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		Biden says he is 'not going anywhere' after poor showing in Iowa
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		 [February 06, 2020] 
		By Trevor Hunnicutt 
 SOMERSWORTH, N.H. (Reuters) - Former U.S. 
		Vice President Joe Biden vowed on Wednesday to go on fighting for the 
		Democratic presidential nomination despite what he called the "gut 
		punch" he took in Iowa, where he lagged in fourth place.
 
 With 97% of precincts reporting from Monday's caucuses, Biden was behind 
		former South Bend, Indiana Mayor Pete Buttigieg and U.S. Senators Bernie 
		Sanders and Elizabeth Warren in the first nominating contest of the 2020 
		campaign.
 
 "I am not going to sugarcoat it: We took a gut punch in Iowa. The whole 
		process was a gut punch,” Biden said in Somersworth, New Hampshire, 
		where he was campaigning. “This isn’t the first time in my life that 
		I’ve been knocked down.”
 
 Biden, who bills himself as the most electable Democratic candidate to 
		take on Republican President Donald Trump in the Nov. 3 election, led 
		many national polls in the run-up to Iowa and has a host of high-profile 
		endorsements.
 
 But his campaign is in trouble.
 
		
		 
		
 "There are an awful lot of folks out there who wrote off this campaign. 
		... They’ve been trying to do that from the moment I entered the race. 
		Well, I’ve got news for them. I’m not going anywhere," Biden said.
 
 In an unusually direct address, Biden took aim at Sanders and Buttigieg 
		as he tried to recover ahead of the New Hampshire state primary next 
		Tuesday.
 
 Biden, 77, said every Democrat running for the House of Representatives 
		or Senate this year would have to carry the label "socialist" if Sanders 
		became the Democratic nominee. An independent, Sanders calls himself a 
		democratic socialist.
 
 BUTTIGIEG AHEAD
 
 Buttigieg, 38, held a very narrow lead over Sanders, 78, in the Iowa 
		caucuses, according to partial results released on Wednesday. Problems 
		with an app used for vote counting had delayed a final count. Warren, 
		70, placed third.
 
 Buttigieg, who would be the first openly gay U.S. president if elected, 
		had 26.2% of state delegate equivalents, the data traditionally reported 
		to determine the winner. Sanders was closing in with 26.1%, Warren was 
		at 18.2%, and Biden garnered 15.8%.
 
 Sanders was slightly ahead of Buttigieg in the Iowa popular vote, which 
		is not used to determine the delegates who will formally choose the 
		nominee at the Democratic National Convention in July.
 
 After more than a year of campaigning and spending more than $800 
		million, the results in Iowa had been expected to provide some answers 
		for Democrats desperately trying to figure out how to beat the 
		businessman-turned-president.
 
 But the delay has blunted the momentum of the state's eventual winner. 
		The partial results have been released in batches on Tuesday and 
		Wednesday and the Iowa Democratic Party has not said when it will 
		announce the rest.
 
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			Democratic presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe 
			Biden speaks at a campaign event in Nashua, New Hampshire, U.S., 
			February 4, 2020. REUTERS/Rick Wilking 
            
 
            Buttigieg has argued it is time for a new generation of leaders and 
			that his lack of experience in Washington makes him an ideal 
			candidate to break the partisan gridlock there.
 But he might struggle to win in New Hampshire, where Sanders, who 
			represents neighboring Vermont, leads in many opinion polls, and in 
			the next Democratic primary in South Carolina on Feb. 29 where Biden 
			expects to receive strong backing from the African-American vote.
 
 Biden accused Buttigieg of being insufficiently supportive of the 
			achievements of the Obama administration and cast doubt on his 
			experience.
 
 “It’s a risk - to be just straight up with you - for this party to 
			nominate someone who’s never held an office higher than mayor of a 
			town of 100,000 people in Indiana,” said Biden, who was President 
			Barack Obama's vice president for eight years.
 
 Jeannie Collins, 34, who works in human resources in Manchester, New 
			Hampshire, said she was leaning toward voting for Sanders but agreed 
			with Biden’s concern that the senator may be too left wing for many 
			Americans.
 
 That concern was more likely to make her vote for Buttigieg rather 
			than Biden, she said.
 
 “I just feel like it's time for the younger generation. That's why I 
			really like Buttigieg,” she said. She described Sanders as “older 
			but his views are younger”.
 
 Two other Biden opponents - Warren and billionaire former New York 
			Mayor Michael Bloomberg - released ads on Wednesday highlighting 
			their ties to Obama in a move to pick up Biden supporters who may be 
			reconsidering after his poor performance in Iowa.
 
 Warren’s advertisement about her creation of the Consumer Financial 
			Protection Bureau during Obama’s administration uses narration from 
			the former president praising Warren as being “very tough” and “one 
			of the country’s fiercest advocates for the middle class”.
 
            
			 
			Bloomberg’s ad quotes Obama praising the former mayor’s work on gun 
			control and education, saying he has shown “what can be achieved 
			when we bring people together to seek pragmatic solutions”.
 (Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Additional reporting by Simon Lewis 
			in Manchester, New Hampshire, Amanda Becker in Washington and Subrat 
			Patnaik in Bengaluru; Writing by Alistair Bell; Editing by Sonya 
			Hepinstall, Peter Cooney and Peter Graff)
 
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