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When Bernie Sanders repeated his call for Medicare for All during an energetic rally Tuesday for Democratic gubernatorial candidate David Garcia, the crowd at the University of Arizona went wild.

“Trump and his friends want to cut Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. But we say to Trump and his friends all over this country, we have a very different vision,” Sanders declared. “Instead of throwing 32 million people off of health care, we are going to guarantee health care for every man, woman and child through Medicare for All.”

The sprawling crowd of students, young workers, and activists gathered in sometimes-heavy rain for the outdoor “Get Out the Vote” rally. They answered the senator’s call with a loud cry of support and sustained applause. Later that day Sanders and Garcia were cheered by a more than a thousand people on the Arizona State University campus in Tempe.

When Sanders is rallying the young people who provided overwhelming support for his 2016 presidential bid, and who he hopes will turn out for Democratic candidates in November, he gets plenty of applause when describing Trump as “a pathological liar” who coddles dictators. He decries fearmongering and defends immigrants. He proposes wage hikes and cuts in college costs. He describes the drug war as a “miserable failure” and speaks of the urgent necessity of criminal-justice reform. But the loudest applause come when he brings up the need to pass a single-payer health-care system. He uses the popularity of Medicare for All as a prime example of how “ideas that we talked about [that] were thought to be fringe ideas, radical ideas, extremist ideas” are now “mainstream American ideas.”

With the midterm campaigns entering their final two weeks, Democratic strategists should take note. Many of the candidates Sanders has been campaigning for in recent days are on board for single payer: including Arizona’s Garcia, Wisconsin Senator Tammy Baldwin, Wisconsin congressional candidate Randy Bryce, and Indiana congressional candidate Liz Watson. But other Democrats remain cautious and some, like Indiana Senator Joe Donnelly, are pledging to oppose it. They might want to reconsider.

There are fresh indications, even as the 2018 campaign enters its final stage, that Medicare for All is a reform that resonates with the young voters Democratic strategists and their allies have targeted as they seek to generate a “blue wave.” A new poll by the Associated Press–NORC Center for Public Affairs Research and MTV finds that “69 percent of young Americans between the ages of 15 and 34 favor a national health plan, known as a single-payer program. Eighty-eight percent of young Democrats and 40 percent of young Republicans favor a government-run health insurance program, according to the poll. Roughly two-thirds of young independents are in favor.” Only 17 percent of those surveyed expressed opposition to single payer. Current Issue View our current issue

Savvy candidates have recognized that this is an issue that connects with voters of all ages, and especially with young voters, who have historically turned out at lower rates in midterm election years than in presidential years. A new survey by National Nurses United (NNU) reports that in 52 percent of congressional races, Democratic contenders support Medicare for All.

Despite “the desperate effort by President Trump and the Republican leadership to discredit it with wildly misleading characterizations and fabrications,” says NNU co-president Jean Ross, RN, “more and more people are ready for fundamental change in our current broken, fragmented, costly system, and we’re seeing that reflected with a majority of House districts, including in what are considered ‘red’ states and ‘red’ districts where Democratic candidates have made it part of their campaign.”

That’s smart policy and smart politics. Amid all the noise at the close of this campaign, the evidence is that Medicare for All is an issue that resonates with the voters, and the potential voters, that Democrats need.