Democratic presidential contender Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) on Tuesday announced an endorsement from National Nurses United, the largest union of registered nurses in the U.S.
The group cited Sanders’s “Medicare for All” proposal as one of the reasons it was backing the Vermont senator’s White House bid.
{mosads}“We are so proud that together, in 2016, Bernie Sanders and NNU elevated Medicare for All to the national mainstream, where it has advanced to a top 2020 presidential race issue,” the group’s executive director, Bonnie Castillo, said in a statement. “Nurses are beyond tired of watching our patients suffer and die needlessly, simply due to inability to pay, and we know Bernie Sanders is and has been, leading on Medicare for All through his advocacy and Senate legislation.”
The union also cited Sanders’s labor platform, including his Workplace Democracy Act, and his support of the Protecting the Right to Organize Act; both bills bolster the power of unions across the country and lift wages.
The union, which also threw its support behind Sanders in the 2016 Democratic primary, plans to officially endorse Sanders at an event in Oakland, Calif., on Friday.
The group has over 150,000 members across the nation and has been a strong proponent of Medicare for All.
The endorsement is a win for Sanders, who has been trying to separate himself from fellow top-tier contender and progressive Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.).
Warren has climbed to the top of the Democratic primary field in a number of polls and has been pushing her own version of Medicare for All.
Sanders criticized Warren’s plan in an interview last week, saying it could stand to hurt workers in the long run.
“When you’re putting what amounts to a $9,500 ‘head tax’ on a company that is hiring workers for $40,000 or $50,000 dollars, that’s quite a hit. Quite a hit,” Sanders told the “Deconstructed” podcast.