The Wall Street Journal - 22.02.2020 - 23.02.2020

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A4| Saturday/Sunday, February 22 - 23, 2020 PWLC101112HTGKRFAM123456789OIXX *** THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.


POLITICS


WASHINGTON


WIRE


Dispatches from the
Nation’s Capital

BYGABRIELT.RUBIN


seen since last summer. Ahead
of the contests in Iowa and
New Hampshire, he burned
through $14 million in cam-
paign money last month—a
move that paid off for him
with strong finishes in both
states.
Mr. Buttigieg acknowledged
a cash crunch in a fundraising
email on Thursday, saying he
must raise $13 million by Su-
per Tuesday to stay competi-
tive. Delegate-rich California
and Texas, large, expensive
states in terms of candidate
travel and advertising, are in
the mix that day.
By contrast, Mr. Sanders, a
self-described democratic so-
cialist, began February with as
much money in the bank as the
three moderates combined,
about $17 million. The Vermont
senator is only pursuing online
contributions, often small do-
nors, and again raised more
money than any other Demo-
cratic candidate, $25 million.
Ms. Warren, a Massachu-
setts senator who has also fo-
cused on small donations on-
line, raised more than $
million in January—but spent
nearly $23 million and started
February with just $2.3 million
on hand. Her campaign also

ILLINOIS DEMOCRATSwant to
move on from the saga of Rod
Blagojevich. Roland Burris, the
longtime Illinois politician who
then-Gov. Blagojevich ultimately
appointed to Barack Obama’s
former Senate seat in 2008,
says he supports President
Trump’s decision to commute
the ex-governor’s sentence.
Blagojevich served eight years in
federal prison for trying to sell
that Senate seat, among other


crimes. “The sentence was ex-
cessive for his wrongdoing. He
shouldn’t have gotten 14 years,”
Burris said in an interview.
Burris said he tried to get
Blagojevich’s sentence reduced
earlier, especially after the Su-
preme Court overturned the cor-
ruption conviction of former Vir-
ginia GOP Gov. Bob McDonnell in
a landmark case in 2016. Former
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel—
who succeeded Blagojevich in
Congress in his North Side dis-
trict—said Blagojevich’s “children
have suffered long enough.” Cur-
rent Mayor Lori Lightfoot also
sympathized with the family, but
criticized Trump for “playing fa-
vorites” with people convicted of
crimes. Current Illinois Gov. J.B.
Pritzker criticized the move, say-
ing he deeply believes the com-
mutation “sends the wrong mes-
sage at the wrong time.”
Burris doesn’t regret taking
his appointment by Blagojevich,
despite the political and media
firestorm that followed: “I as-
pired to become a United States
senator—that was on my bucket
list,” said Burris, who has built
an elaborate tomb for himself
next to the grave of Olympian

Jesse Owens in a Chicago ceme-
tery. The stone lists his accom-
plishments under the epitaph
“Trail Blazer.”

WAR POWERSresolution is set
for another vote in the House,
again testing Republican willing-
ness to buck the administration.
Eight Republicans joined all
Democrats in the Senate to pass
a resolution last week requiring
Mr. Trump to seek congressional
authorization before taking fur-
ther military action against Iran.
A Jan. 9 House vote on the is-
sue lured just three Republican
House members. But the rela-
tively strong showing of Republi-
can senators could prompt more
defections from the party line.
Last year, a similar vote on
limiting the president’s military
powers in Iran passed the House
but didn’t muster the necessary
support in the Senate. The reso-
lution won’t survive a presiden-
tial veto, and President Trump
has made clear that he sees a
vote for it as a personal affront.

ANOTHER UNIONfeud awaits
Sen. Bernie Sanders in the cru-
cial California primary, where re-

cent polls show him leading the
Democratic pack. The largest of
the unions representing workers
for PG&E Corp., the embattled
utility, is attacking Sanders for
his support for a $100 billion
state takeover of the company.
The International Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers Local 1245,
which represents 12,000 PG&E
workers, accused Sanders of
supporting a “bird-brained idea”
that would “raise energy rates,
do nothing to improve theenvi-
ronment” and take away state
funds better used for other pri-
orities.
Sanders’s campaign re-
sponded that “greed and corrup-
tion” at PG&E have led to the
decline of California’s electrical
grid, which sparked disastrous
fires in 2018. The company says
it has “made tremendous prog-
ress” to improve fire safety in
recent years. Sanders and his
supporters have been sparring
with the powerful culinary work-
ers union local in Nevada over
his Medicare for All proposal,
which union leaders there say
could jeopardize the hard-won
health-care plan they negotiated
with employers.

