Los Angeles Times - 24.02.2020

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twice as much of the vote,
solidifying his position as
the front-runner in the con-
test.
Pete Buttigieg’s cam-
paign has questioned some
of the results, saying its own
figures indicate the former
South Bend, Ind., mayor got
more votes than Biden.
For Biden, second would
be an improvement over his
fourth-place finish in the
Iowa caucuses and fifth-
place showing in the New
Hampshire primary, and he
cast the results as the begin-
ning of a comeback.
“You have in your hands
the power, unlike any time in
a long time, to determine
who the next Democratic
nominee will be,” he said
Sunday, speaking to the con-
gregation at Royal Mission-
ary Baptist Church in North
Charleston.
He added that he did not
take African American vot-
ers’ support for granted.
Some political figures
here believe Biden contin-
ues to have a shot in a state
where he was once the
undisputed leader.
“He’s moving up,” said
Clay Middleton, a South
Carolina political strategist
who advised New Jersey
Sen. Cory Booker’s unsuc-
cessful presidential cam-
paign. “However, he needs to
win the debate” when the
candidates confront each
other here Tuesday. “He has
to own that stage.”
None of the other top
contenders has quite as
much at stake in this state as
does Biden — a fact reflected
in their schedules, which
were heavy with appear-
ances in Super Tuesday
states, where several drew
large crowds.
Buttigieg made a brief
appearance here, then held
a town hall in northern Vir-
ginia. Sen. Elizabeth Warren
of Massachusetts held an
event in Denver with thou-
sands of supporters and
plans a rally in San Antonio
this week.
Sanders was already in
Texas when he celebrated
his Nevada triumph Sat-
urday night; he stayed there
Sunday for rallies in Hous-
ton and Austin.
In Houston, he largely ig-
nored Biden but sought to
rebut Democratic establish-
ment figures who worry he
would lose to President
Trump, reeling off a series of
polls showing him beating
Trump in key states.
Some people in the “cor-
porate media” get “agitated
and nervous,” he said. But
“we are gonna win here in
Texas, and in November we
are gonna defeat Trump
here.”
Sen. Amy Klobuchar of
Minnesota spent Sunday in
North Dakota, which holds
caucuses March 10, before
traveling to Super Tuesday
states Oklahoma and Ar-
kansas.
The election is “about


taking back our country,”
she told an audience of sev-
eral hundred in Fargo, N.D.
“It’s about stopping the
mean tweets at 4 in the
morning and stopping the
drama.”
Biden’s campaign, by
contrast, has moved staff
from Super Tuesday states
to South Carolina. Even so,
they are outnumbered by
those working for some of his
principal rivals.
In South Carolina, Biden
is battling not just Sanders
but also billionaire Tom
Steyer, who has eclipsed ev-
eryone on air here, with
more than $13 million in
broadcast and digital ads,
and gone on a campaign
spending spree targeting
black voters, who make up
about 60% of the state’s
Democratic primary elec-
torate.
Steyer also spent heavily
in Nevada but ended up not

winning any delegates to the
nominating convention.
South Carolina is friendly
territory for Biden not only
because it is the first of the
early-voting states with a
large population of black
voters, a pillar of Biden’s po-
litical strength, but also be-
cause of long-standing ties
he has with the state’s politi-
cal leadership.
But Biden’s once-com-
manding lead in polls here
has seriously eroded — even
among black voters.
For most of 2019, polling
averages showed Biden with
a lead here of some 20 per-
centage points, but that
cushion has all but vanished.
A CBS/YouGov poll of the
state, released Sunday,
showed Biden leading with
28%, but Sanders close be-
hind, with 23%. Steyer had
18%, followed by Warren with
12%, Buttigieg with 10% and
Klobuchar with 4%. Michael

