"The Democratic machine
has launched an unjust attack on your campaign," Stein writes to Sanders
While overly presumptive
Republican presidential candidates are rushing
to announce potential vice presidential running mates, one presidential candidate
is openly courting the idea of a bipartisan unity ticket.
Jill Stein, the Green Party
candidate for president, wrote an open letter to Bernie Sanders, asking the Independent
Vermont senator to consider ditching his attempt to win the Democratic Party’s
presidential nomination for a real “revolution for people, planet and peace”
alongside Stein.
Stein, who has long called on
Sanders to join forces with her in the interest of their “shared
goals,” wrote to Sanders over the weekend: “I invite you to join me in pushing
the boundaries of that system to a place where revolution can truly take root.”
“You’ve proven that in today’s
rapidly changing America, a populist progressive agenda covered by the media
and the televised debates can catch on like wildfire and shake the foundations
of a political establishment that seemed invulnerable just a few short months
ago,” Stein wrote to Sanders, asking if “in this wildly unpredictable election
where the old rules are giving way one by one, can we think outside the box and
find new and unexpected ways to synergize beyond obsolete partisan divides?”
Stein, who first ran for the
White House under the Green Party banner in 2012, argued that despite its
early successes, Sanders’ campaign has faltered as the “neoliberal Democratic
machine mobilizes to quash revolution in its ranks”:
The Democratic machine has
launched an unjust attack on your campaign – from the NY Daily News hit job to
Paul Krugman’s unfounded assault, the DNC’s efforts to minimize your debate
exposure, and the near-unanimous endorsement of Clinton by Democratic elected officials
and super-delegates.
“I would love to explore with
you collaborative ways to advance that effort and ensure the revolution for
people, planet and peace will prevail. Please let me know if you’re interested
in talking,” Stein concluded.
This isn’t the first time the
Harvard-trained physician has reached out to the Sanders campaign with an
offer of a possible third-party unity ticket.
“Many of my supporters are
also his supporters,” Stein told NBC
News last month. “I’m asked all the time if there could be a Bernie Sanders
collaboration and my answer to that has always been yes. The Green Party has
long sought to establish a collaboration with Bernie Sanders.”
But, Stein said, “that phone
call has not been returned and I don’t expect that this will happen.”
“We’re different,” she added.
“He is working inside the Democratic Party. I threw in the towel a long time
ago.”
In another interview with The
Huffington Post last month, Stein expressed worries that Sanders’
campaign would ultimately end and his supporters will eventually support Hillary
Clinton, arguing that the primary “is over” and that “the party machinery is
behind [Clinton].”
“There are many things about
Sanders that are great. We agree on a lot domestically. But to allow
yourself to be lulled into compliance with the Democratic Party means you’re
allowing yourself to be reined in from establishing a real progressive
message,” she said.
For his part, Sanders has
repeatedly stated he intends to support the eventual Democratic nominee — even
if it is Hillary Clinton.
Sophia Tesfaye is Salon's
Deputy Politics Editor. You can find her on Twitter at @SophiaTesfaye.
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