Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., has signaled that he’s potentially open to another presidential run.
At least, when asked on “CBS Mornings” whether he plans to run for president again, the socialist firebrand didn’t rule it out. “That’s something — you know, I haven’t made that decision,” Sanders said Tuesday.
It’s by no means a confirmation of a third presidential run, and the odds that he’d prevail aren’t high. But it’s the clearest sign yet that he still has the energy, and possibly the inclination, to make another attempt.
Sanders has become an extraordinarily influential politician through his previous two runs.
Sanders’ position is likely to draw sighs of exasperation from his center-left critics and even raise eyebrows among some of his former fans. He has already failed to clinch the Democratic presidential nomination twice, and he’s 81 years old — a little over a year older than Joe Biden, who is currently the oldest president to serve the United States.
In the spring, a leaked memo from his former campaign manager to Sanders allies said he hadn’t ruled out another run. This latest comment pushes the ball forward even further, because it was a statement from Sanders himself on national television. And we’re now approaching the midterms, which means 2024 jockeying is just a few months away.
So let’s take seriously, for a moment, the possibility that Sanders is in fact considering another White House run. Under certain conditions, it would be a defensible move, and valuable for the country.
One condition is that Sanders does not run against Biden, if Biden decides to try to stay on for a second term. Fortunately, Sanders challenging Biden seems almost inconceivable. Sanders has already said he would support Biden if he ran again. He also has a personal friendship with Biden that has probably only become stronger as Biden pivoted further to the left after winning the Democratic primary in 2020. Biden actively courted Sanders’ political alliance and policy ideas in the run-up to the general election, and he has enlisted Sanders as a defender of his most sweeping progressive policy proposals — which went much further than progressives had anticipated prior to Biden’s election.
Operating with the baseline assumption that Sanders runs only if Biden doesn’t, another condition is that no serious politician with Sanders’ worldview runs as well. If a credible advocate for democratic socialism and anti-imperialism steps up to the plate, then Sanders should use the occasion to pass the torch to the next generation and act as a surrogate for his chosen candidate. (Sanders’ circle has reportedly encouraged Rep. Ro Khanna of California to consider a presidential bid, toward that very end it seems.)









