‘Fight the Power’: Public Enemy Joins Bernie Sanders for Political Revolution
Bernie Sanders’s “Fight the Power” rally with Public Enemy was a sign that he intends to run as the unabashed leader of a “political revolution.”
Bernie Sanders’s “Fight the Power” rally with Public Enemy was a sign that he intends to run as the unabashed leader of a “political revolution.”
According to CNN, Sanders will sit down with Chris Cuomo and take questions on major issues facing the nation. The town hall will also focus on the Democratic strategy for approaching President-elect Donald Trump’s administration.
As he urged them to support Clinton for president, his most ardent fans booed loudly — something one Sanders delegate from Illinois swore would never happen. There are things, he said, you keep within the family. The Democratic Party is an unhappy family.
“The political revolution continues,” Bernie Sanders said an email message to volunteers and supporters notifying them that he will be speaking directly to grassroots supporters in a live, online video message on Thursday at 8:30 p.m. from Burlington, Vermont.
LOS ANGELES — Bernie Sanders’s campaign manager, Jeff Weaver, told Breitbart News on Saturday that he was “feeling good” about the latest polls and momentum Sanders has built ahead of the anticipated June 7 California primary, where 475 delegates are at stake on the Democratic side.
SAN PEDRO — Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) promised labor unions at a rally at the Downtown Harbor dock area near the Los Angeles Maritime Museum on Friday that that he will deliver higher hourly wages as part of his “political revolution.”
SANTA MONICA, California — Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) blasted Hillary Clinton for declining to participate in a Fox News debate before the highly anticipated June 7 primary in California.
Fans of Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) are planning to occupy the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania this July.
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) delivered a virtual concession in a written statement following his speech on Tuesday evening after losing all but Rhode Island — the lone state with an open primary — to presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton.