https://www.liberationnews.org/sanders-carries-youth-vote-in-south-carolina/?utm_source=one_signal&utm_medium=desktop_alert&utm_campaign=liberationnews

Sanders carries youth vote in South Carolina

By Liberation Staff-South Carolina

Mar 02, 2020

On Saturday, February 29, voters across the state of South Carolina went to
the polls to cast their ballots in the primary, marking the “first in the
South” contest in the Democratic Party’s nomination progress. After gaining
momentum with victories in the first three states to vote – Iowa, New
Hampshire, and Nevada – the Bernie Sanders campaign generated support
across the state, especially among the youth, where the candidate got the
largest number of votes from young people of all backgrounds.

Members of the Party for Socialism and Liberation in Columbia, South
Carolina, conducted outreach among Sanders supporters at his rally a day
before the election and found enthusiastic support for socialism from a
diverse group of South Carolina residents. A volunteer event staffer left
their post to speak with us, stating that they were “excited to see a
socialist party” in South Carolina and wanted to get involved.

*[image: Maddox McKibben-Greene, senior journalism and global studies major
at the University of South Carolina. Liberation photo.]
<https://www.liberationnews.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/0d0f.jpg>*

Maddox McKibben-Greene, senior journalism and global studies major at the
University of South Carolina. Liberation photo.
When asked about the mass movement generated by Sanders’ campaign, Maddox
McKibben-Greene, a senior journalism and global studies major at the
University of South Carolina in Columbia, stated that it is a movement that
is drawing support from “people who have not had politics work for them,
ever. Especially not in this country where a few people own a majority of
the wealth.”

In response to Sander’s insurgent campaign against the Democratic and
Republican ruling-class establishment, and his rhetoric of waging a
political revolution, she responded, saying, “We’re actually way overdue
for a political overturning and a political revolution in my opinion.
Revolution is about trying to help people who are the most vulnerable in
our society – people who need healthcare and homes, people who need a
government that works for them.” When asked about the massive amounts of
inequality and the growing class divide that the movement is drawing
attention to, she replied that “I don’t think that there should be people
hoarding unimaginable amounts of wealth – more than you could spend in 50
lifetimes.”

On the issue of why the Sanders movement is gaining support across many
sections of the working class youth, McKibben-Greene believes that more
youth are growing up with a “concrete understanding of injustice and a
stronger call to fight it. I think young people are just more
revolution-minded. We want things to change and we want them to change now.”

When asked about the so-called “moderate” or “centrist” candidates, she had
this to say: “Steyer poured millions into South Carolina, then he dropped
out. Pete Buttigieg dropped out. It shows that money can’t buy real
grassroots support.”

For sophomore chemistry major and campus political activist Jake Sawyer, an
important issue is the “building of working class power and unions.” He
also said that he supports a “de-commodification of necessities like
housing and healthcare,” something that the Sanders movement is speaking to
more than any other campaign. “Since we can provide those things we should…
we first have to start meeting people’s basic needs.” This, he believes,
will allow working class people to have more “time and energy to get into
the political process.” When workers have their basic needs met, they can
focus on organizing and mobilizing against the capitalist class that
oppresses them.

Many people are also concerned about the aggressive assaults on immigrants
that have taken place under the Trump administration and want to fight
back. This is the case for sophomore social work major Carolina
Escobedo-Ramirez, who said  “restoring DACA and including a path to
citizenship with comprehensive immigration reform” is a pressing and
important issue. To do this, she believes that the movement must wage a
“political revolution, which means taking back government and policy to
benefit the people versus having greedy corporations and millionaires and
billionaires making all the decisions.”
Members of the Party for Socialism and Liberation in Columbia have seen the
groundswell of enthusiastic support for fundamental change in the economic
and political system of this country. Even in a state with a reputation for
being conservative, the youth are leading the way in organizing themselves
and getting involved in a movement that, through experience, is providing a
new generation with a sprouting class consciousness.

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