
In 2017, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders published an instructional guide for regular Americans on how to organize social movements, and his strongest supporters are now using his manifesto as a playbook for the 2020 presidential race.
A half dozen people hung large Bernie Sanders posters from a chain link barricade on a pedestrian bridge over the 101 Freeway in the North Valley of Los Angeles last Friday evening. The Sanders volunteers who organized this spectacle called it a โbanner drop.โ
Their audience? The bumper-to-bumper rush-hour traffic speeding below.
โThereโs still a narrative out there thatโs being pushed, you know โ Is Bernie electable? Is there real support for him? Can he grow his base? โ all these questions that feel a little offensive to those of us who have recognized the massive movement that heโs building,โ said Sanders supporter Michelle Manos.
Manos said banner drops are meant to counter that narrative. Sheโs part of a network of Sanders volunteers in the Los Angeles area that has also orchestrated phone banks, neighborhood canvasses, flash mobs and even a float at the Rose Parade.
โWe are the Bernie Sanders Metro Squad,โ Manos said.
She added that Sandersโ unsuccessful run for president in 2016 lit a fire that burns even hotter today.
โThose of us who had showed up for the first time in the activist community because of Bernie Sanders, we didnโt just go back home, go back to our job, go back to sleep, you know, we really made a concerted effort to push for the values,โ Manos said.
That concerted effort is now focused squarely on delivering Sanders a victory in the California primary on Tuesday. Manos said she probably dedicates 30 to 50 hours a week on Sanders volunteerism, โif not more.โ
โMany of us put paid work aside, we ask our relationships to sort of be on hold, temporarily, while we work really hard for this,โ she said.
Manos and her fellow Metro Squad members are what the Sanders campaign refers to as “super volunteers.” Think of them as radio repeaters, who receive the signal from its original source, and then retransmit the message to broaden its reach.
Or, thereโs this analogy from Isiah Smith:
โIโm sure you guys are very familiar with the Evangelist movement, how well thatโs done, and โฆ What itโs accomplished. And it should work for a political, social movement that people are interested in that will lift everybody, right? 99%, right?โ

Smith said this while addressing the five people who showed up to his โOrganize Your Friends for Bernieโ event on Saturday morning. He sat in the blue-carpeted community room at his condominium complex in Compton, wearing running tights with an American flag design and an oversize โBernieโ t-shirt pulled over a bright purple hoodie.
Smith said the political movement Sanders is building isnโt all that dissimilar from religious movements that came before it.
โThe best way to build a movement, the best way to grow an idea, is through small groups gathering together, where people feel as though theyโre part of something, part of a unique group of people that know each other, that are pushing each other,โ he said.
At the event Smith organized, the blueprint for that movement came in the form of a script from the Sanders campaign. It had tips for phone banking and knocking on doors:
โPeople want to feel heard and understood.โ

And most importantly:
โNever debate … Research has found that when two people enter into a debate, both sides usually leave more committed to their prior beliefs than before.โ
Smith told his new friends theyโre trying to move public opinion toward Sanders, not entrench the opposition.
โYou are attempting to persuade,โ he said. โPeople may need that.โ
Smith said he spends his evenings and weekends trying to mobilize support for Sanders in his community. Heโs even taken days off from work. Itโs a new calling for Smith, 38, who said heโd never really been much for politics in the past.
โBut when I heard this guy Bernie talking this stuff that he was talking back in 2015 โฆ $15 minimum wage, health care for everybody, free public college education for anybody that can get in โฆ I got interested,โ Smith said.
He said he understands there are other candidates in the Democratic presidential primary that check those same boxes. But Sanders, he added, is the only one whoโs been talking about those issues for decades.
โBernie opened the door, and I think he should walk through it, and thatโs kind of how I feel about it,โ Smith said.
This past Tuesday, I was sitting at Gate 36 in Terminal 3 at Los Angeles International Airport, waiting for my flight home and transcribing some tape from that phone-banking how-to that Isiah Smith organized.
A few feet away, I heard a man reciting lines from the same Sanders campaign script.
Masoud Yeganagi, who lives in Toronto, Canada, told me he uses a lot of his free time to phone bank for Sanders. Campaign finance law prohibits foreigners from donating to U.S. candidates or working as paid campaign staffers.
โBut the FEC website specifically stipulates that Iโm allowed to volunteer โ thatโs the only way I can help,โ Yeganegi said. โAnd the reasons Iโm helping is, I have a niece whoโs American, whoโs five years old. I have a nephew whoโs a few months old, and these are issues thatโs going to affect their lives as they grow up.โ
Issues like Medicare for All, Yeganegi said, or a $15 minimum wage, or, most importantly for him, climate change.
Volunteers like Yeganegi helped the Sanders campaign log five million calls in the first two weeks of January alone.
โThatโs why heโs the best chance we have to create change in America, because he has this grassroots movement that no other candidate has,โ Yeganegi said.
Sanders will find out on Super Tuesday whether that movement translates into electoral success.
Editorโs note: This article is part of a partnership between VTDigger and VPR to cover Sen. Bernie Sandersโ 2020 run for president. This story is the second in a series from Peter Hirschfeld, who recently traveled to California to cover the Sanders campaign. Read the first story here.
