nytimes.com
Former Aides to Bernie Sanders Form a Super PAC to Support Joe Biden
By Shane Goldmacher
7-8 minutes
Mr. Sanders’s 2016 campaign manager and another architect of the 2016 bid are joining together in an effort to rally progressive support for the former vice president ahead of the November election.
Credit...Shawn Thew/European Pressphoto Agency
- April 28, 2020Updated 2:03 p.m. ET
Former top advisers to Senator Bernie Sanders are teaming up on a surprising new venture to try to rally progressive support for former Vice President
Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s 2020 campaign: a super PAC.
Jeff Weaver, who served as Mr. Sanders’s campaign manager in 2016 and as a top adviser in 2020, is leading the effort, which will focus on mobilizing the base of Sanders supporters — young people, liberals Latinos and “blue-collar progressives” — for Mr. Biden.
Other top Sanders officials from the 2020 race who will be involved include Chuck Rocha, a senior adviser who focused on Latino outreach, Tim Tagaris, who oversaw digital strategy and fund-raising, and Shelli Jackson, a California strategist for the campaign. Mark Longabaugh, who worked for Mr. Sanders in 2016 but left the 2020 campaign early on, is also part of the new group.
Mr. Sanders has railed for years against super PACs, which can accepted unlimited donations, emphasizing his reliance on millions of small contributions from supporters online to fuel his two presidential bids.
“The senator is not supportive of super PACs. He is not supportive of this super PAC,” Mr. Weaver said in an interview Tuesday. “He certainly would prefer we had not done it through a super PAC,” he added. “Each of us has to make our own decision about how to move forward.”
Mr. Weaver said that, given the short time frame until the general election, this was the most efficient way for the Sanders movement to “lock in some of the gains progressives have made” by electing Mr. Biden and ousting President Trump.
Mr. Sanders, through a spokesman, did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the new group.
Mr. Weaver can be a polarizing figure in the Sanders orbit and the reaction from some former Sanders aides and supporters was negative. “Don’t give them a dime. Pass it on,” wrote the popular @PeopleforBernie Twitter account run by Sanders supporters.
The new effort will not have access to Mr. Sanders’s vaunted email list, Mr. Weaver said.
Mr. Longabaugh was a top architect of the 2016 Sanders campaign but
parted ways one week into the 2020 effort, issuing a public statement with two fellow consultants, Tad Devine and Julian Mulvey ,that they were leaving “because we believe that Senator Sanders deserves to have media consultants who share his creative vision for the campaign.” The media firm eventually worked for Andrew Yang’s campaign.
This is not the first time that an independent entity sprung out after Mr. Sanders ended a presidential campaign.
In 2016, veterans of Mr. Sanders’s campaign formed a different outside group, a 501(c)(4) nonprofit called Our Revolution. Mr. Weaver was initially installed as president, a posting that caused
an exodus of other alumni who had clashed with Mr. Weaver during that race. Mr. Weaver left the group in 2017, at which point Nina Turner, another top Sanders adviser and surrogate, took over.
Our Revolution continued to support Mr. Sanders through 2020. With the new group, both halves of the title of Mr. Sanders’s post-campaign book in 2016, “Our Revolution: A Future to Believe In,” are now the names of entities that sprung out of his movement.
The new effort is actually the second super PAC formed by a former top adviser to the Sanders campaign. Mr. Rocha recently also created Nuestro PAC, a super PAC dedicated to turning out Latino voters in the fall, using the same model and methods that the Sanders campaign used to win over such voters in the primaries.
Shane Goldmacher is a national political reporter and was previously the chief political correspondent for the Metro Desk. Before joining The Times, he worked at Politico, where he covered national Republican politics and the 2016 presidential campaign.
@ShaneGoldmacher
Updated April 28, 2020
- A former Facebook employee is using a tool he employed to help President Trump win to conduct tests for a group dedicated to ousting him.
- As the pandemic upends the 2020 campaign, several states have postponed or canceled their primary elections. We’re keeping track here.
- Get an email recapping the day’s news
- Download our mobile app on iOS and Android and turn on Breaking News and Politics alerts