CENSUS BUREAUmoves to
shore up its information-technol-
ogy systems, which the Govern-
ment Accountability Office calls
“high risk” because of unresolved
management issues related to
capacity and cybersecurity. Con-
cerned that census-takers could
flood the system and cause it to
crash, the bureau planned to use
a third-party system to handle
five times the expected load of
120,000 concurrent users. Then,
after testing the network proto-
col, they decided to make that
system the backup, and make an
in-house system its primary op-
tion. “Redundancy allows us to
have a backup system should
there be any reason to swap
one of these systems out,” the
bureau said.

VIEWS OF RACE RELATIONS
have hit an all-time low among
black voters while improving
among whites, a new Wall
Street Journal/NBC News poll
finds. Perceptions hit a low
among all respondents in 2016,
the polling found. They have
brightened since then, even after
the 2018 white supremacist
march in Charlottesville, Va., that

left a counter-protester dead.
But the improvement has been
driven by white and to a lesser
extent by Hispanic voters. Today,
48% of white voters say race re-
lations are good or fairly good,
compared with 31% of Hispanic
and 15% of black voters.

PRUNE JUICEisn’t a major U.S.
import, especially from Europe:
the U.S. didn’t import any of it
from the Continent in 2019. But
perhaps that will change after
the U.S. removed European
prune juice from its list of prod-
ucts subject to 25% tariff rates
on Friday.

MINOR MEMOS:Ukrainian Pres-
ident Volodymyr Zelensky says
that as an actor he always
dreamed of becoming famous in
America, and now he is, “but not
the way I wanted.” ... Blagojevich
conducts press conference with
a bleeding face after nicking it
while shaving, showing how out
of practice he is with normal ra-
zors. ... Rock star Neil Young,
who recently became a U.S. citi-
zen, voices support for Sanders,
saying “his initials are BS. Not
his policies.”

tapped into $400,000 of a $
million line of credit, her filing
shows. The campaign said in a
statement that it took out the
money “in case it was neces-
sary for cash flow purposes
around the Iowa caucuses, but
it ultimately wasn’t necessary.”
The campaign said it got a
boost of money in its end-of-
January fundraising appeals.
Her adversarial approach to
Mr. Bloomberg at Wednesday’s
debate also invigorated the
senator’s fundraising and
helped her collect $17 million
so far this month, her cam-
paign said, its record so far.
Still, her campaign has only
spent about $300,000 on Su-
per Tuesday ads.
Ms. Klobuchar’s weaker
fundraising in January—she
raised $5.5 million while spend-
ing $7.6 million—came before
she rode a strong debate per-
formance in New Hampshire to
a third-place finish there. Ear-
lier this week, the Minnesota
senator’s campaign said she
had raised more than $12 mil-
lion since that Feb. 7 debate.
The Biden campaign, which
spent about $11 million last
month while raising almost $
million, hasn’t publicly set any
fundraising goals for the
month or provided updates
about its recent fundraising,
although the former vice presi-
dent has said he is raising
about $400,000 a day online.
His candidacy is receiving
financial backup from a super
PAC called Unite the Country,
which raised more than $4 mil-
lion last month and spent
slightly less than that. Most of
its money went to TV ads in
Iowa, federal filings and data
from Kantar/CMAG show.
Until recently, Messrs. Biden
and Buttigieg were the only
top-tier Democratic candidates
receiving help from super
PACs. But in the past few days,
outside groups have popped up
to help Ms. Klobuchar and Ms.
Warren, who had previously
sworn off such aid.

skip the February states for
the delegate-rich contests of
March 3 and beyond.
After Nevada, candidates will
quickly pivot to the Feb. 29
South Carolina primary, which
has long been a focus of Mr. Bi-
den because of his support
among African-American vot-
ers. But a new Wall Street Jour-
nal/NBC News poll released Fri-
day showed the former vice
president now running about
even with Mr. Sanders among
that bloc, a sign of caution for
his overall standing.
The disparity in campaign
spending shows how the 2020
Democrats poured resources
into the four February states,
and the campaigns could still
make significant purchases if
they can raise more money
with, say, strong debate per-
formances.
But several candidates will
have to rush to compete with
Mr. Sanders and the deep-pock-
eted self-funders Mr.
Bloomberg and billionaire Tom
Steyer. Mr. Biden had just over
$7 million in the bank, Mr. Butt-
igieg less than $7 million and
Ms. Klobuchar less than $3 mil-
lion heading into this month.
Those candidates are rely-
ing in part on traditional fund-
raising events attended by
wealthier donors—a style of fi-
nancing that is increasingly
hard to maintain as the pri-
mary voting demands more of
the candidates’ time.
Mr. Buttigieg, the former
mayor of South Bend, Ind., and
a prolific fundraiser for much
of the race, raised just over $
million in January, a slower
fundraising clip than he has

Continued from Page One

Democrats


Face Money


Problems


will represent a sizable chunk
of the electorate in states vot-
ing in March, including in the
delegate-rich Deep South.
Nevada, the first racially di-
verse state to hold a nominat-
ing contest in this cycle, holds
its caucuses on Saturday.
The survey found reserva-
tions among black Democrats
about Sen. Amy Klobuchar of
Minnesota and former South
Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Butt-
igieg, who fared well in Iowa
and New Hampshire.
Both drew single-digit sup-
port when black Democratic
primary voters were asked
their top choice for nominee.

