In a series of moves, the campaign has replaced the New Hampshire state director, Joe Caiazzo, with Shannon Jackson, who is deeply enmeshed in Sandersâ inner circle and who led the senatorâs reelection campaign in Vermont last year. Caiazzo, who was Sandersâ political director in Massachusetts and Rhode Island during the 2016 campaign, has been named state director in Massachusetts.
The moves were announced to the campaignâs New Hampshire staff Sunday.
âWe feel really good about where we stand in New Hampshire right now,â said Faiz Shakir, Sandersâ campaign manager. âThe poll numbers, the volunteer capacity, the crowds that we have been getting at these events all suggest to us that we are in a very good position.â
He added: âObviously, much work to do to continue that trend.â
The Sanders campaign also recently shook up its top leadership, promoting both Ari Rabin-Havt, chief of staff, and Arianna Jones, communications director, to the position of deputy campaign manager and bringing on a new senior communications adviser.
Sandersâ campaign said the moves in New Hampshire and elsewhere are an attempt to expand his operations and organize supporters in the northeast as they look beyond the early states toward Super Tuesday, when several other New England states, including Sen. Elizabeth Warrenâs state of Massachusetts, will vote. The campaign recently hired a Maine state director, Ben Collings, a member of the Maine Legislature who ran Maine for Sandersâ 2016 campaign.
âThis campaign is building up and spreading out over the next few months,â Shakir said.
But Sandersâ decision to shake up his campaign in first-in-the-nation New Hampshire, a state he almost certainly must win to have a chance at the nomination, underscores the challenges he faces in recreating the formula from his landslide victory there against Hillary Clinton.
Without the same mix of New Hampshireâs anti-establishment and progressive voters all to himself this time, he has fallen into the 20s in most polls, bunched up with Joe Biden and Warren at the top of the surveys in the state.
The rise of Warren, in particular, has created difficulties for Sanders because, like him, she is from a neighboring state and, also like him, appeals to much of the partyâs left. Potentially even more threatening, she represents a new alternative for voters who were mostly aligned with Sanders in 2016 to oppose Clinton.
What gets less attention, but which some New Hampshire Democrats said helps explain Sandersâ challenges there, are the long-shot candidates: Andrew Yang, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard and Marianne Williamson are drawing attention from the sort of avant-garde voters who had no such alternative options last cycle other than the Vermont senator. New Hampshire Democrats said Caiazzo, who grew up in Massachusetts and last year ran the reelection campaign of Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island, was a traditional party operative and always something of an unusual fit for Sanders, a self-described democratic socialist whose campaign is about upending the establishment.
And increasingly, Sanders, in New Hampshire and beyond, is focused less on winning over traditional Democratic activists than he is in mobilizing volunteers as well as new supporters, particularly individuals who have not participated in past primaries, including independents and disaffected Republicans. New Hampshire Democrats also believe that Sanders did not have the sort of organization befitting the candidate who had won the state so overwhelmingly three years ago.
Jackson, who was previously the Sanders campaignâs northeast regional director, has worked with Sanders for years, including in his senate office in Burlington. He also helped start Our Revolution, the senatorâs political advocacy group.
In a statement, Jackson said he was âhonored to be taking on a more direct role in this critically important stateâ and praised the team there.
The campaign said it had recently added a campus outreach director and labor outreach director in New Hampshire as well.
This article originally appeared in
.