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Wednesday, July 22, 2020

The Hill’s Campaign Report: Biden, Obama reunite for socially distanced conversation

 
 
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Welcome to The Hill’s Campaign Report, your daily rundown on all the latest news in the 2020 presidential, Senate and House races. Did someone forward this to you? Click here to subscribe.

We’re Julia Manchester, Max Greenwood and Jonathan Easley. Here’s what we’re watching today on the campaign trail. 

Welcome to The Hill’s Campaign Report, your daily rundown on all the latest news in the 2020 presidential, Senate and House races. Did someone forward this to you? Click here to subscribe.

We’re Julia Manchester, Max Greenwood and Jonathan Easley. Here’s what we’re watching today on the campaign trail. 

 

LEADING THE DAY: 

Former President Barack Obama and former Vice President Joe Biden reunited recently for a socially distanced sit-down discussion about the future of the country. The get-together marks the first time the former president and vice president have been seen together in-person since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic. 

The Biden campaign released a preview of what it called a “wide-ranging” conversation on Wednesday, showing the two men arriving to a location wearing masks and sitting six feet or more apart. 

"Can you imagine standing up when you were president and saying, 'It's not my responsibility. I take no responsibility.' Literally. Literally," Biden said, taking a dig at President Trump. 

"Those words didn't come out of our mouths when we were in office," Obama responded.

"No. I don't understand his inability to get a sense of what people are going through," Biden said. "He can't relate in any way."

"Well, and one of the things I have always known about you, Joe, it's the reason I wanted you to be my vice president, and the reason why you were so effective ... it all starts with being able to relate," Obama said.

The former president went on to praise Biden, saying he had the right credentials to lead the country through crises. 

“You know what it's like as much as anybody to be in the White House during a crisis. You know what it's like to have to get laws passed through Congress. You know what it’s like to deal with foreign leaders,” Obama said.  “You know what it’s like, and how lonely it can be, to make tough decisions — where not every decision is going to be perfect, but you gotta make them and take responsibility for it.  I've seen you with families that have gone through tragedies and, and the thing I've got confidence in Joe is, is your heart and your character, and the fact that you are going to be able to reassemble the kind of government that cares about people and brings people together.”

The Biden campaign said it plans to release the recorded conversation in its entirety on Thursday. 

News of the Obama-Biden reunion is likely to energize the Democratic base, for whom the former president is one of the most popular figures in the party. 

Obama and Biden already raised $11 million in their first 2020 fundraiser together last month, in which more than 120,000 people signed up to participate. 

President Trump has yet to comment on the video. But it might just be a matter of time. Trump has launched a number of attacks on Obama, even going so far last month as to accuse him of treason without evidence. 

--Julia Manchester 

 

READ MORE: Obama, Biden discuss country's future, coronavirus outbreak in socially distanced sit down, by Julia Manchester 


 

FROM THE TRAIL:

Republican strategists are voicing concerns about President Trump’s public opposition to mail-in voting, worrying that it could hamper the party’s effort to sign voters up to cast their ballots by mail. The Hill’s Reid Wilson reports. 

The Trump campaign announced on Wednesday it was rolling out Spanish-language television and radio advertisements that will hone in on “Democrats’ shameful smear campaign against Goya Foods, a beloved Hispanic-owned family business.” The ads will begin airing in the critical swing state of Florida. The Hill’s Tal Axelrod reports. 


 

CONGRESS AND THE STATES:

The Democratic Mayor of Shreveport, La., announced on Wednesday that he will challenge GOP Sen. Bill Cassidy in Louisiana’s Senate race. Mayor Adrian Perkins honed in on his military experience and the response to the coronavirus pandemic in a campaign video announcing his candidacy. There are currently at least three other Democrats in the race. The Hill’s Tal Axelrod reports. 

 

GOP Rep. Elise Stefanik gave an update on the work Elevate PAC, her group aimed at electing Republican women to office, has done this cycle during a virtual conference with Republican women running for Congress on Wednesday. Stefanik said she has raked in over $200,000 for female Republican congressional candidates through digital efforts over the last two months, in addition to donating  $450,000 to female GOP candidates and committees that back them. Out of EPAC’s 21 endorsed-candidates, 19 of them have won. The update comes as a record number of women run for Congress this cycle, boosted by an uptick in Republican women candidates. 

 

The Senate Leadership Fund says it will launch a $1.2 million ad buy in Kansas on Thursday, airing ads that will tout positive messages about Rep. Roger Marshall, who will compete against the state’s former Secretary of State Kris Kobach and ten other candidates in the GOP primary on August 4. News of the buy was first reported by Politico. Julia Manchester has more. 

 


POLL WATCH:

REUTERS/IPSOS- PRESIDENTIAL

Biden: 46%

Trump: 38%

 

OHIO FIRST HOUSE DISTRICT- INTERNAL POLL FROM KATE SCHRODER 

Chabot (R ): 48%

Schroder (D): 46%

 

GARIN HART YANG RESEARCH GROUP – GEORGIA SENATE (OSSOFF INTERNAL)

Ossoff: 45%

Perdue: 44%

 

GARIN HART YANG RESEARCH GROUP – GEORGIA PRESIDENTIAL (OSSOFF INTERNAL)

Biden: 47%

Trump: 43%


 

PERSPECTIVES:

 

Paul Stekler and Daniel Carter: “Donald Trump may end what George Wallace started.”

Albert Hunt: “Democrats' lurch toward the radical left — and other useful myths.”



 

MARK YOUR CALENDARS:

    

Aug. 4:

Arizona primaries

Kansas primaries

Michigan primaries

Missouri primaries

Washington primaries

 

Aug. 11:

Connecticut primaries

Minnesota primaries

Vermont primaries

Wisconsin primaries

Georgia primary runoffs

 

Aug. 18:

Alaska primaries

Florida primaries

Wyoming primaries

 

Aug. 17-20:

Democratic National Convention

 

Aug. 24-27:

Republican National Convention

 

Sept. 1:

Massachusetts primaries

 

Sept. 8:

New Hampshire primaries

Rhode Island primaries

 

Sept. 15:

Delaware primaries

 

Sept. 29:

First presidential debate

 

Oct. 7:

Vice presidential debate

 

Oct. 15:

Second presidential debate

 

Oct. 22:

Third presidential debate

 
 
 
 
 
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