Quote from that article:
Allen Gear, a Republican member of the Board of Aldermen since 1979, looking back over Sanders’s tenure as mayor, says, “He’s done things I don’t think we Republicans could have done, because the two traditional parties in a town like this are very close. We interact with each other on business over coffee, over tea, crumpets and marmalade, if you will, and it would have been very hard for us, us being Republicans, if we had the Chief Executive’s spot, to have done some of the things Bernie has done ... He’s taken a lot of very Republican ideas and put them in place. Such as combining all of the garages of the various city departments and putting them into a single public-works department, initially a Republican proposal, to gain efficiency in handling city rolling stock ... He’s put a lot of modern accounting practices and money-management practices into place that are good Republican business practices ... And he has surrounded himself with some very talented, vigorous people.”
This sounds like quite a different man than you described.
As the article notes, Sanders also works very hard, talks [and listens] to his constituents, doesn't pretend to know it all, and most important: he does not lie about who he is, what he can do, what is important to him, or anything, really. He is authentic, and that inspires people as no other candidate can. That he also happens to be an effective manager and legislator is why I think he deserves serious consideration..
Allen Gear, a Republican member of the Board of Aldermen since 1979, looking back over Sanders’s tenure as mayor, says, “He’s done things I don’t think we Republicans could have done, because the two traditional parties in a town like this are very close. We interact with each other on business over coffee, over tea, crumpets and marmalade, if you will, and it would have been very hard for us, us being Republicans, if we had the Chief Executive’s spot, to have done some of the things Bernie has done ... He’s taken a lot of very Republican ideas and put them in place. Such as combining all of the garages of the various city departments and putting them into a single public-works department, initially a Republican proposal, to gain efficiency in handling city rolling stock ... He’s put a lot of modern accounting practices and money-management practices into place that are good Republican business practices ... And he has surrounded himself with some very talented, vigorous people.”
This sounds like quite a different man than you described.
As the article notes, Sanders also works very hard, talks [and listens] to his constituents, doesn't pretend to know it all, and most important: he does not lie about who he is, what he can do, what is important to him, or anything, really. He is authentic, and that inspires people as no other candidate can. That he also happens to be an effective manager and legislator is why I think he deserves serious consideration..