Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders was a live wire for college students during primary season 鈥� especially in Colorado. Sanders won the state鈥檚 Democratic caucus in March. But the party鈥檚 candidate is Hillary Clinton. That鈥檚 what brought Jack Califano to the campus of Colorado State University in Fort Collins.
鈥淏arry. Barack. You know, the best,鈥� Califano jokes. 鈥淏arack Obama started as a community organizer in Chicago. He was you guys.鈥�
Califano was making a pitch to a room full of young Democrats at CSU. He is a staffer for Clinton鈥檚 campaign. The room in the Lory Student Center is packed. On the wall are Clinton鈥檚 campaign signs that say 鈥渟tronger together.鈥� Next to them are ones that read 鈥淏ernie 2016.鈥� More than a few people in the audience are feeling the Bern. And Califano is trying to win them over.

鈥淎re you guys all excited? Are you very pumped?鈥� he asks. 鈥淎re we all excited to kick some ass this November?鈥�
The room erupts in cheers.
With all his enthusiasm, you may not guess that just months ago Califano was working for the Sanders campaign in New York, and later California.
鈥淵ou know, I joined the Bernie campaign because I have a deep belief in social justice and ending systemic oppression in this country, and I think I realized that even if Hillary isn鈥檛 the perfect candidate, the kind of existential threat that Donald Trump poses to women, queer people and people of color is so great and so staggering, that to stand by and do nothing would be really untrue to the values that got me involved in the Bernie campaign in the first place,鈥� he says.
He even gave them a carrot and a stick, register more voters than University of Colorado Boulder, and Sanders may come speak at CSU instead. That鈥檚 a big promise for young liberals in Larimer County, where Sanders won two-thirds of the vote back in March. But even with that win, the primary winners were Clinton and Republican presidential nominee Trump. And both are struggling to live up to Sanders鈥� political revolution.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 even know, I can鈥檛 even explain the sadness that comes from not being able to vote for Bernie, something that I like really support,鈥� says Bronson Torres, a freshman at CSU. 鈥淎nd having to - no matter what the selection, even with a third party - having to compromise what I really feel for, or what I really feel - who I really want to support.鈥�
Torres is still not sure about volunteering for Clinton. But fellow freshman Annalese Cole-Weiss is sold. Despite the fact that she鈥檚 wearing a 鈥淔eel the Bern鈥� shirt, with an illustration of Sanders鈥� wild hair and square glasses.
鈥淭hey are stronger together. And I think that鈥檚 really important for people,鈥� she says. 鈥淚 think the 鈥楤ernie or Bust鈥� movement is a little bit mislead, because we all love Bernie but putting your efforts towards someone that cares about the same things that he does - and yeah it鈥檚 not him, but like - Hillary鈥檚 awesome too, and I鈥檓 going to support her no matter what.鈥�
After it was clear Sanders wouldn鈥檛 win the party鈥檚 nomination, Alexandra Simon wasn鈥檛 sure what to do. For a while, she considered a third party vote. But, she says she made up her mind in July, after watching the Democratic National Convention. She now volunteers for the Clinton campaign.

鈥淚 will always be a Bernie supporter, but Hillary is doing a great job of implementing some of a lot of Bernie鈥檚 ideas,鈥� she says. 鈥淢ay not be as drastic as Bernie supporters are into. But I think it鈥檚 a step in the right direction, and it鈥檚 a step in the right direction for the Democratic party especially in the years coming forward.鈥�
And that鈥檚 the message that Clinton staffer Jack Califano is trying to get across in the critical few weeks left until the election. For him, the challenge has been harnessing the power of the Sanders revolution, for a comparatively unrevolutionary candidate.
鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to get inspired by saving what we already have, but we have just as much to lose facing Donald Trump as we did have to gain working for Bernie Sanders,鈥� he says. 鈥淎nd I think students are starting to see that.鈥