Bernie
Sanders said Senate Democratic leaders discussed Monday whether the
party would flatly oppose any nomination President-elect Donald Trump
makes to the Supreme Court.
At
the same time, Sanders urged fellow Democrats against simply obstructing
the incoming administration -- demonstrating the difficulty
progressives are having in deciding how to handle the incoming
president.
Speaking at a town hall
in Washington sponsored by CNN and moderated by Chris Cuomo, Sanders
blasted Republicans for acting "shamefully and outrageously" by refusing
to consider President Barack Obama's nomination of Merrick Garland to
the Supreme Court last year. He suggested Democrats may not "do the right thing" and instead adopt the GOP's tactics.
Meanwhile,
Sanders, a Vermont senator and progressive favorite in the 2016
Democratic primary, acknowledged Obamacare has "problems."
"But we damn well aren't going to see it repealed and have no replacement there at all," he said.
And
he drew another clear line with Trump, saying: "I will tell you this:
He ran a campaign whose cornerstone was bigotry. It was based on sexism,
on racism, on xenophobia, and on that issue, I will not compromise."
Still,
Sanders said he hopes Democrats don't use the "obstruct, obstruct,
obstruct" tactics against Trump that congressional Republicans deployed
against Obama.
"I don't think
that's what we do," Sanders said. "I think where Trump has ideas that
make sense that we can work with him on, I think we should."
Sanders wouldn't say whether he would
again seek the presidency in 2020. But said there's one issue on which
he would work with Trump: trade. Both railed against the North American
Free Trade Agreement on the campaign trail and said they opposed the
Trans-Pacific Partnership.
"I
believe we need a new trade policy. I believe we tell corporate America
they've got to control their greed," Sanders said. "Mr. Trump is
prepared to sit down and work on a new trade policy which is based on
fairness, not just on corporate greed, yes, I will be happy to work with
him."

"They're not going to believe you," he
said of voters. "What we have got to do is come up with an agenda that
speaks to the needs of the working people."
It's
against that backdrop that Democrats will begin to fight back this week
as they seek to make the case that Trump is selling out his working
class base by tapping corporate figures such as ExxonMobil CEO Rex
Tillerson for secretary of state, Goldman Sachs veteran Steve Mnuchin
for treasury secretary and fast food executive Andy Puzder for labor
secretary.
Sanders said he has
real concerns about two of Trump's nominees -- Alabama Sen. Jeff
Sessions for attorney general and Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt
for EPA administrator. The Vermont senator said he wants to hear what
they have to say before deciding whether he'll vote against them -- but
acknowledged he's not inclined to vote for either of them.
"All that I am doing here is trying to be polite," Sanders said.
Heated moment
A heated moment unfolded when
a Trump-supporting small business owner pressed Sanders on what he said
were a raft of burdensome Obama administration regulations.
Sanders
pushed back, telling the man: "Obama did raise taxes on the top 1 or
2%, and you know what? I would have gone further. I think the wealthiest
people in this country are doing phenomenally well."
The
questioner continued to press Sanders, who wouldn't give an inch. "The
devil is in the details. We've got to see what those regulations are,"
he said, adding that he wouldn't rule out reconsidering some
regulations, but saying he didn't know which ones the man was citing.
"It's
very easy to blame Barack Obama for everything, by the way. Some of
those regulations may be state, may be local," Sanders said.
"But
some of them, if you're talking about -- you now, you have some folks
out there who really want the freedom to pollute our air and pollute our
water," he said. "They want to get rid of those regulations. I don't
agree. I don't agree. We have got to protect our environment."
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