By David Freedlander
He’s paying attention to
the concerns of black America now, as a presidential candidate. Back
when he represented Vermont? Not so much, local activists say.
Back in 2006, the Vermont Partnership for Fairness and Diversity, a Brattleboro area civil rights organization hosted a Candidate Night. The race for the open U.S. Senate seat between Bernie Sanders and Richard Tarrant, a Republican and one of the wealthiest people in the state, had grown increasingly acrimonious.
The audience of African-American activists and other Vermonters of color should have been a friendly one for the socialist congressman.
Instead,
remembers Curtiss Reed Jr., the executive director of the group, it
became something of a showdown. Sanders “was just really dismissive of
anything that had to do with race and racism, saying that they didn’t
have anything to do with the issues of income inequality,” Reed told The
Daily Beast.
“He just
always kept coming back to income inequality as a response, as if
talking about income inequality would somehow make issues of racism go
away.”
And
since winning that race, Sanders’s approach toward Reed and his
organization has been one of “benign neglect,” the activist added. “We
are a major statewide organization. It would stand to reason that you
would check in with your major constituents, but voters of color are
simply not on his radar.”
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Source: The Daily Beast
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