“Nurses are beyond tired of watching our patients suffer and die needlessly, simply due to inability to pay,” said Bonnie Castillo, the union’s executive director. “And we know Bernie Sanders is, and has been, leading on Medicare for All through his advocacy and Senate legislation.”

While the 150,000-plus-member union gave serious consideration to both Sanders and Warren, the race’s staunchest supporters of "Medicare for All," union co-President Jean Ross told POLITICO that Sanders’ far longer record of fighting for single-payer health care tipped the scales. The union backed him in 2016 as well.

“It was really longevity — the amount of time Bernie has been solid and sincere on the issue,” she said. “He’s ahead of the pack because he’s had a lifetime of commitment to it. And our union tends to do the right thing even when it isn’t popular, so we appreciate candidates who do the same.”

Sanders’ staffers hope the nurses’ endorsement will help brand him as the definitive pro-single-payer candidate. Though Warren has co-sponsored the Vermont senator's bill and built on it with her own plans, some of Sanders’ aides and allies have criticized her for referring to Medicare for All as a “framework.” His supporters have also noted that Warren did not back single-payer health care in her 2012 Senate campaign.

“There is only one candidate in this race who won’t equivocate on Medicare for All, and the nurses know it,” said Nina Turner, Sanders’ campaign co-chair. “He doesn’t talk about frameworks.”

Still, Warren has effectively courted the progressive Democratic voters who approve of Medicare for All. In a Monmouth poll of New Hampshire released in September, Warren received more support among backers of single-payer than Sanders.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren has effectively courted the progressive Democratic voters who approve of Medicare for All. | Charlie Neibergall/AP Photo

Unlike in 2016, when Sanders was the sole candidate who aligned with the nurses union on health care, this time officials interviewed multiple candidates who voiced support for single-payer.

Earlier this fall, eight Democratic candidates filled out the union’s questionnaire, which was sent to every contender and focused not just on health care but also on labor issues and climate change.

The union narrowed its choices to five candidates who were invited for a follow-up interview: Sanders, Warren and Kamala Harris, as well as Joe Biden and Pete Buttigeig. Sanders was the only one to sit for an in-person interview. Warren spoke to the union’s board by video chat, Buttigeig sent in a video, and Harris and Biden declined to participate.

Ross said the nurses union took a close look at candidates like Harris and Buttigeig, who previously endorsed Sanders’ Medicare for All proposal but over the past year have shifted to supporting more incremental health care reforms.

Still, the union has pledged to support whoever wins the Democratic nomination.

"We have to, because what we have now is hazardous to our health and the health of the public,” Ross said of President Trump.

Sanders’ campaign said the nurses will likely appear with him at upcoming events. The group has an especially strong presence in California, a delegate-heavy state whose election officials will begin sending vote-by-mail ballots to residents the same day as the Iowa caucuses.

"We would love them to play as active a role as they want to play," said Jeff Weaver, Sanders’ senior adviser.

The union’s super PAC poured nearly $5 million into the 2016 primary to support Sanders. It is planning to back him financially again. But that could pose a problem for Sanders: He has railed against super PACs and seized on the recent news that a super PAC is supporting Biden after he dropped his opposition to it.

The Sanders team, however, is distancing itself from the nurses’ PAC.

“Bernie Sanders doesn’t want a super PAC, doesn’t raise money for a super PAC, and doesn’t want anybody spending money on a super PAC on his behalf,” Weaver said.

Ross said the union’s executive board has yet to decide how much money the union will spend boosting Sanders in the 2020 primary and how they will use the funds.

“What has worked for us is door-to-door organizing and building a mass movement,” she said. “We’re never going to be a wealthy union. But we do use the money we have very effectively."