Workers’ rights are campaign focus this weekend


Associated Press

DENMARK, S.C.

The issue of workers’ rights is a focus this weekend for some of the Democrats running for president.

Bernie Sanders has campaign stops in the Midwest, including a community meeting in Indiana and an event with members of a plumbers and pipefitters’ union in Michigan. He will stop in Lordstown today. The event with the American Federation of Teachers at Lordstown High School starts at 1 p.m. with the doors opening at 12:30 p.m.

Tickets are not required, but an RSVP is encouraged. To RSVP, go online to: https://act.berniesanders.com/signup/event-190414_warren_oh/.

Beto O’Rourke, the former Texas congressman, emphasized workers’ rights and civil rights when he visited the Medical University of South Carolina for the 50th anniversary of a strike led by black workers protesting poor treatment.

Other highlights from the campaigns:

BETO O’ROURKE

O’Rourke is campaigning in rural South Carolina, saying he wants to show up for communities that are often overlooked by politicians or “left for last.”

O’Rourke spoke to about 50 people at Voorhees College, a historically black college in Denmark, a city of 3,000 people. Addressing the infrastructure needs of rural areas, he said politicians need to demonstrate that every community, no matter how big or small, “is worthy of investment.”

ELIZABETH WARREN

Sen. Elizabeth Warren said the United States is a world leader on the climate issue. It’s just that the nation is leading in the wrong direction.

At a house party in New Hampshire on Saturday, the Massachusetts Democrat said the reason the country is headed in the wrong direction is because of corruption.

“This is not ignorance,” Warren said. “This is not that people just don’t get it. The people in Washington, oh, they get it. But they are on the take. They are influenced by the money.”

But it’s so much more than campaign contributions, she said. It’s also the lobbyists, lawyers, the think tanks and “bought and paid for experts” that has created a sense of deniability around climate change, she said.

CORY BOOKER

New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker returned to his Newark home Saturday to kick off a two-week, nationwide “Justice For All” tour that will focus on issues that include gun control and criminal justice reform.

Booker, who served as the mayor of Newark before joining the Senate, has sought to showcase the city’s economic progress as an example of the kind of priorities he would set as president. In his remarks Saturday, he emphasized issues including ending mass incarceration and gun control.

JOHN HICKENLOOPER

Former Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper said Saturday Democrats can’t beat President Donald Trump with anger. Instead they should make fun of him.

Speaking to a crowd of about a dozen voters at a diner in Mount Pleasant, Iowa, Hickenlooper said Trump was a “bully,” and “most bullies are narcissistic and insecure. ... They want to be respected, and they want to be seen as a powerful person.”

“The way I dealt with bullies as a kid is ... you don’t take them head-on, you take what they’re saying, you twist it a little bit so you expose the ridiculousness of what they’re saying,” he said.

“The only way you can beat Trump is to set him up for the absurd figure, the comic-book figure that he is,” he said.