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Robert Philpot

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Robert Philpot,

Robert Philpot

Analysis

Sanders poised to make history

January 28, 2016 09:34
Sanders: in a close primaries race with Clinton
2 min read

At some point in the next 10 days, the improbable candidacy of Bernie Sanders, the Jewish self-declared socialist challenging Hillary Clinton for the Democratic party’s presidential nomination, will likely make history.

This weekend, Democrats in Iowa will vote for who they want to represent them in November’s battle for the White House; just over a week later, the party’s supporters in New Hampshire will do likewise. If Mr Sanders wins in either state, he will become the first Jew — in fact, the first non-Christian — to win a Democrat or Republican presidential primary or caucus election.

Mr Sanders may just be in with a shot of winning both. In Iowa, polls show the Vermont senator has whittled away Mrs Clinton’s once-double digit lead, fighting her to a virtual draw. The Iowa caucus has thrown up some nasty surprises for Mrs Clinton before, not least eight years ago when Barack Obama’s upset win dealt the former First Lady a blow from which she never recovered.

Mr Obama built his victory by massively boosting turnout. Mr Sanders believes he can do likewise, turning the tens of thousands of young liberal grassroots enthusiasts who have showed up at his rallies since last summer into a victory. Some local observers, however, remain sceptical: having seen her hopes melt away here in 2008, Mrs Clinton has visited the state repeatedly and has had a long-entrenched ground operation.

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