With rivals stuck in impeachment trial, Biden and Buttigieg to barnstorm
Iowa
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[January 16, 2020]
By Tim Reid and Michael Martina
DES MOINES, Iowa (Reuters) - Democratic
presidential candidates Joe Biden and Pete Buttigieg will blitz Iowa
before the state kicks off the party's nominating contest on Feb. 3,
while their key rivals will be largely unable to campaign because they
must sit as Senate jurors in Republican President Donald Trump's
impeachment trial.
Aides to Biden and Buttigieg, locked in a tight four-way battle with
U.S. Senators Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, would not comment on
the unprecedented advantage next week’s Senate trial presents them.
Yet newly released schedules reveal an intense on-the-ground push by
both candidates in the final stretch in Iowa, while Sanders, Warren and
another senator, Amy Klobuchar, will miss most remaining campaign days
to participate in the impeachment trial, which is expected to begin on
Tuesday.
A senior aide to former Vice President Biden, speaking on the condition
of anonymity, said the campaign has not recalibrated its Iowa strategy
because of the Senate trial.
But their No. 1 priority is getting Biden talking to as many voters as
possible in Iowa in the final days of what polls suggest is a virtual
tie among the four.
Biden heads to Iowa on Friday and will spend nearly every day between
then and the Feb. 3 caucuses in the state, the aide said. Biden’s wife,
Jill Biden, who has been campaigning heavily on behalf of her husband in
Iowa and other early-voting states, will also spend much of the final 18
days in the state.
Buttigieg's campaign, meanwhile, announced a flurry of events with the
candidate blanketing the state next week. On Monday alone, he will hold
seven town hall events with voters, with an eighth on Tuesday.
Entrepreneur Andrew Yang, who is not a leading contender in Iowa,
nevertheless announced on Wednesday a 17-day bus tour throughout the
state starting this weekend.
SUPPORTERS, FAMILY AND WEEKEND TRIPS
To be sure, Sanders, Warren and Klobuchar are not ceding Iowa. They plan
to campaign there during the final three weekends and will rely on
representatives traveling the state for them on weekdays when the Senate
trial is in session.
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Democratic 2020 U.S. presidential candidate and former South Bend
Mayor Pete Buttigieg shakes hands with a supporter after a campaign
town hall meeting in Newton, Iowa, U.S., January 15, 2020.
REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File Photo
Warren’s campaign has said they are considering remote appearances
and events hosted by key supporters or family members.
Sanders is weighing weekend trips and remote appearances at Iowa
events. U.S. Congress members and fellow liberal firebrands
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ilhan Omar are among the possible
supporters Sanders may use in his place, his campaign has said.
Klobuchar, who capped off a rise in the Iowa polls with another
strong televised debate performance on Tuesday night, will also tap
proxies such as her husband, she has said.
The three senators also hope they might also get a visibility boost
if the Senate impeachment proceedings are widely watched on national
television.
Dennis Goldford, an expert on Iowa’s caucuses and a political
science professor at Drake University, where Tuesday’s debate was
held, said the three senators are at a disadvantage, but not a
crippling one, because they are already well known.
“But if there’s a feather on the scale, that can make a difference
in a close race. This is a close race,” Goldford said.
Tom Miller, Iowa’s long-serving attorney general who endorsed Biden
this week, said he plans to campaign with Biden and hold his own
events. He has also been telephoning undecided Iowans to plead
Biden’s case.
He said he and the campaign do not want to appear to be capitalizing
on the senators’ absence.
“It’s going to hinder them somewhat, but they’ll still be out there,
they’ll still have their organizations, and maybe people will work a
little bit harder for them to make up for it,” Miller said.
(Reporting by Tim Reid and Michael Martina; Additional reporting by
Amanda Becker and Simon Lewis; Editing by Soyoung Kim and Cynthia
Osterman)
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