via @The Guardian
I saw this headline and felt a surge of excitement, but then I saw "Green Party" and got a little upset.
Headline is a tiny bit clickbait (as news headlines are) -- but the third paragraph of the story will have you know, he's not talking about replacing David Cameron as Prime Minister...
US presidential hopefuls do not often intervene in British parliamentary byelections. But then, not many presidential candidates are Bernie Sanders. And more than that, he is intervening on behalf of his older brother.
Sanders, who missed out on taking the Democratic nomination from Hillary Clinton, has recorded a brief but heartfelt campaign video aimed at voters in Witney, Oxfordshire, that talks up the attributes of his brother, Larry.
Larry Sanders, who has lived in the UK since 1969, is standing for the Green party in the constituency, which will elect a new MP on 20 October to replace David Cameron, who quit the Commons last month.
Bernie Sanders tells viewers in the video “that I do not know a heck of a lot about British politics”, adding: “But I do know a lot about my brother, Larry Sanders.”
Describing his brother’s “very strong influence over my life”, Sanders said: “From when I was a very little kid, Larry and I discussed issues of social justice, economic justice, and racial justice. And what I can tell you is that my brother is a very, very caring human being, who wants to see government represent all of the people, not just the people on top.”
He added: “He wants to see a society in which we do not have massive levels of income and wealth inequality, wants to see a society where healthcare is a right of people and that means quality healthcare under the national health system.
“For decades now, and I hear this from him almost every week, he has been working to strengthen the NHS to ensure that it is the quality system that everyone in the UK is entitled to.”
-- more in link+video
I saw this headline and felt a surge of excitement, but then I saw "Green Party" and got a little upset.
Headline is a tiny bit clickbait (as news headlines are) -- but the third paragraph of the story will have you know, he's not talking about replacing David Cameron as Prime Minister...