In bid for unity, ex-rival Sanders backs Biden to challenge Trump
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[April 14, 2020]
By Trevor Hunnicutt and James Oliphant
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Senator Bernie
Sanders on Monday endorsed his longtime rival former Vice President Joe
Biden, a move aimed at unifying a Democratic Party long fractured along
moderate and liberal lines ahead of the election match-up against
President Donald Trump.
Sanders cited the novel coronavirus outbreak as a reason for the party
to come together behind Biden, the likely Democratic presidential
nominee after the progressive firebrand Sanders suspended his White
House campaign.
Sanders' endorsement during an online campaign event came as Biden's
team had already begun reaching out to advocacy groups on the left to
enlist their support for the Nov. 3 general election battle against the
Republican Trump.
Before the pandemic brought the Democratic primary contest to a virtual
halt, Biden had built up a commanding delegate edge over Sanders,
leading the U.S. senator from Vermont to declare last week he saw no
viable path to the nomination.
Even so, it remained unclear how soon Sanders, who is especially popular
with liberal young voters, would rally behind Biden, whose support comes
chiefly from the party’s older moderates.
Sanders' quick move to back Biden made for a stark contrast to 2016,
when Sanders waited until the eve of the summer Democratic National
Convention to support the then-nominee, Hillary Clinton.
In the online event, Sanders called on Democrats, independents and
Republicans "to come together in this campaign to support (Biden's)
candidacy, which I endorse, to make certain that we defeat somebody who
I believe ... is the most dangerous president in the modern history of
this country."
Biden responded by terming Sanders "the most powerful voice for a fair
and more just America.”
With social distancing in widespread effect, Biden has been forced to
move the bulk of his campaign to online events and has watched as the
global pandemic had relegated the U.S. presidential race to the back
burner.
The Sanders endorsement gives him a much-needed jolt of energy and
attention.
As the last two standing in a bruising Democratic primary, Biden and
Sanders represented the conflict raging within the party between its
moderate and liberal wings, with moderates claiming expansive
progressive policies would alienate centrist voters needed to beat
Trump.
But Biden and Sanders, contemporaries who both have served in the
Senate, largely treated each other with civility, even when some on the
left wanted Sanders to be more critical of Biden's moderate approach.
"We've disagreed," Biden said on Monday, "but we've been friends."
Biden said he and Sanders would develop six policy working groups on
issues including the economy, education, criminal justice, immigration
and climate change to develop solutions to problems the United States
faces.
Trump's re-election campaign used Sanders' endorsement to argue that
Biden had moved too far left.
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Senator Bernie Sanders speaks as former Vice President Joe Biden
reacts during the ninth Democratic 2020 U.S. Presidential candidates
debate at the Paris Theater in Las Vegas Nevada, U.S., February 19,
2020. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
“This is further proof that even though Bernie Sanders won’t be on
the ballot in November, his issues will be," Trump's campaign
manager Brad Parscale said in a statement.
OLIVE BRANCHES
Biden and his campaign had been reaching out to Sanders and his
aides for weeks before he dropped out. Biden and Sanders spoke
personally, and Biden had avoided suggesting that Sanders should
exit the race, according to a person familiar with that
conversation.
Biden's campaign also had some lower-level talks with the Sanders
campaign that included efforts to make clear that there was room for
his ideas in Biden’s general election campaign, according to another
person familiar with the matter.
That included conversation between a top Biden aide, Anita Dunn, and
a counterpart with Sanders, Jeff Weaver. Neither could be reached
for comment on Monday.
The person said Biden would not be likely to adopt a wide swath of
Sanders’ policies wholesale, such as Medicare for All, with which
Biden does not agree.
Yet in recent days, in a clear bid to woo Sanders' supporters, Biden
endorsed expanding access to Medicare, forgiving some student debt
and making public colleges free for families making $125,000 or
less.
Biden's campaign also reached out in recent weeks to progressive
groups, including the Sanders-endorsing Working Families Party to
court their support, according to people familiar with those
conversations.
Some activists said they were encouraged both by Sanders’ rapid
endorsement, as well as the former rivals' pledge to work together
on key issues.
Sarah Audelo, executive director of Alliance for Youth Action, said
the new working groups could help prove Biden is willing to bring on
advisers with progressive bona fides in areas such as climate change
and immigration.
But she said the onus remains on Biden to engage young voters who
were drawn to Sanders' agenda.
“We need to see the vice president making a real effort to bring
young voters in,” she said. “It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy
when candidates say young people won’t vote and then fail to target
them."
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt in New York, James Oliphant in
Washington and Joseph Ax in West Stockbridge, Massachusetts; editing
by Colleen Jenkins, Jonathan Oatis and Dan Grebler)
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