Sen. Bernie Sanders’ army of volunteers has signed up to host about 3,900 organizing parties for his presidential bid, his campaign told POLITICO.
The figure demonstrates the strength of Sanders’ volunteer operation, which includes a reported 1 million people who have agreed to rally support for his second attempt at the White House.
"People power is the unique and comparative advantage of the Bernie Sanders campaign," said Faiz Shakir, Sanders’ campaign manager. "We are seeing an extraordinary mass participation from a dedicated volunteer base whose individual skills, life experiences and relationships to their communities allows us to connect with voters in a way that hasn’t been done before."
Earlier this month, Sanders’ primary opponent Beto O’Rourke announced that his volunteers held more than 1,000 watch parties corresponding with his campaign kickoff events in Texas.
Sanders’ events will be held on April 27, the official kickoff of his presidential team’s organizing program, in all 50 states and Puerto Rico. Sanders’ fans will also host house parties in 19 countries outside the United States.
Sanders put out a call for volunteers to hold the events in an email April 3, telling his supporters that “this is the means by which we bring millions of Americans together to help transform our society.”
In the 24 hours after the campaign had called for the events, volunteers offered to hold 1,200 events, Sanders’ campaign said.
The Sanders team is planning to provide its volunteers with specific tools to begin helping him. In 2016, his staffers trained volunteers to orchestrate their own phone-banking and texting efforts, resulting in 80,000 events, 85 million phone calls and 10 million peer-to-peer texts, according to his staff.
The strategy, known as “distributed organizing,” was also utilized by O’Rourke in his unsuccessful Senate bid in 2018.
Sanders’ campaign said it is putting its volunteers to work earlier this election cycle after getting off to a late start in the 2016 primary.