“Both candidates have sim-
ply not made a connection
with African-Americans,” said
Bill McInturff, a Republican
pollster who conducted the
survey with Democrat Jeff
Horwitt. He said it was hard to
imagine that either would be
“active players anywhere
where African-Americans are a
chunk of the vote.”
Black voters showed higher
levels of enthusiasm for Sen.
Elizabeth Warren of Massachu-
setts and Michael Bloomberg,
the former New York mayor,
but lower levels than for
Messrs. Biden and Sanders.
Mr. Buttigieg and other Dem-

ocratic presidential candidates,
as well as black elected leaders
and activists, have pushed back
forcefully on the notion that Mr.
Buttigieg is struggling with
black voters because he is
openly gay. A strong majority—
some 62%—of black Democratic
primary voters said they would
be enthusiastic about or com-
fortable with a gay or lesbian
candidate, though that was
lower than 83% among all Dem-
ocratic primary voters.
For the general election, the
poll showed signs that Presi-
dent Trump can improve upon
his 2016 margins among black
voters, depending on whom

the Democrats nominate to
run against him.
When matched against ei-
ther Mr. Biden or Mr. Sanders,
the president’s black support
is comparable to the high-sin-
gle-digit share he got in 2016.
But against Ms. Klobuchar
or Mr. Buttigieg, Mr. Trump
could do better, according to
the poll, which found the pres-
ident earning 15% or more of
the black vote when going
head-to-head with either.
Mr. Trump drew 11% sup-
port among black voters when
matched against Ms. Warren
in a Journal/NBC News poll in
January.

Black support is slipping for Democratic candidate Joe Biden,
seen speaking on Friday in Las Vegas.

MATT YORK/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Joe Biden has lost a sub-
stantial part of his black-voter
support and is now running
about even with Bernie Sand-
ers among those voters, a new
Wall Street Journal/NBC News
poll has found.
The survey offered a cau-
tion sign for Mr. Biden just as
the Democratic primary race
moves into states with more
racial diversity than Iowa and
New Hampshire, two largely
white states that held the first
nominating contests.
Mr. Biden has long bet that
his strong support among
black voters would be the
linchpin of his candidacy.
Journal/NBC News surveys in
2019 found that about half of
black voters who said they
would participate in Demo-
cratic primaries named Mr. Bi-
den as their top choice for
nominee. In the new poll, both
he and Mr. Sanders had sup-
port from just under one-third
of black voters.
The poll underscored that
many other Democratic candi-
dateshavealongwaytogoin
winning support from black
voters and not much time to
do so, now that the pace of
voting will soon accelerate.
Black Americans make up
about 60% of the party’s vot-
ers in South Carolina, which
holds its primary Feb. 29, and

BYJOSHUAJAMERSON

Biden Falters in Poll of Black Voters


and whether he would commit
to releasing women who
signed them so they could
speak publicly. Mr. Bloomberg
didn’t make the commitment
on the debate stage.
“None of them accuse me of
doing anything, other than
maybe they didn’t like a joke I
told,” he said on Wednesday.
“There’s agreements between
two parties that wanted to
keep it quiet, and that’s up to
them. They signed those
agreements, and we’ll live
with it.”
“I’ve said we’re not going to
get—to end these agreements
because they were made con-
sensually, and they have every
right to expect that they will
stay private,” Mr. Bloomberg
later added.
Bonnie Josephs, a lawyer
whose former client filed a
lawsuit against Mr.
Bloomberg, said she was glad
that Mr. Bloomberg had been
“forced to do it.”
“The public has a right to
know if he’s running for presi-
dent,” Ms. Josephs said.
Ms. Josephs represented
Sekiko Sakai Garrison, who
signed a nondisclosure agree-
ment after suing Mr.
Bloomberg and his company in
1998 for “wrongful and unlaw-
ful discrimination.” Ms. Garri-
son alleged that when Mr.
Bloomberg learned she was
pregnant, he told her to “kill
it.”
A senior campaign aide
confirmed that Ms. Garrison
would be one of the women
released from the agreement.
Mr. Bloomberg’s represen-
tatives have denied the allega-
tions in the lawsuit. Mr.
Bloomberg has also said he
passed a lie-detector test vali-
dating his denial.

