Super PAC Begins Populist Push to Support Bernie Sanders

A California-based super PAC is beginning a new effort to help Bernie Sanders win the Democratic nomination by holding superdelegates accountable to Democratic primary voters.

Progressive Kick, a 527 PAC based in Oakland, unveiled a website this week that allows users to track superdelegate commitments and reach out to them. The effort cost around $5,000, the super PAC's president, Joshua Grossman said.

Grossman said his super PAC's effort is intended to pressure more Democratic superdelegates to follow the voters pick in choosing which candidate to support in the primary. Superdelegates, unlike most delegates, can choose which candidate to back, regardless of the popular vote, and have so far overwhelmingly backed Clinton.

The group, which has spent several million dollars support progressive candidates in recent years, also worked in conjunction with the groups Ready to Fight and Women for Bernie to launch an online petition that garnered nearly 200,000 signatures.

The new initiative is meant to boost Sanders, Grossman said.

"If I said it was only to make the process more democratic, that would be disingenuous. I'm not going to say that," Grossman said. "I definitely did this--not just I, but the with the people we're working with--to help Bernie Sanders."

In the cash-flushed world of campaign spending and multimillion dollar checks, $5,000 is comparably tiny sum. But Progressive Kick is now the second super PAC to spend money to support Sanders--something the Vermont Senator has repeatedly said he does not want. "We don't have a super PAC," Sanders says often.

Grossman said he doesn't see a contradiction in his support for Sanders. "I don't think it's a problem. I think this is very grassroots-y. We made a point of using the money we had left over from last year," he said. "This is done mostly with volunteer energy."

He added that the effort was meant to make the Democratic primary process more fair and democratic by making superdelegates accountable. It is one of the few sources that openly lists their names. "We think people who believe in democracy should want this website to be successful, irrespective of who they support," Grossman said.

Bernie Sanders' proposals would cost an extra $18 trillion:

Since August, the super PAC arm of National Nurses United, a 185,000-member-strong nurses union, has spent some more than $1.7 million supporting Sanders with funding from its union member dues. NNU, which does not receive large contributions and is spending much of its cash busing nurses to primary states to canvass for Sanders, says it is not like other super PACs.