Here's How Bernie Sanders Diehards Are Plotting To Keep Donald Trump Out Of The White House

They may not have embraced Hillary Clinton, but they loathe Trump.
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Joshua Roberts / Reuters

WASHINGTON ―  Sen. Bernie Sanders’ (I-Vt.) staunchest supporters are still feeling torn about voting for Hillary Clinton, who defeated the progressive rock star in this year’s bitter Democratic primary. But they’re acutely aware of the consequences of strategic voting that would help ensure GOP nominee Donald Trump can’t win the White House.

Norman Solomon, a former Sanders delegate and a coordinator of the Bernie Delegates Network, a group that claimed to represent two-thirds of Sanders’ delegates at the Democratic National Convention, said the decision of whether to vote for Clinton may ultimately rest on the margin between Clinton and Trump in hotly contested battleground states.

“I heard a number of delegates say, ‘I’m going to keep my eyes on the polls, and if it’s close I’ll vote for Clinton,’” Solomon told The Huffington Post on Thursday.

“Speaking for myself, I live in California, and I have no intention of voting for Clinton,” he added, referring to the overwhelming Democratic advantage there. “If I lived in Ohio or Florida, I would vote for Hillary in a heartbeat. To me the rational political choice for progressives is to vote for Clinton in swing states and don’t worry about it anywhere else.”

Clinton in recent weeks has redoubled her outreach to young voters, who comprised a large portion of Sanders’ support. But she still has more work to do. A nationwide straw poll of 461 Sanders delegates, released Thursday by the Bernie Delegates Network, found that only 37 percent plan for vote for Clinton in November.

In sign of a thaw, however some of Sanders’ most devoted followers, who unleashed nasty, sexist attacks against a top Democratic official in Nevada earlier this year, are giving the former secretary of state another look.

“At this point in time, she’s the only option that we have that wouldn’t completely destroy ― at least in my opinion ― completely destroy our way of living,” Atlanta field organizer Austin Gates told The Huffington Post this week.

Gates, 22, angry with what he saw as a “rigged” primary system, joined other Sanders supporters in May attacking Nevada Democratic Party chairwoman Roberta Lange. Gates called Lange a “corrupt bitch” and a “pussy” in text messages.

Gates said this week he didn’t want to re-litigate the past. His only goal now, he said, is making sure Trump doesn’t win. 

“She showed an extraordinary amount of reservation and patience,” Gates said of Clinton’s performance at the debate last week. “Donald Trump, on the other hand, he just interrupted, wanted to basically be a yelling match between the two of them.”

At issue in Nevada was an attempt by the Sanders’ campaign to change the rules in order to seat additional delegates at the state party convention in Las Vegas. After dozens of potential delegates were deemed ineligible, a “near-riot” broke out, forcing local authorities to shut down the event. Sanders supporters blamed Lange for heading off their efforts and accused the Democratic Party of rigging the process in favor of Clinton.

The state chairwoman was deluged with other threatening text messages and sexist, profane voicemails. One caller told Lange to commit suicide.

Another Sanders supporter, who also attacked Lange in May, brusquely summed up the attitude among young voters toward both parties’ nominees.

“I think that the country can basically choose whatever the fuck it wants,” the person, who declined to be identified, told HuffPost earlier this week. “Companies will make their decision. If voting was helpful, it would be illegal. I haven’t decided either. It’s pretty crazy.”

The Sanders supporter, who called Lange a “criminal,” “un-American,” and a “threat to the nation” in a text message, said the country had to “choose between two evils” come November. The Dallas resident added that he was put off by Clinton’s email practices, including allegations made recently by the website WikiLeaks.

“If you can address the WikiLeaks stuff, and just table it for me, I might” reconsider voting for Clinton, the Sanders supporter said.

But he quickly reversed, lamenting, “You just can’t address that. It’s unaddressable.”

 What’s happening in your state or district? The Huffington Post wants to know about all the campaign ads, mailers, robocalls, candidate appearances and other interesting campaign news happening by you. Email any tips, videos, audio files or photos to scoops@huffingtonpost.com.

