Bernie Sanders Is America's Jeremy Corbyn

Two socialist men are leading youthful left-wing insurgencies against establishment candidates. BuzzFeed UK’s Jim Waterson attempts to understand US politics.

DUBUQUE, Iowa – Jeremy Corbyn's influence is spreading to the US.

Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders has said he is aware of the rise of the left-wing British MP, currently favourite to win the Labour party leadership contest, and says he sees parallels between his campaign and the current state of left-wing politics in the UK.

"Whether it's the UK or here in the US, people are sick and tired of establishment politics," Sanders told BuzzFeed News on the campaign trail in Iowa. "They are sick and tired of a politics in which people continue to represent the rich and the powerful."

For a British observer, watching Sanders is like watching Corbyn two months ago – a candidate drawing enormous crowds but still dismissed as an unelectable crank by the mainstream media and political establishment. In the UK that changed when it was realised that the enormous rallies and social media backing were actually turning into real support at the polls.

Just as Corbyn unexpectedly took the lead in the Labour leadership, so Sanders is surprising the Democratic establishment by leading Hillary Clinton in early polls in Iowa and New Hampshire.

"Our campaign has taken the political establishment by surprise," Sanders shouted at a crowd of 500 packed into a sports centre in the Iowan town of Dubuque. "Three and a half months ago they asked if there was an appetite to stand up to the billionaire class. Guess what? Turns out there is!"

Watch both Sanders and Corbyn speak, and the parallels are easy: Both are self-described socialists who spent decades on the fringes of politics and reluctantly entered the race to lead their party three months ago. Both have the demeanour of a university protester approaching retirement and unexpectedly found themselves capturing the attention of young supporters who were disillusioned with the mainstream left's choice of candidates.

They both get massive cheers for bringing up their votes against the Iraq war, for saying that inequality is a scourge, big banks need to broken up, public healthcare needs defending, and university tuition fees should be free. Sanders is less radical than Corbyn's unashamed socialism, but both have a message packing out massive rallies of grassroots supporters in unexpected places on both sides of the Atlantic.

"Every other candidate seems to be the same and connected with big money," said Sanders supporter Mark Weis, a lifelong Democrat who won't vote for Clinton because of her establishment connections. "What appeals to us is he isn't accepting money from big business. If Bernie doesn't make it we won't vote for Hillary."

Sanders and Corbyn supporters both want the real left-wing deal, believe they've found it, and are willing to reject any alternatives.

But unlike the favourite to be Labour leader, Sanders supporters are honest about his chances of taking the nominations. While Sanders supporters cheer his refusal to solicit large financial donations, it's likely to hinder his chances of beating Clinton in the long-run.

Sanders' main target is the "grotesque level of wealth and income inequality" in the US. In Dubuque he raised the topic of the "United Kingdom with their queens and their kings and their dukes".

He let his audience imagine a land of such entrenched elitism before dropping the punchline: "We have more income inequality even than they do."

At the back of the venue a man exclaimed: "Oh my god! Oh my god! How is that even possible?"

There were massive cheers for a $70 billion pledge to end tuition fees at public universities ("We'll put a tax on Wall Street speculation, which will bring in substantially more money"), an attack on the coverage of his campaign ("establishment economics and establishment media"), plus a fair dollop of economic protectionism ("You can't shut down factories and then move to low-wage countries").

"All over this country people are working and not making enough money to feed their families," Sanders thundered. "It is not a radical idea to say that if someone works 40 hours a week that person should not be living in poverty."

It's a dollop of European-style social democracy in the heart of America, tapping into the same mix of anti-establishment youth and reawakened left-wing supporters who thought their time had passed. One woman said she had turned up because of Sanders taking the #BlackLivesMatter movement seriously. Another said she had been politicised by protests against nuclear weapons in the 1980s and had finally found a candidate who shared her values.

Outside the Dubuque venue were Amelia Scarbrough and Emily Markee, two students from Luther College who drove across the state to a listen to a 73-year-old man they'd never even heard of a couple of months ago. En route they put together a list of Bernie Sanders puns for their unlikely hero.

"He has 100% honesty in his voting record," said Scarborough approvingly. "It's the fact he's funding his own campaign. He has a slot of support but it's not necessarily being seen."

Both said that, like Corbyn in the UK, Sanders has become an unlikely icon of cool among supporters for his perceived authenticity and refusal to compromise on his values for the sake of immediate electoral success.

Markee said it's perceived as being more authentic to like Sanders rather than Clinton: "It's like Starbucks versus your local coffee shop."

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