Yet he continues to work for the people.
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) on Sunday doubled down on his support for Vice President Harris, stating he will “do everything” he can to help her win in November.
“I think the vice president now has a very good chance to win it. She’s certainly going to win the popular vote by millions of votes, and I think she has a great chance to win many of the battleground states. And I intend to do everything that I can to see that she wins,” Sanders said on ABC News’s “This Week.”
Sanders, reflecting on what he described as the “very high” energy at last week’s Democratic National Convention, said he believes people are growing “tired and fatigued” with former President Trump, the GOP presidential nominee.
The independent senator, who caucuses with Democrats, was a longtime supporter of President Biden and continued to back him amid growing calls from Democratic lawmakers to step down earlier this summer.
Sanders had not initially endorsed Harris for president, stating he wanted first to see more specific commitments from her on issues important to the working class. The Hill that Sanders was looking to shape Harris’s campaign and had held off on an endorsement in part to exert some pressure on the vice president to adopt some of his priorities.
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) on Sunday doubled down on his support for Vice President Harris, stating he will “do everything” he can to help her win in November.
“I think the vice president now has a very good chance to win it. She’s certainly going to win the popular vote by millions of votes, and I think she has a great chance to win many of the battleground states. And I intend to do everything that I can to see that she wins,” Sanders said on ABC News’s “This Week.”
Sanders, reflecting on what he described as the “very high” energy at last week’s Democratic National Convention, said he believes people are growing “tired and fatigued” with former President Trump, the GOP presidential nominee.
The independent senator, who caucuses with Democrats, was a longtime supporter of President Biden and continued to back him amid growing calls from Democratic lawmakers to step down earlier this summer.
Sanders had not initially endorsed Harris for president, stating he wanted first to see more specific commitments from her on issues important to the working class. The Hill that Sanders was looking to shape Harris’s campaign and had held off on an endorsement in part to exert some pressure on the vice president to adopt some of his priorities.