How Bernie Sanders Is Attracting Monster Crowds (and Whether Hillary Should Be Worried)

Sanders drew the biggest crowd of any 2016 presidential contender.

Campaign spokesperson Michael Briggs called the turn-out impressive but not a surprise. “We had been getting indications all along that there was that much interest,” Briggs told ABC News over the phone Thursday morning.

“Also impressive,” Briggs added, “In Rochester, Minnesota, this morning -- on a Thursday morning -- we had 600 people for an hour-long town hall meeting,” The list of these smaller, but still relatively impressively well-attended events goes on and on. In the end of May, 300 people turned up for an event for Sanders in Kensett, Iowa, a rural town where only around 240 people live.

The campaign gauges interest in upcoming events based on RSVPs through their website and has had to change venues on more than one occasion based on a large number of people signed up to attend. It has already changed its venue for an event in Portland, Maine, on Monday, where the campaign expects more than 5,000 people to attend.

Sanders does not have a PAC and he says he does not want donations from corporations. Still, according to a note out from the campaign today, he has raised an impressive $15 million since launching his campaign on April 30. They say that total comes from 250,000 individual donors, with the average donation size around $33 dollars.

“Some campaigns have a machine, Sanders has a ground swell of support where people are doing their part,” Mankner said.

“It is fundamentally different kind of campaign,” he continued. “People are taking ownership. ... There is no centralized leader.”

“Bernie is a candidate that people can rally behind. He has a lot of integrity. They feel like he is not just another political puppet,” she added. “People are coming out of the woodwork who want to get involved. We are helping to empower them so they feel like their role is important.”

Through the group’s website, those interested in Sanders can organize a "meetup" event and "People for Bernie" will help promote it. They are also taking the time to train people on how to use Twitter and Facebook. The group successfully facilitated 99 events (symbolic of “the 99 percent”) in the first week of Sanders's campaign and have held nationwide conference calls every two weeks since.

Super volunteers like East see themselves as playing a key role traditionally reserved for a paid campaign staffer. “We knew how important it was for the media to see how many people are backing Bernie,” she said about the event in Madison. “We have artists making memes, making videos and sharing it.”

“We can show visually this isn’t some crackpot candidate. He has a following. It is a movement," she said.

Although Sanders would be the oldest president ever elected, he has an impressive social media presence himself. His Senate Facebook page has over 1.3 million likes and his campaign page is catching up, with over 700,000. In addition, his campaign has adopted a method of signing up supporters at events for text message alerts.

Sanders’s Iowa director, Pete D'Allesandro, said the mega-events and his on-the-ground effort in the Hawkeye State go hand-in-hand. “They help build enthusiasm for us here,” he said. “Because of social media, you can see the increase in the Bernie and Iowa supporter pages.”

Last Sunday, Sanders told ABC News' George Stephanopoulos he was riding the momentum all the way to the White House.

“We are going to win New Hampshire. We're going to win Iowa and I think we're going to win the Democratic nomination, and I think we're going to win the presidency,” he said.