JUDY WOODRUFF: And now to our other lead story
today.
With a narrowing path to victory and an end
to normal campaigning due to the pandemic,
Senator Bernie Sanders today suspended his
presidential race.
Our Lisa Desjardins reports.
SEN. BERNIE SANDERS (I-VT): I wish I could
give you better news.
LISA DESJARDINS: From his home in Vermont,
Senator Bernie Sanders announced he is ending
his fight for the Democratic nomination for
president.
SEN. BERNIE SANDERS: So, while we are winning
the ideological battle, and while we are winning
the support of so many young people and working
people throughout the country, I have concluded
that this battle for the Democratic nomination
will not be successful.
LISA DESJARDINS: Former Vice President Joe
Biden is now the likely candidate to take
on President Trump.
The Democratic socialist and independent senator
from Vermont has arguably single-handedly
moved the Democratic Party to the left. His
underdog 2016 campaign against Hillary Clinton
was also a movement, raising new attention
to ideas like Medicare for all, free public
college, and aggressive climate action.
In the 2020 race, many of Sanders' Democratic
rivals adopted his proposals.
SEN. BERNIE SANDERS: It wasn't long ago that
people considered these ideas radical and
fringe. Today, they are mainstream ideas,
and many of them are already being implemented
in cities and states across the country. That
is what we have accomplished together.
LISA DESJARDINS: He used his address today
to make another push for single-payer health
care, in light of the coronavirus pandemic.
SEN. BERNIE SANDERS: This current horrific
crisis that we are now in has exposed for
all to see how absurd our current employer-based
health insurance system is.
The current economic downturn we are experiencing
has not only led to a massive loss of jobs,
but has also resulted in millions of Americans
losing their health insurance.
LISA DESJARDINS: Sanders won the most votes
in the first three contests of 2020, with
ardent supporters, especially among the young
and in Hispanic communities. He was positioned
to be the front-runner.
SEN. BERNIE SANDERS: The reason that we are
going to win is that we are putting together
an unprecedented, multigenerational, multi-racial
political movement.
(CHEERING AND APPLAUSE)
JOSEPH BIDEN (D), Presidential Candidate:
This campaign is taking off!
LISA DESJARDINS: But, starting in South Carolina,
Biden began racking up blowout wins, and didn't
stop. He quickly built an insurmountable delegate
lead.
After Sanders dropped out, Biden said:
JOSEPH BIDEN: He's inspired and energized
millions of supporters, especially young voters,
to join him in championing a progressive vision
for our country.
And he didn't just run a political campaign.
He created a movement. And that's a good thing
for the nation and for our future.
LISA DESJARDINS: President Trump weighed in
on Twitter, saying: "This ended just like
the Democrats and the DNC wanted. The Bernie
people should come to the Republican Party."
In his address, Sanders said he will continue
to collect delegates to influence the party's
platform at the convention. He currently has
some 914 delegates, out of the nearly 4,000
up for grabs.
For the "PBS NewsHour," I'm Lisa Desjardins.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Although Senator Sanders is
no longer in the race, the issues he ran on
still resonate with many in the Democratic
Party.
Here to discuss those, the race ahead, and
more, Senator Sherrod Brown, Democrat of Ohio.
He endorsed Joe Biden yesterday.
Senator Brown, thank you very much for joining
us.
Even though Senator Sanders has dropped out
or suspended his campaign, he says he is still
going to be competing on the ballot in the
coming primary states, that he wants to influence
the convention.
Is that complicating things for the Democratic
Party?
SEN. SHERROD BROWN (D-OH): No, not at all.
Bernie came to a meeting we had today. I mean
a meeting by phone with a number of Democratic
senators. We talked about that. He already
has influenced this race and already has influenced
the Democratic Party.
I mean, we're now talking about a $15 minimum
wage. We're talking about dramatically, expanding
building on the Affordable Care Act. I think
Bernie has had an impact, will continue to
have an impact about the dignity of work,
about empowering workers, having an impact
on the next round of the coronavirus bill.
And so Bernie's influence in the party is
felt and it will continue to be welcomed.
JUDY WOODRUFF: President Obama's strategist
David Axelrod said today that if Bernie Sanders
really wants to help Joe Biden, he's going
to have to make a much more affirmative case
for him.
Do you think he will do that?
SEN. SHERROD BROWN: Oh, I'm sure he will.
He -- already, he has a decent relationship
with the vice president. They're friends.