Democratic presidential
candidate Michael Bloomberg
said he would release from
their nondisclosure agree-
ments three women who made
allegations against him in law-
suits over the last three de-
cades.
“If any of them want to be
released from their NDA so
that they can talk about those
allegations, they should con-
tact the company and they’ll
be given a release,” Mr.
Bloomberg said Friday, refer-
ring to his financial-data com-
pany, Bloomberg LP.
“I’ve done a lot of reflecting
on this issue over the past few
days and I’ve decided that for
as long as I’m running the
company, we won’t offer confi-
dentiality agreements to re-
solve claims of sexual harass-
ment or misconduct going
forward,” the former New
York City mayor said.
He also tweeted Friday that
the same would apply to his
campaign.
Mr. Bloomberg didn’t pro-
vide any other information
about the women. That is be-
cause the agreements are still
in place, and it’s up to them to
decide if they want to be re-
leased, said an aide to Mr.
Bloomberg’s campaign.
Several women have filed
lawsuits against Mr.
Bloomberg and Bloomberg LP
alleging sexual discrimination
and harassment over the
years.
The statement comes after
Mr. Bloomberg repeatedly was
pressed by Massachusetts Sen.
Elizabeth Warren in Wednes-
day’s Democratic presidential
debate about the agreements

BYTARINIPARTI
ANDKATIEHONAN

Bloomberg to Release


Women From NDAs


Candidate Cash
BernieSandersstartedthis
monthwiththemost
campaigncashofany
Democratraisingmoney
fortheirpresidentialbids.
Cash on hand as of Jan. 31

Source: Federal Election Commission

Note: Does not include Michael Bloomberg
and Tom Steyer, who are self-funding their
campaigns.

Sanders
Biden
Buttigieg
Klobuchar
Warren
Gabbard

$16
7
6
2
2
2

In millions

Biden

Klobuchar

Sanders

Men Women

15% 78%

27 64

10 81

2% 96%

687

5 92

Margin of error

Source: Wall Street Journal/NBC News telephone poll of 108 African American registered voters,
conducted Feb. 14-18.

Buttigieg
29 59 687

Percentage of African Americans who would vote forTrumpvs.
selectDemocraticcandidates

WASHINGTON—U.S. offi-
cials have informed Sen. Ber-
nie Sanders that Russia is ac-
tively trying to support his
campaign for the Democratic
nomination as part of Mos-
cow’s broader efforts to inter-
fere in the 2020 election, ac-
cording to two people familiar
with the matter.
President Trump and a
small number of lawmakers
have been briefed on the same
intelligence, the people said.
The classified FBI briefing
wasn’t of the type routinely
given to presidential cam-
paigns about election security,
those people said. It was given
in reaction to intelligence con-
sidered compelling enough
that Mr. Sanders needed to be
alerted, one of the people said.
But the intelligence suggested
that the Russian effort to bol-
ster Mr. Sanders hasn’t ap-
proached the scale or scope of
operations to support Mr.
Trump’s campaign in 2016, the
person said.
The Washington Post ear-
lier reported Mr. Sanders re-
ceived a briefing that Russia
was seeking to support him in
the primary.
Speaking to reporters Fri-
day, Mr. Sanders acknowl-
edged a briefing had taken
place but said it wasn’t clear
what role Russia was attempt-
ing to play in the election.
“We were told that Russia
and maybe other countries
were getting involved in the
campaign,” Mr. Sanders told
reporters in Bakersfield, Calif.
“And look, here is the message
to Russia, ‘Stay out of the
American election.’ ”
Mr. Sanders, who has been
criticized for online vitriol
some of his supporters have
directed against his opponents,
also said in a statement that it
was possible “ugly stuff” that
has been attributed to his
campaign was actually coming
from fake internet accounts.
The Office of the Director of
National Intelligence, the Fed-
eral Bureau of Investigation and
the Department of Homeland
Security declined to comment.
The reports emerged a
month after the briefing on
the day before the Nevada
caucuses. Mr. Sanders is cur-
rently leading his Democratic
rivals in national polls follow-
ing a first-place finish in the
New Hampshire primary this
month, and polls suggested he
was positioned for a strong
finish in Nevada.
“I’ll let you guess, about
one day before the Nevada
caucuses, why do you think it
came out?” Mr. Sanders asked.
Last week, intelligence offi-
cials told President Trump and
lawmakers on the House Intel-
ligence Committee about Rus-
sia’s apparent preference to
have Mr. Trump re-elected, ac-
cording to people familiar
with the matter. During an
Oval Office meeting Mr. Trump
lashed out at Joseph Maguire,
his acting director of national
intelligence until he was re-
placed this week, because he
was irate that lawmakers re-
ceived the information first,
the people said.


BYDUSTINVOLZ


Sanders


Is Warned


Of Russian


Meddling

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