How Bernie Sanders’ Vermont Career Could Hurt Him Nationally

For thirty-five years, Bernie Sanders has represented a state where there is one dairy cow for every five people. Twice as many licensed wildlife hunters reside in Vermont's green hills as the national average, and they can openly holster a gun without a special permit. And there are just three people of color for every 97 whites.

Now Sanders is on his way to campaign for the Democratic nomination in Nevada and South Carolina, and he will find climes and crowds that look very different from his home state.

On issues from criminal justice reform to immigration and gun control, Sanders has held views in the past that are at odds with many non-white voters in the next two primary states. In Nevada, about 40 percent of the Democratic electorate is non-white, and in South Carolina, 55 percent of Democrats who voted in the 2008 primary were black. Many of Sanders' votes in Congress appeal more to the Green Mountain State and its demographic cousins, Iowa and New Hampshire, than the third and fourth primary states.

"The population is much more diverse than New Hampshire or Iowa, and the people in Nevada don't really care who those folks vote for," U.S. Rep. Dina Titus of Nevada, who has endorsed Hillary Clinton, said in an interview. "We don't have many things in common with those states."

Though Sanders was a civil rights activist in the early 1960s, he does not have strong ties communities of color after decades in mostly white Vermont. The Clintons, meanwhile, are well-known in South Carolina and among African-American communities after decades of campaigning and have deep roots there. Sanders' effort to desegregate college housing and public schools in Chicago and participation in Martin Luther King's March on Washington don't resonate with a younger generation.

"I didn't see the picture of him standing next to Martin Luther King. He has not been the one for whom we said, 'We have got to hear what Bernie sanders says on civil rights,'" minority leader in the South Carolina House Todd Rutherford said in an interview. "If past is prologue, we can expect a great deal more from Secretary Clinton than anyone else."

Since beginning his presidential run, Sanders has shifted his rhetoric and his positions to appeal to a broader segment of the Democratic Party. During his 2006 campaign for Senate, Sanders appealed to Vermonters by touting his record on crime and pointing in particular to his support for the 1994 crime bill that former President Bill Clinton has been criticized for and since renounced. Sanders' website during that race even touted his "strong record of supporting tough on crime legislation."