Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders tried Tuesday to leverage his popularity among Minnesota college students and DFLers on behalf of his former Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, while calling Republican Donald Trump "the worst candidate for president in the modern history of the United States."
Sanders' message of political revolution found one of its most receptive audiences in Minnesota earlier this year. Though here this time to plug Clinton, his afternoon rally on the University of Minnesota campus sounded most of the same notes of his unexpectedly spirited outsider campaign.
"Real change never comes from the top on down, it comes from the bottom up," Sanders told more than 2,000 people gathered inside Northrop auditorium. He emphasized his signature issues: income inequality and Wall Street greed's effect on the middle class; the urgency of climate change; the necessity of changes to the criminal justice system, and the need to make college more affordable.
"Our job is to elect Hillary Clinton, but on the day after, we continue the movement," Sanders said in a speech just short of 30 minutes.
Sanders held a second campus rally on Tuesday evening at the University of Minnesota Duluth. His stops at the state's two biggest public universities underlined the Clinton campaign's recent emphasis on turning out millennial voters energized by Sanders' campaign.
In Minnesota's presidential caucus last March, Sanders soundly defeated Clinton by a margin of 62 to 38 percent. It was among his stronger showings nationwide, but not enough to stop Clinton from clinching the Democratic nomination in June.
Sanders has been campaigning for Clinton in recent weeks, an important player in her effort to woo millennial voters. Younger voters tend to lean liberal but also vote in fewer numbers, leaving Clinton and allies to try to figure out ways to motivate them to the polls.
Polls, including in Minnesota, consistently show Clinton besting Trump among voters under 35 — but not nearly at the levels by which President Obama beat Republican Mitt Romney in 2012.