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Liberal Vermonters Look Across The Border To Sway Upstate New York Voters

Canton, N.Y. candidate Tedra Cobb, left, recently visited with Gordon Miller and other Vermont residents. "We can't vote," Miller said of the New York race, "but certainly we can provide financial support." Other supporters are going door-to-door to talk to voters.
Canton, N.Y. candidate Tedra Cobb, left, recently visited with Gordon Miller and other Vermont residents. "We can't vote," Miller said of the New York race, "but certainly we can provide financial support." Other supporters are going door-to-door to talk to voters.

A crowd of Vermonters packed into Chris Shaw's living room this spring, not to hear about local politicians, but to meet a Democrat running for a House seat in upstate New York's 21st congressional district. People here are part of a national trend among progressive-tilting voters. They appear energized, eager to vote in November's midterm election. Many say they hope to tip the balance of power in Congress away from Republicans, away from the party of President Trump. But millions of those Americans live in places like Vermont that already elected a congressional delegation that side with the Democrats. They can't vote for anymore national Democrats until the 2020 presidential election. So activists and donors here have begun looking beyond Vermont's borders. A major focus is New York's 21st district House race, right next door across Lake Champlain. "It is really energizing to us on the Vermont side to become involved in whatever way we can," said Susan Kavanaugh, who co-hosted this gathering in the liberal college town Middlebury, Vt..That means "financially supporting a candidate or literally going door-to-door to help tell the story," Kavanaugh added.We're still in primary season and New York's 21st district currently has seven Democratic candidates vying for the nomination. Katie Wilson from Keene, N.Y. has made the pilgrimage today. She's hoping to find support and dollars that will help her challenge Republican incumbent Elise Stefanik."There are people who just want to flip the House," Wilson says, pointing out that she also has support from Democrats in other "safe" districts around the country.One of the country's leading environmental activists, Bill McKibben, turned up at this event. He said his fellow Vermonters know money will be a big factor this November. "There will be millions of dollars from the Koch Brothers and the RNC [supporting GOP incumbents]," he said. "Vermont kind of always has its heart for the scrappy underdog." Beating Stefanik, a rising star in the GOP, won't be easy. New York's 21st district is just as rural as Vermont but a lot more conservative. Donald Trump did really well there and Stefanik won in a landslide. She's already raised more than a million dollars for her reelection campaign, with roughly 90 percent of her war chest coming from outside her district, from industry groups and PACS. Of course, this fundraiser too is happening outside the 21st district, but McKibben argues that there is a real difference between this kind of organizing and the big money that shapes so much of American politics. People at this gathering, he said were "coming up with $50 or $100 bucks to try to help our neighbor's campaign 10 miles away across the lake." "The other end of the spectrum is they gather fellow billionaires for a retreat," McKibben added.This grassroots dynamic isn't new and it can be effective. In Pennsylvania a few weeks ago, Democrat Conor Lamb raised more than $3 million for his special election House victory, with much of that cash coming from small donors around the country. It was enough to help turn a House race that didn't look competitive into a real contest. That's what donors and activists in Vermont say they're trying to do. They want to expand the map, help put more Republican House seats in play. Copyright 2018 NCPR. To see more, visit NCPR.

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