They worked together in the Senate for a number
-- for not very long, I think three years.
Bernie and I came the same year, in 2007.
The vice president, I guess, left in early
2009.
But the answer is yes. Bernie will be full-throated
for Biden, as I will be, as most of my colleagues,
maybe all of my colleagues will be.
JUDY WOODRUFF: And you think his supporters
will be for Biden, too?
SEN. SHERROD BROWN: Well, I think his supporters
overwhelmingly will be for Biden.
No candidate's ever transferred his or her
entire electorate, supporters, his followers,
her followers to another candidate. That never
happens entirely.
But keep in mind that -- you know, that Donald
Trump got well under 50 percent of the vote
last time. He hasn't grown his base at all.
And I think that Bernie Sanders and Kamala
Harris and a number of others in this race,
Mayor Pete, brought more -- Elizabeth Warren
-- brought more people into the system.
And they're not -- almost none of them are
voting for Donald Trump. And very few of them
will stay home, because the contrast is, do
you want this president who clearly is in
over his head, who doesn't tell the truth,
who has betrayed workers every single day,
do you want that president, or do you want
a president that's going to support workers
and really fight for the dignity of work?
And that's such a clear contrast. And people
are going to vote in huge numbers. You saw
that yesterday in Wisconsin. People are willing
to vote even if they might get sick from voting.
That tells you about the interest in this
election.
And that's going to play to the benefit of
the vice president.
JUDY WOODRUFF: And speaking of that, as you
know, Democrats want to put at least $2 billion
into legislation that would help -- that would
strengthen states' ability to run elections
that are fair, that are safe, and yet the
Republicans are fighting that.
Where do you think that's headed?
SEN. SHERROD BROWN: Well, I was secretary
of state in Ohio for eight years and ran the
election system.
And so I know how elections work in big states.
I know that there was very, very, very little
vote fraud. I know that Donald Trump has said
that mail-in balloting won't work, but he
also said that mail-in -- if we do mail-in
balloting, no Republicans would get elected
again.
Our government shouldn't expect anybody to
go vote when their life is at risk. Literally,
their life is at risk, if they get the coronavirus.
And so I can't imagine that Mitch McConnell
is going to continue to block and Donald Trump
is going to continue to block efforts, so
that people can vote safely and healthily,
if you will.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Senator, just quickly, on coronavirus,
you mentioned what more needs to be done.
You punched for hazard pay for front-line
workers.
Do you think that's going to end up being
-- becoming law?
SEN. SHERROD BROWN: Well, the president said
he wants to do some hazard pay. He was talking
about nurses and hospital workers, but it
also ought to also be city bus drivers.
It ought to be people that stock shelves in
grocery store. It ought to be the people that
clean up and do the laundry in the hospitals
and clean the floors and clean the rooms.
It should be people that are out working delivering
packages, driving -- as I said, driving city
buses, all of that.
I think that will be a negotiation. McConnell
has resisted. I think it will also be a negotiation
to put money in a rental assistance fund.
No one -- no one should lose her home, no
one should lose his apartment as a result
of this coronavirus.
And a huge number of people just last week
didn't pay their rent on April 1, when it
was due. A huge number of people around the
country, they're facing immense hardship.
If we're going to help the airlines, if we're
going to help Wall Street -- and that package
Mitch McConnell wrote did that explicitly
-- then we sure ought to help people stay
in their apartments and stay in their homes.
JUDY WOODRUFF: And just finally, the president's
response, compared to the response of your
governor of Ohio, who is also a Republican,
Mike DeWine?
SEN. SHERROD BROWN: Well, that shows how this
is -- it's not a partisan thing I'm going
to say.
My -- the governor of Ohio, I have said very
publicly -- he and I ran against each other
once, so we're not necessarily political allies
for our whole careers. But we are now.
The governor of Ohio has saved thousands and
thousands of Ohioans from getting sick because
he took early action.
The president of the United States has cost
lives because he delayed and delayed and delayed.
He called it a witch-hunt. He called it a
hoax. He said the Democrats are trying to
impeach him over this.
And, unfortunately, we're seven or eight weeks
behind in testing, in our whole public health
response in getting safety equipment to the
workers, and whether they're in grocery store
or firefighters or nurses and doctors.
And we -- we're trying to make up for lost
time. The president certainly has not been
helpful in that, while -- and the governor
of Ohio has been very good.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio,
we thank you very much, and we hope you stay
safe.
SEN. SHERROD BROWN: Judy, thank you.
