In must-win South Carolina, Biden must seal the deal with black voters
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[September 19, 2019]
By Trevor Hunnicutt
GALIVANTS FERRY, S.C. (Reuters) - A
marching band played and several hundred people roared for former U.S.
Vice President Joe Biden at a South Carolina country general store this
week, a stark contrast to the respectful but less enthusiastic applause
given to several of his Democratic presidential rivals.
Many voters at the folksy candidate event in tiny Galivants Ferry called
Biden, the Democratic front-runner, their top choice to take on
Republican President Donald Trump in November 2020.
South Carolina, where a majority of Democratic voters are black,
represents an important prize for Biden and his rivals for the
Democratic nomination. It is one of the first states to hold a
nominating contest in the state-by-state battle for the nomination.
Among the first four to hold such contests, it is the only state where
black voters promise to play a leading role.
Biden currently leads his closest rival in South Carolina, Bernie
Sanders, by 25 percentage points, according to a RealClear Politics
average of recent polls. But in a potentially worrisome sign, there are
questions about the level of enthusiasm among black South Carolina
voters for Biden, who served for eight years as vice president under
Barack Obama, the first black U.S. president.
Even as supporters defended Biden against criticism over his repeated
verbal gaffes on the trail, they voiced concerns that these could hurt
his chances long-term and said they were keeping an open mind with five
months to go before South Carolina's Democratic primary.
"Biden struggles with trying to communicate. You can tell the man has a
good heart," said Verlene DeWitt, an African-American retired teacher
who serves as a vice chairwoman of the Democratic Party in coastal Horry
County. "It worries me."
Biden, 76, has been questioned by rivals, particularly black U.S.
Senators Cory Booker and Kamala Harris, about his record on race. He has
had to defend his work with white segregationist senators and opposition
to mandatory school busing programs aimed at desegregation in the 1970s
as well as his championing of criminal justice legislation in the 1990s
that sent black people to prison in disproportionately high numbers.
Of particular concern to some black voters was Biden's chuckle in
response to a serious question on race during a Democratic debate last
Thursday and his meandering answer suggesting parents keep a record
player - an obsolete technology - on at night to build children's
vocabulary.
Biden remains popular with black voters nationally. A Reuters/Ipsos
national poll in August showed a third of black people who identified
themselves as Democrats or independents said they would vote for Biden,
comfortably ahead of his rivals, with Sanders getting the next highest
level of support.
South Carolina holds its party primary election on Feb. 29, following
nominating contests in Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada. With six in 10
Democratic voters black, South Carolina is crucial to Biden's hopes.
Iowa and New Hampshire have small numbers of black voters. In Nevada,
Latino voters overshadow black voters.
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Amari President of Charleston, South Carolina, shows his support for
Democratic U.S. presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe
Biden at the 2019 Presidential Galivants Ferry Stump Meeting in
Galivants Ferry, South Carolina, U.S. September 16, 2019.
REUTERS/Randall Hill/File Photo
Biden backers in South Carolina said they admire him for his time as
Obama's No. 2 as well as his long experience in Washington and
ability to reach out to working-class voters. They also like his
policy positions, particularly on healthcare, where he is striking a
more moderate tone than candidates to his left who tout Medicare for
All proposals with a bigger government role.
'THINK BEFORE HE TALKS'
But there is room for improvement, they said.
"He needs to think before he talks," said Biden supporter Linda
Thomas, a 68-year-old black retired banker from Florence, South
Carolina.
"Vinyl is coming back now," quipped her 75-year-old husband Eddie,
who is also black, a retired railroad dispatcher and a Biden
supporter, in reference to vinyl records for record players.
In Galivants Ferry, the crowd munching on peanuts and ice cream on a
blistering day also heard from U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar of
Minnesota, Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Indiana and New York
City Mayor Bill de Blasio.
Buttigieg, who has had to fend off accusations of systemic racism in
his city, spent two days in South Carolina on his latest campaign
swing.
At a town hall event Tuesday in Conway, which drew a largely white
audience, Buttigieg outlined his differences with both Biden and
Trump. He said Democrats might be making a mistake if they think
picking an establishment figure from Washington will deliver the
victory over Trump they crave.
Jay Fowler, a 36-year-old black man who works in mental-health
services, asked Buttigieg about whether he supports paying cash
reparations to descendants of slaves. The majority of South
Carolina's 19th century pre-Civil War population was made up of
enslaved black people. The state later targeted free blacks with
discriminatory laws after the abolition of slavery.
Buttigieg said he supports congressional legislation that proposes
studying the issue, an answer that underwhelmed Fowler, who has not
picked a favored candidate.
"The Democratic Party," Fowler said, "runs a risk of a lot of us not
coming out to vote if these issues aren't addressed."
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Will
Dunham)
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