Correction: This article incorrectly spelled the last name of a Bernie Sanders delegate. It is Norman Solomon, not Norman Soloman.

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Before You Go

Bernie Sanders' Most Interesting Quotes
On Youth Unemployment(01 of15)
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"We got to put young people to work, we got to give them an education, rather than putting them in jail," Sanders said in an interview on MSNBC's "The Ed Show."

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On The Middle Class(02 of15)
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"Ordinary people are profoundly disgusted with the fact that the middle class is being destroyed and income going to the top 1 percent," Sanders tweeted. (credit:Justin Sullivan via Getty Images)
On Gun Control(03 of15)
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"Folks who do not like guns [are] fine. But we have millions of people who are gun owners in this country -- 99.9 percent of those people obey the law. I want to see real, serious debate and action on guns, but it is not going to take place if we simply have extreme positions on both sides. I think I can bring us to the middle," Sanders said in a CNN interview.

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On Free Tuition(04 of15)
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"It is insane and counter-productive to the best interests of our country, that hundreds of thousands of bright young people cannot afford to go to college, and that millions of others leave school with a mountain of debt that burdens them for decades. That must end," Sanders said during his campaign announcement.

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On Wanting Top Marginal Tax Rate Over 50 Percent(05 of15)
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"In the last 30 years there has been a massive -- we’re talking about many trillions of dollars being redistributed from the middle class to the top one-tenth of 1 percent. It is time to redistribute money back to the working families of this country from the top one-tenth of 1 percent," Sanders said on PBS's "Charlie Rose."

(credit:Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images)
On Marijuana(06 of15)
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“I coughed a lot, I don’t know. I smoked marijuana twice -- didn’t quite work for me,” Sanders told Yahoo.

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On Universal Health Care(07 of15)
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"So I do believe that we have to move toward a Medicare-for-all, single-payer system. I think it's not going to happen tomorrow, but that certainly should be the goal," Sanders said on ABC’s "This Week."

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On Police Reform(08 of15)
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"We’ve got to demilitarize the police -- we don’t need tanks, you don’t need heavy military equipment in the communities of the United States. We gotta pay attention to the African-American communities, to poverty so these kids get the education and job training they need," Sanders told Yahoo.

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On His American Citizenship(09 of15)
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"Well, no, I do not have dual citizenship with Israel. I'm an American. I don't know where that question came from. I am an American citizen, and I have visited Israel on a couple of occasions. No, I'm an American citizen, period,” Sanders said in an interview with a D.C. NPR affiliate. (credit:Tom Williams via Getty Images)
On Health Care And Education(10 of15)
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"Please don't tell me that the United States of America, our great country, cannot guarantee health care to all people. Don't tell me that every person in this country should not be able to get all the education that they need regardless of their income," Sanders said in Portland, Maine.

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On Campaign Finance Reform(11 of15)
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"A major problem of our campaign finance system is that anybody can start a super PAC on behalf of anybody and can say anything. And this is what makes our current campaign finance situation totally absurd," Sanders said to the Burlington Free Press.

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On Undocumented Immigrants(12 of15)
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"Despite the central role that undocumented workers play in our economy and in our daily lives, these workers are too often reviled by many for political gain and shunted into the shadows," Sanders said at the National Association of Latino Elected Officials conference.

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On Bank Bailouts(13 of15)
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"If a bank is too big to fail, that bank is too big to exist," Sanders said in Denver, Colorado.

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On Raising The Minimum Wage(14 of15)
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"Our goal as a nation is that if somebody works 40 hours a week, that person will not be living in poverty," Sanders said in Iowa.

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On The War On Drugs(15 of15)
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"What I can tell you is this: We have far, far, far too many people in jail for nonviolent crimes, and I think in many ways, the war against drugs has not been successful, and I think we've got to rethink that," Sanders told Yahoo News' Katie Couric. (credit:MICHAEL B. THOMAS via Getty Images)