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- NATION, Page 46Election NotesVERMONTA Socialist in The House
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- In a rural state like Vermont, Bernie Sanders carries heavy
- political baggage. His native Brooklyn bray grates on Yankee
- ears. Worse yet, he is a socialist. And he struck out in
- previous tries at statewide office. Yet the four-term former
- mayor of Burlington last week was elected the first independent
- Congressman in decades. Why? While Sanders rails raucously
- against huge corporations and tax breaks for the wealthy,
- Vermonters finally realized that his revolutionary bark has
- little bite. He ran Burlington efficiently, pushing nothing much
- more radical than a decree that 10% of all city-funded trade
- jobs go to women. Also, he had the good luck to be opposed by
- a Democrat who sounded even more extreme: Delores Sandoval, a
- University of Vermont professor, called for legalization of
- drugs. Meanwhile, incumbent Peter Smith, a Republican, offended
- all hunters who can't shoot straight by advocating restrictions
- on semi-automatic weapons.
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- Moving to the national stage as Vermont's only Congressman,
- Sanders said he will oppose any offensive U.S. military
- operation in the Persian Gulf and will call for a five-year, 50%
- slash in defense spending. His soak-the-rich tax ideas will be
- welcomed by many Democrats. The apparent message from Vermont:
- let's shake things up in Washington.
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