McClatchy Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON — Bernie Sanders is still nominally a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, though he has turned his efforts to shaping the party’s platform after losing in both delegate and popular votes to former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. But Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein said she is willing to step aside if he wants to lead their third-party ticket.
The former doctor and likely Green Party nominee told Guardian US that she emailed the Vermont senator after the end of the Democratic primary season, offering to step aside if he was interested in continuing to run for president.
“I’ve invited Bernie to sit down, explore collaboration — everything is on the table,” she told the paper. “If he saw that you can’t have a revolutionary campaign in a counter-revolutionary party, he’d be welcomed to the Green Party. He could lead the ticket and build a political movement,” she said.
Sanders has not yet responded, she said, adding that he would disappoint his supporters “if he continues to declare his full faith in the Democratic Party.”
“That political movement is going to go on — it isn’t going to bury itself in the graveyard alongside Hillary Clinton,” she told Guardian US.
Stein said she is hopeful the Green Party can gather enough support in national polls to qualify for the general election debates with Clinton and presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump, noting that Sanders supporters are considering her candidacy as an alternative to Clinton’s.
“I’m not holding my breath but I’m not ruling it out that we can bring out 43 million young people into this election,” she told Guardian US. “It’s been a wild election; every rule in the playbook has been tossed out. Unfortunately, that has mainly been used to lift up hateful demagogues like Donald Trump, but it can also be done in a way that actually answers people’s needs.”
According to Guardian US, she currently polls nationally between 4 and 6 percent.
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