Bernie Won’t Get the Nomination. But His Online Army Isn’t Done

If the latest projections come to pass, Hillary Clinton will lock up the Democratic nomination for president by the June 7 primaries in six states. If she does, it will be the end of a hard-fought insurgent campaign for Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders.

But it will not, Sanders supporters say, be the end of the massive progressive movement that propelled him.

The Sanders campaign has defied expectations from the outset. What began as a long-shot campaign in April 2015 soon became a viable threat to what pundits had long seen as Clinton’s inevitable coronation. Over the course of a year, his campaign has out-raised Clinton’s, amassing more than 6 million mostly small-dollar donations and drawn record-breaking crowds, with more than 28,000 people turning out to his Brooklyn rally in April alone.

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  • Sanders, of course, deserves much of the credit for this success, but so do the millions of vocal supporters who gathered on Reddit, Facebook, Slack, and Twitter to amplify his message. They’re the same people who donated nearly $213 million to his campaign and who built dozens of apps and tech tools for free to help lighten the campaign’s load. Now, even as they cross their fingers for a contested convention in July, Sanders supporters are already spinning off new organizations in hopes of maintaining the momentum they’ve built over the last year.

    “Bernie is great,” says Saikat Chakrabarti, who worked as Sanders’ director of organizing technology until April, “but we’ve got to keep this political revolution going.”

    Brand New Congress

    For Chakrabarti, that means upending Congress so that, no matter who becomes president, the progressive platform Sanders laid out during the primaries won’t just evaporate. That’s why he and about forty other Sanders volunteers and former staffers are launching Brand New Congress, an audacious organization that aims to recruit and elect hundreds of new members of Congress who agree to uphold parts of Sanders’ platform. That includes both Republicans and Democrats.

    The goal is for Brand New Congress to become a central fundraiser for all of the candidates by tapping into Sanders’ substantial fundraising community. That way, the candidates won’t have to mount their own fundraising campaigns, and the community of donors and volunteers can focus their resources on a single entity.

    ‘The movement needs something to focus on that’s constructive.’

    “My personal belief in doing Brand New Congress is that the movement needs something to focus on that’s constructive,” Chakrabarti says. He compares Brand New Congress to groups like Democracy for America, which grew out of Howard Dean’s 2004 campaign, and Organizing for Action, which evolved from President Obama’s campaign, Obama for America.

    “DFA and OFA did a lot of advocacy work, but those are things that are hard to keep a lot of momentum going, because the goals are shifting,” he says. In order to keep people’s attention, he says, “you need concrete goals and a thing to focus on.”

    But there’s another major difference that separates the Sanders movement from Dean and Obama. Those earlier campaigns built strong grassroots communities. But in 2004 and 2008, the campaigns themselves were largely responsible for maintaining the connections among supporters. In Sanders’ case, supporters found each other. “Now, almost all of these groups are hanging out on Reddit, Facebook, and Twitter, and Slack,” Chakrabarti says. “They’re creating their own centers of power.”