Journal Pioneer

Buttigieg backing Biden

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DALLAS - It was a scene that was hard to imagine just one week ago.

Joe Biden, 77, and until Sunday his rival for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination Pete Buttigieg, 38, appeared together before a tiny crowd in the Chicken Scratch restaurant in Dallas, where Buttigieg endorsed the former vice president.

Fighting back tears, Biden compared the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, to his late son Beau, saying it’s the highest compliment he could offer any person.

Having ditched his own bid for the nomination, Buttigieg, who had spent months calling for generation­al change, said Biden would “bring back dignity to the White House”.

Buttigieg’s endorsemen­t was the most eye-catching among over 100 that flooded in for Biden from mostly moderate Democrats after his dominant South Carolina win on Saturday.

That victory gave Biden unexpected momentum going into the pivotal “Super Tuesday” contests of 14 states that voted on the nominee to challenge Republican President Donald Trump in November.

New Biden backers also included U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, who ended her own presidenti­al bid on Monday, as well as another former presidenti­al rival, former Texas congressma­n Beto O’Rourke. Both endorsed Biden at his final rally in Dallas before voting n Texas and 13 other states on Tuesday.

Biden’s comeback in South Carolina, after poor showings in other early voting states, was exactly the kind of a victory that Democratic party officials, alarmed that frontrunne­r U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders is far too liberal to beat Trump, had been craving, according to more than two dozen people who either gave their endorsemen­ts or were involved behind the scenes.

“I hadn’t planned on endorsing anybody, but then I started getting worried that Bernie Sanders would become the nominee,” said former Senator Barbara Boxer of California, a longtime Senate colleague of both Biden and Sanders.

On the eve of the South Carolina primary, she called Biden’s longtime aide Steve Ricchetti, telling him that she would endorse him if Biden won the race. Boxer then wrote up her own endorsing statement, sent it to the Biden campaign, and said the campaign could release it in the event of a victory.

“There was no plan, no pressure, nothing,” Boxer said.

People both inside and outside the Biden campaign said while the effort involved calls from Biden aides asking for help, most decided on their own.

“People woke up and got a sense of urgency,” said one person close to Biden.

Buttigieg’s endorsemen­t, in particular, surprised Biden.

When the two talked by phone after Buttigieg exited the race on Sunday night, Biden did not ask Buttigieg for his endorsemen­t nor did Buttigieg say he was going to announce support, Biden said at the Texas chicken restaurant event.

The event, which lasted only a few minutes and involved a small crowd of press, campaign supporters and people who just happened to be at the restaurant, was hastily arranged to accommodat­e a quick, last-minute announceme­nt, said one person familiar with the matter.

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