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Our two female delegates, Mary and Kay, flank "Bernie" on either side, while Alecia and I take the ends. |
Rocking the Caucus
I'm not a political animal by nature. Never in a
million years (not an exaggeration) would I have thought I'd
"volunteer" to run as a delegate for Bernie Sanders to the Democratic
National Convention in Philadelphia this summer. But when I told another Bernie
campaign organizer back in early December which district I was in, he said,
"You've got to be a delegate!"
"Okay," I thought,
"If Bernie needs help to win our state and I live in a mostly rural,
heart-of-Republican-country congressional district, then I'm willing to go out
of my comfort zone and do it for him. It'll be a learning experience."
One thing to be said for being a Bernie supporter: You
learn a lot of new things in a very short period of time.
My husband and I drove approximately 50 miles to our
district caucus site at a Knights of Columbus bingo hall in Marion, Ohio and
only got lost once. Yes, we had to travel that far--so did many others, if not
further. Some traveled upwards of 95 to 100 miles, one way. Looking at a map
of the 4th Congressional district of Ohio, the word "gerrymander"
springs to mind.
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Ohio U.S. District 4 |
You would be shocked to see that it begins in the
Northeastern quadrant of the state just outside the western suburbs of
Cleveland, zigs, zags and serpentine-crawls it way through the middle of the
state hitting our Northwest county of Seneca, dips southeasterly again through
Marion in the central area of the state and then makes it way westerly to Lima
and then dives south to Sidney, just north of Dayton. In this manner, the
Republicans have been able to carve out a niche and install a Tea Party/Freedom
Caucus idiot--excuse me, gentleman--named
Jim Jordan as our U.S. House representative. We are predominately rural, small
town and suburban, yet in one Congressional district we touch upon the outer
Cleveland, Toledo, Columbus and Dayton metropolitan areas.
Not bad. All we're missing of the top five largest
cities in Ohio is Cincinnati, and I'm sure Republicans are working on a way to
zigzag in some of their 'burbs. You realize they can't have us rural/small town
folks hooking up with an actual big city, don't you? Oh, no! We might be influenced
to vote against the G.O.P. if we ever had contact with our big city neighbors.
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Dave, one of our delegates. |
The well-paying union jobs in our district have long
gone to Mexico with NAFTA, and the family farms have all but withered away in
the agribusiness takeover explosion of the last decades. You'd be pardoned to
believe the Democratic base in this gerrymandered nightmare of a district isn't
perhaps the strongest. I believed it, too, until I saw the enthusiastic Bernie
supporters in the K. of C. bingo hall. People in our downtrodden district really love Bernie Sanders!
As we came into the hall, the Bernie supporters
didn't appear to be in majority, but I learned later that the Hillary
supporters had been provided transportation to the caucus by chartered bus,
courtesy of a national union whose leaders have endorsed her. Even if we were slightly outnumbered, I can say for
certain we were the liveliest and most enthusiastic group there. (Martin
O'Malley's campaign failed to get the prerequisite number of signatures to
be qualified for the Ohio primary ballot. I wasn't sure if any of his supporters
were present or if they had migrated to one corner of the room
or the other.)
The "Hillary corner" of the caucus had
about twenty more people than our group my husband estimated, but they didn't
strike me as the happiest of souls. The word "lethargic" comes to
mind. Many were well-dressed. They didn't look like they were "working
class" individuals but older, retired couples who enjoy a weekly steak
dinner and a drink or two at their local country club… Not exactly working
farmers or blue-collar factory workers or high school science teachers or
nurses or college students struggling with overwhelming loan debt.
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Jamie gives delegate Mary's Bernie stand-up sign a thumbs up! |
Frankly, Bernie fans are my type of
people. They're animated and came dressed in their t-shirts, hats, hoodies and
wearing badges and carrying signs. They can't contain their enthusiasm for
Bernie and how much they admire him and his progressive agenda. If I were throwing a party, I'd invite the "Berners" any day of the week. They're fun and friendly people. In direct contradiction to the
mainstream media political pundits, we had a much higher percentage of women in
our group than the Hillary camp.
By contrast, the Clintonistas acted subdued,
orderly. They just didn't display much pep. We didn't see any t-shirts, hats,
badges or anything else that would designate them as fans of the former
secretary of state. When an elderly couple wandered in a little later in the
evening and sat in the back of the room (not huddling with either group), I thought
perhaps when they saw all the cars in the parking lot they thought it meant it
was Bingo Night instead of the Democratic delegate caucus. Maybe they really
were a part of the Hillary caucus? Their subduedness and apartness fit in with
that group's vibe.
To the detriment of all, the bingo hall had terrible
acoustics. At half-basketball-court size, it wasn't big enough for the approximately
80 people present. Delegates were given 60 seconds to give their "stump
speech" to persuade people to vote for them. Of course, the Clintonistas
were doing likewise just a few feet from our tables… Bedlam! Neither side had a
mircophone or a megaphone. Talk about challenging for the hard of hearing. I
really had to concentrate to hear any of the speeches.
When I caught one of the Hillary supporters behind
us bellowing "I'm a FDR Democrat!" I just had to wonder why this
older gentleman was sitting in the other corner of the room. Hadn't he heard
Bernie's latest speech on Wall Street? It would have made FDR proud. Of
course, an elderly voter probably doesn't watch You Tube or get online very
often. More than likely, he watches the local news or gets his political fix
from CNN or Fox. Another on-the-fence older couple I talked to earlier in the
evening stated, "We love Bernie, but he's not going to win the
primary." When I asked them if they'd watched any of his speeches or
rallies online and did they know anything about the large number of people attending
his events and how inaccurate the mainstream media polling data was, they
looked at me with quizzical yet hopeful eyes. I'm happy to say they ended up
caucusing with the Bernie group.
Our district gets to select four delegates per
candidate--two male and two female--to be sent to the national convention. And
what a long slate of names we had! We had eight women and at least six men to
choose from--all very intelligent and enthusiastic candidates. It was a tough
choice.
How did I do? Since I couldn't hear the first two ladies
at all in the noisy hall when my time came to speak, I did like all mothers and
schoolteachers everywhere do to get attention: I stood on my chair and projected
loudly to our group. I got a nice round of applause, too.
Unfortunately, I came
in third place in the female delegate election. I lost by one measly vote. Oh, well. At least I don't have to come up with the
two or three thousand dollars to cover the costs of the hotel and travel to the
convention in Philadelphia. (Whew!) I can cover the convention online and write
about since I know four people from my area who can give me their insights. Odds are, not all four of our delegates will be able to attend, but you never know. Bernie could get 75% or more of the primary vote in Ohio. (Fingers crossed!)
We drove home after the caucus tired but energized.
Later I learned that as the Hillary charter bus pulled out, they all "honked
and waved" at a Bernie Light Brigade LED sign one our group was demonstrating in
the parking lot. It seems everyone in the
4th Ohio Congressional district loves Bernie.
* * *
Are you attending a debate watch party on January 17? Are you planning a Bernie meet-up for the live stream event from the man himself on January 23? Go to the national events page and type in your zip code to find an event nearest you. Better yet, sign up to host one yourself and invite all your friends, family members and fellow Berners. #FeeltheBern and spread the word--Bernie's our next president!
Bernie's Light Brigade is planning another light up the night for Bernie, January 16. Find out how you can help out at the Reddit link and join in the fun.
The Rockland County BLB mix and matches signs to advertise Bernie.