*** 🎂 Happy 49th birthday to first lady Melania Trump! *** **** The first 24 hours are in the bag for former Vice President Joe Biden as he made his opening pitch to 2020 Democratic primary voters in his new role as front-runner for the party’s nomination. Biden made his first campaign stop Thursday night at a Philadelphia fundraiser hosted by many of the state’s political heavy hitters before he prepared for his first television interview as a candidate today on ABC’s “The View,” which is seen as a push for the former vice president to make an appeal to female voters in a Democratic Party that is increasingly led by them. However, the first day for the former vice president was not all positive. It emerged he phoned Anita Hill earlier this month, initiating a conversation that left her “deeply unsatisfied” and without an apology. In an interview, Hill said without accepting his harm to her and many women who suffered sexual harassment, Biden could not have her support (The New York Times). “I cannot be satisfied by simply saying I’m sorry for what happened to you. I will be satisfied when I know there is real change and real accountability and real purpose,” she said. The New York Times: Where Biden stands on issues and how he’s changed. Biden is expected to kick off his schedule of events in earnest Monday when he travels to Pittsburgh, where he has appeared frequently in the past, including for their annual Labor Day Parade, before kicking off a swing of early primary states. He is expected to travel to Iowa and South Carolina next week, Nevada and California the week after, before making his inaugural stop in New Hampshire and delivering remarks on “unifying America” in Philadelphia the following week. The road will not be easy for Biden despite his front-runner status alongside Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.). As Jonathan Easley reports, candidates are beginning to take the gloves off on their rivals. A horde of 2020 Democratic presidential candidates used the opportunity to fundraise off Biden, who is expected to focus heavily on raising money in the coming months. While fundraising has been a challenge for Biden in the past, he does have one major piece of political infrastructure afforded to no other 2020 Democrat: the 2012 Obama-Biden email list, which he is expected to exploit. As the Daily Beast noted, the list is one of the largest in politics and helped raise more than $500 million for the Obama-Biden campaign in 2012. Additionally, top Democrats also announced their support for Biden, who in his first day had as many endorsements from senators – four – as the rest of the field combined. It was never expected that former President Obama would endorse any candidate in the sprawling Democratic field during the primaries, but Biden asserted on Thursday that he’d specifically asked Obama to stay neutral, even as the former vice president played up their two-term alliance (The Hill). One issue Biden is going to have to tackle is framing his stance on health care. As Jessie Hellmann reports, he’s expected to back the Affordable Care Act, the “BFD” law he and Obama helped pass ten years ago. However, he’s entering a primary that so far has been focused on “Medicare for All,” a Sanders proposal that would wipe out ObamaCare, employer insurance and federal health programs, replacing it with a single plan run by the government. The Atlantic: When Obama talked Biden out of running for president. Biden’s announcement also got the attention of another 2020 candidate: President Trump, who welcomed him to the race with open arms. Biden has been on Trump’s mind for the better part of a month as the president tweeted multiple times about him, including a retweet of a video mocking Biden after multiple women accused him of inappropriate contact and retweets in recent days about his penchant for “losing presidential elections.” But Trump supporters recognize Biden’s stature and worry that he could remain a top candidate well into the primaries. Ralph Reed, the head of the Faith & Freedom Coalition and an ally of Trump’s, told reporters Thursday that Biden is a “formidable and strong” candidate today, as reflected by his poll numbers. The Hill: Biden makes hard push for African American support. The New York Times: The Democratic Party is in transition. Does Biden’s brand still pack a punch? Perspectives and Analysis: Gail Collins: Biden joins the really big crowd. Dan Balz: Biden lays out his opening bid: It’s all about the president. Karen Tumulty: Biden could be the best bet to defeat Trump. But he might not get that far. David Brooks: Your average American Joe. National Review: Will abortion politics sink Biden in the Democratic primary? © Twitter |
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