sanders / Age
Defender of the peopleSanders is a patronymic name, meaning son of Alexander. The name derives from the abbreviation xander, with Alexander deriving from the Greek "áźÎťÎΞινδĎÎżĎ" (AlĂŠxandros), meaning "Defender of the people".
Where We Go from Here: Two Years in the Resistance is a book by U.S. Senator from Vermont Bernie Sanders, published by Thomas Dunne Books on November 27, 2018. The book chronicles the senator's actions from June 2016 to August 2018. It also elaborates on Sanders' political ideology.
Sanders supports repeal of some of the tax deductions that he says benefit hedge funds and corporations, and would raise taxes on capital gains and the wealthiest one percent of Americans. He would use some of the added revenues to lower the taxes of the middle and lower classes.
Requirements to Hold Office According to Article II of the U.S. Constitution, the president must be a natural-born citizen of the United States, be at least 35 years old, and have been a resident of the United States for 14 years.
United States Senate Committee on the BudgetStanding committeeChairBernie Sanders (I) Since February 2, 2021Ranking memberLindsey Graham (R) Since February 2, 2021StructureSeats2217 more rows
50Â years (1957â2008)Bernie Mac / Age at death
Bernie is a character first encountered in Issue 127 of Image Comics' The Walking Dead. He is a member of a small group of six people led by Magna trying to survive in the Washington, D.C. area.
6Ⲡ2âłBernie Mac / Height
Apart from tax and social-welfare matters, Sanders sponsored bills and amendments that mostly concerned climate change, veteransâ affairs, and renewable energy. U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders (right) and U.S. Rep. Brad Sherman at a news conference about big banks, 2013.
In August 2020 he cosponsored the Make Billionaires Pay Act, a proposed bill that would tax the wealth gains of billionaires during the crisis, with the revenue going toward the out-of-pocket health costs of Americans for one year. Gregory Lewis McNamee The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica.
Sanders was the first independent to serve in the U.S. House of Representatives in 40 years, and he remained an independent when he ran for, and won, a Senate seat in 2006. Former governor Howard Dean ran for U.S.âŚ. > Bernie Sanders (Vermont), along with Biden.âŚ.
Biden, who was less progressive than Sanders, soon took a commanding lead in delegates , and Sandersâs attempt to regain momentum was hindered by the coronavirus pandemic, which caused a number of contests to be postponed and prevented in-person rallies.
Sanders was so prolific at filing amendments that he was dubbed by some colleagues the âamendment king.â.
Between his years in the House and the Senate, Sanders filed over 500 amendments, with roughly one in five of them getting approved in a vote.
Sanders denied he ever personally considered launching a primary bid and he never did. But he continued to build on his outsider approach in the years that followed Obamaâs re-election. In 2013, he spoke at a rally outside the White House to denounce proposals for entitlement reforms, once again implicitly criticizing Obama. In 2015, as much of the Democratic Party was rallying around a proposal to raise the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour, Sanders decided to go far further, introducing a bill to raise it to $15 an hour. In the years that followed, he heightened his demands for Medicare for All, even as much of the Democratic Party remained focused on staving off efforts to kill or roll back Obamacare.
Sanders knew he couldnât stop the vote from passing. Indeed, unbeknownst to his supporters, heâd privately told Reid, then the majority leader, that he wouldnât torpedo the compromise. But the episode gave both him and his team their first taste of the power they could yield through playing an outsiderâs game.
It was late in 2010 that Sanders decided to try a different approach.
A key instance of this was on Sandersâ signature issue: health care . When Barack Obama took office and Democrats swept the House and Senate, Sanders agitated for the party to push for a so-called public option for health insurance.
But while Sanders developed a reputation for not being particularly interested in collaboration, he was never viewed as a nihilist either. When big votes came up, he was ultimately fine not letting ideological rigidity upend incremental reform.
Campaigning in 2019, Sanders rarely looks back beyond the 2016 election.
Sandersâ worldview, colored by a swirl of empathy and ideology, is locked in. But his politics â and the language he uses to promote them â have become more polished and, on some occasions, less radical than during his first decade in Vermont.
Sanders resigned from the Liberty Union Party in 1977, the Burlington Free Press reported, telling the paper that âa serious political party cannot maintain the respect of people if it simply pops up every two years for elections.â
On July 12, 2016, Sanders endorsed Hillary Clinton for president of the United States. At a joint appearance in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, Sanders said, "I intend to do everything I can to make certain she will be the next president of the United States. ... I have come here to make it as clear as possible as to why I am endorsing Hillary Clinton and why she must become our next president." Clinton did not win the presidency.
Sanders endorsed 15 U.S. House candidates. Eleven advanced past their primaries and of those five won election to the House. Sanders endorsed eight gubernatorial candidates . Seven advanced past their primaries and of those two won election, with one race pending.
Sanders endorsed two attorney general candidates. One advanced past the primaries and went on to win the general election. Sanders supported 26 ballot measures. Of those, 17 were approved and seven were defeated with two remaining pending. Sanders opposed seven ballot measures.
Sanders didnât run a smart enough campaign. In 2016, Sanders built a passionate bloc of supporters who crowded his rallies and flooded his campaign with money, but lost to former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, a more centrist, establishment Democrat who had greater appeal among black, Southern and older voters.
Sanders and his aides also made new mistakes in 2020. There were some clear indications that some of Sandersâs success in 2016 â among white voters without college degrees, in particular â had more to do with anti-Clinton sentiment than strong support for Sanders.
Sanders and his team also expected that he would boost turnout among younger voters. This did not pan out.
It undermined one of Sandersâs central arguments â that his brand of politics appealed to white voters without a degree in a way that the more centrist vision of Biden and Clinton did not, making the Vermont senator a stronger candidate than Biden in the general election.
Sanders being an older white man is probably relevant here too. In 2016, Democrats opted for a historic choice in nominating a female candidate. In 2020, they nominated a centrist white guy who they believe is the most electable candidate.
Mr. and Ms. Sanders in 1992, several years after they married. She is her husbandâs closest political adviser and confidante.
The school, in Vermont, collapsed a few years after she oversaw a land deal that was intended to bring it new life.
Today, Mr. Sanders is among the front-runners challenging President Trump, and Jane Sanders is â as she long has been â his closest political adviser and confidante. A sprawling housing development is now rising on the lakeside land. But questions about the Burlington College deal live on.
By Danny Hakim. June 21, 2019. BURLINGTON, Vt. â If Jane OâMeara Sanders had had her way, a stretch of prime real estate in Burlington along Lake Champlain would have become a college campus. Instead, it became a cloud lingering over her reputation and her husbandâs presidential campaign.
In January 2016, Brady Toensing, who ran the Trump campaignâs operations in Vermont, wrote a letter to the Justice Department seeking an investigation of the land deal. Mr. Toensing works at a Washington law firm founded by his mother, Victoria Toensing, and stepfather, Joseph diGenova, outspoken defenders of Mr. Trump, and has long talked up the Burlington College controversy.