Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders extended an olive branch
Thursday to President-elect Donald Trump, offering to work with the incoming
Republican administration on infrastructure and trade policy.
“I don’t think it makes sense to say, ‘No, we’re not gonna
work in any way in any form with the Trump administration,’” Sanders told
MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.” “Trump has talked appropriately about a collapsing
infrastructure: our roads, bridges and water systems. If he is prepared to work
with us on rebuilding America’s crumbling infrastructure and creating millions
of jobs and doing it in a way that doesn’t privatize our infrastructure or give
tax breaks to billionaires, yes, let’s work together.”
In a break with his party, Trump has proposed a $1 trillion
infrastructure spending plan, a proposal Democrats have expressed a willingness
to work with him on. And, despite Sanders' progressive positions on the left
and Trump's hard-line views on the right, both espoused similar views on trade.
Sanders credited the president-elect for talking about what
he referred to as America’s “failed trade policy” on the campaign trail,
particularly NAFTA and trade relations with China.
“If he is prepared to work with us on a trade policy which
works for the American worker and not just the CEO of large multinational
corporations, let’s work together on those areas,” Sanders said.
He added, however, that there will be no compromise on
bigotry and blamed Trump for running a divisive campaign.
“There can be no compromise there,” Sanders said of bigotry.
“There can be no compromise, in my view, on protecting American democracy,
working against voter suppression that many Republican governors are trying to
bring about, and in my view there can’t be any compromise on climate change.”
The Vermont senator slammed Trump’s nominee to lead the
Environmental Protection Agency, Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt, a
climate change skeptic who is expected to roll back much of President Barack
Obama’s legacy.
Given that Trump is a Republican, Sanders noted that he
never expected him to nominate progressives to lead major agencies but
contended that Pruitt is a “right-wing extremist.”
“I think, especially as a member of the environmental
committee, I’m gonna do everything I can to oppose Pruitt's nomination,” he
said.
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