Campaign Literature—Primaries


Bernie 2016
   
 
Brochure, front, inside and back.  9" x 5", 2016. 
Above version from April 19 primaries; also used in OR and CA primaries, see below.


Taking on big Wall Street banks
Bernie Sanders knows our economy is rigged. Most new wealth flows to the top 1 percent and the system is held in place by corrupt politics. Bernie will fight to level the playing field by closing loop holes and making the wealthy and big corporations pay their fair share in taxes.

Equal access to economic opportunity
It's unconscionable that women earn less than men for performing the same work and that some full-time workers lives in poverty. Bernie will fight to raise the minimum wage to a living wage and ensure equal pay for working women.

Breaking Through Gridlock

During a decade in the Republican-controlled U.S. House, Bernie passed more amendments than any other Member. He also led a bipartisan effort with Sen. John McCain to clean up the mess at the V.A. and strengthen veterans' healthcare. His other legislative accomplishments expanded primary care to millions and funded cancer research.

"I'm running for the Democratic nomination because we must change course, or risk losing the future for so many to the interests of so few."

Meet Bernie

Bernie is an honest leader with the courage to take on powerful interests.

The son of an immigrant, he grew up with little. An activist in the civil rights movement, he joined the March on Washington with Martin Luther King, Jr. As mayor of Burlington, Vermont, he was named one of America's best mayors.

In the Senate, he has fought for working families and stood on principle, opposing the Iraq war and fighting for veterans, to protect American jobs, and to make college more affordable.

He is running for President to make America a more fair and just place for his grandkids and all of our children.

 

 
The three versions of the brochure are nearly identical. The later versions add "OR" or "CA" to the web address, and the date on the back changes.  The California version adds "Register to Vote by..."  Also in the California version a typo inside is fixed ("...that some full-time workers live in poverty.")  Below is an insert included in a brochure from the office in Oakland, CA.