R. Bloomberg, the billion-
aire former New York mayor,
is not on the ballot. Steyer’s
showing in the poll qualified
him for Tuesday’s debate,
which will feature seven can-
didates.
Biden’s strength in South
Carolina among black vot-
ers is widely attributed to his
role as vice president to
Barack Obama, who re-
mains a hero to many.
At Sunday’s church serv-
ice, the senior pastor, Isaac
J. Holt Jr., praised Biden by
invoking Obama’s judg-
ment.
“Barack chose him out of
a long list of people he knew
to be his vice president. So
that goes a long way with
me,” he said.
And Biden sought to use
Obama’s legacy as a weapon
against Sanders, pointing to
a report in New York maga-
zine that Sanders had con-
sidered mounting a primary

challenge to Obama’s reelec-
tion in 2012.
“Bernie and I have real
disagreements on support
for Barack,” he said.
Sanders campaign man-
ager Faiz Shakir denied that
report, citing a 2011 interview
in which Sanders said he
was not planning a primary
challenge.
Beyond his support
among black voters, Biden
has other long-standing per-
sonal and political ties to the
state. He was close to late
South Carolina Sen. Ernest
“Fritz” Hollings, an iconic
political figure who intro-
duced him to political lead-
ers throughout the state.
Biden delivered the eulogy
at Hollings’ 2019 funeral.
In a tribute to Biden’s
roots in a more bipartisan
era that seems foreign to
many young Democrats to-
day, he also in 2003 gave a eu-
logy for Sen. Strom Thur-
mond, the former segre-
gationist Republican sen-
ator from South Carolina.
And for decades, Biden and
his family have vacationed in

South Carolina.
“It’s nothing to walk into
a restaurant in South Car-
olina and see Joe Biden, or to
go to church and see Joe Bid-
en,” Clyburn said. “He’s been
coming here for 20 years and
people know him.”
In an interview Sunday
on NBC’s “Meet the Press,”
Clyburn offered some criti-
cism of Biden, saying he had
not been forceful enough so
far in laying out for voters
why he should be their
choice.
But in an interview on
ABC’s “This Week,” he
warned that having Sanders
as the nominee could put the
Democrats’ House majority
in jeopardy.
“I think that that would
be a real burden for us in
these states or congres-
sional districts that we have
to do well in” to keep the ma-
jority, he said. “It’s going to
be tough to hold on to these
jobs if you have to make the
case for accepting a self-pro-
claimed democratic social-
ist.”
Some of Biden’s old-fash-
ioned political skills of bipar-
tisanship and relationship
building may be less power-
ful amid today’s fierce poli-
tics of a more-liberal Demo-
cratic Party preoccupied
with beating President
Trump and now on course to
nominating a fiery candi-
date like Sanders.
“It’s breaking my heart,”
said Biden supporter Jo-
anne Letendre, 71. “It’s like
he doesn’t want to yell and
scream. But in a world that
yells and screams, he needs
to defend himself.”
Marlon Kimpson, a
South Carolina state sen-
ator backing Biden, said vot-
ers in South Carolina — a
state that kept Thurmond
and Hollings in office for a
combined 87 years — have a
tendency to favor politicians
they know well.
“When voters go to vote
for Biden, they don’t have to
struggle to pronounce his
name, they don’t have to
struggle to put a name to the
face,” Kimpson said. “They
know Joe Biden.”
Kimpson said he is telling
moderate voters to consider
voting for Biden rather than
other lower-polling moder-
ates such as Buttigieg and
Klobuchar.
“Moderate South Car-
olina voters need to ask
themselves whether a vote
for a candidate that is
polling in single digits is a
vote for Bernie Sanders,”
Kimpson said.
Old-fashioned virtues
and Biden’s decades of expe-
rience are still attracting
voters such as Cornell John-
son of Moncks Corner, S.C.,
who is unfazed by Biden’s
early-state losses.
“He has a moral com-
pass,” said Johnson as he
waited at the brewery for
Biden’s sister to speak. “It’s
not always the swift that
wins. It’s endurance. Not
quitting.”

Biden, trailing, puts his chips on S.C.


SEN. BERNIE SANDERS,taking the stage at Valley High School in Santa Ana last week, appears to have
won more than twice as much of the vote in the Nevada caucuses as did former Vice President Joe Biden.

Allen J. SchabenLos Angeles Times

BIDENsaid at Royal Missionary Baptist Church in North Charleston, S.C., that
he won’t take black voters’ support for granted. The state’s primary is Saturday.

Matt RourkeAssociated Press

‘When voters go


to vote for Biden,


they don’t have


to struggle to


pronounce his


name, they don’t


have to struggle


to put a name to


the face. They


know Joe Biden.’


— Marlon Kimpson,
South Carolina state senator

[South Carolina,from A1]


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