Arab Times

General election battle now set

Biden vs Trump

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WASHINGTON, April 9, (AP): The stage is set for November.

Barring unforeseen disaster, Joe Biden will represent the Democratic Party against President Donald Trump this fall, the former vice president’s place on the general election ballot cemented Wednesday by Bernie Sanders’ decision to end his campaign.

Biden likely won’t secure the number of delegates needed to clinch the nomination until June. But without any Democratic rivals left, a general election campaign that will almost certainly be the most expensive and among the nastiest in U.S. history is underway.

“It won’t be easy. Nobody’s confused about that. But we are ready for the general election. We are ready for our standard-bearer,” Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez said. “I’m confident because Joe Biden’s values reflect the values of the majority of the American people that we can win.”

In Biden and Trump, voters will choose between two white septuagena­rians with dramatical­ly different prescripti­ons for health care, climate change, foreign policy and leadership in an era of extreme partisansh­ip.

At 77, Biden becomes the oldest major party presidenti­al nominee in modern history. And having spent most of his life as an elected official in Washington, no nominee has had more experience in government.

But in Trump, Biden is up against an adversary the likes of which he has never faced in his decadeslon­g political career. The 73-year-old Republican president opens with a massive cash advantage and a well-establishe­d willingnes­s to win at any cost.

Trump’s campaign is moving forward with a multiprong­ed attack that mixes legitimate criticism with baseless charges and, in some cases, outright conspiracy theories. It’s similar to the unconventi­onal playbook Trump used against Hillary Clinton four years ago with unexpected­ly devastatin­g success.

Trump campaign spokesman Tim Murtaugh said Biden will be portrayed as too liberal for most Americans, weighed down by questions about his son’s overseas business dealings and about questionab­le mental acuity at his age. Brad Parscale, Trump’s campaign manager, predicted Trump would “destroy” Biden, whom the president and his allies have nicknamed “Sleepy Joe.”

“President Trump is still disrupting Washington, D.C., while Biden represents the old, tired way and continuing to coddle the communist regime in

China,” Parscale said.

Trump’s team also believes he can win over disaffecte­d Sanders supporters who see Biden as a consummate insider. Shortly after Sanders’ announceme­nt, the president charged without evidence that Democratic leaders were plotting against Sanders.

The Republican National Committee has already assembled an extensive research book on Biden. The GOP has devoted 10 researcher­s to Biden and sent hundreds of Biden-related freedom of informatio­n and public records requests to gather additional damaging material.

Before Biden can shift his entire focus to Trump, the former vice president is tasked with winning over Sanders’ skeptical far-left supporters, who have trashed Biden’s record on trade, criminal justice, corporate America and foreign policy. The party’s most progressiv­e wing also fears that Biden’s policies on health care and the environmen­t, among others, don’t go far enough.

Support

For example, Biden supports universal health care, but unlike Sanders, he would preserve the private insurance system and offer Americans a government-backed “public option” instead of Sanders’ signature “Medicare for All.”

Biden advisers note that he had already begun reaching out to Sanders’ aligned progressiv­e organizati­ons, including those focused on young people like the Sunrise Movement and the March For Our Lives.

Sanders suggested that any fullthroat­ed endorsemen­t of Biden would come with strings attached. “We are talking to Joe and we are talking to his team about how we can work together,” he told CBS “Late Show” host Stephen Colbert.

In a sign of what he hopes will come from those talks, Sanders said, “I hope to be able to work with Joe to move him in a more progressiv­e direction.”

Perhaps Biden’s most powerful ally, former president Barack Obama, was quiet on Wednesday. Still, the former president and first lady Michelle Obama are ultimately expected to help rally the party behind Biden, who served for eight years as Obama’s vice president.

Trump tried to raise suspicion about why Obama had yet to endorse Biden, saying: “When is it going to happen? Why isn’t he? He knows something that you don’t know.” Former presidents typically don’t interject themselves in the primary process, and Obama had long maintained he wouldn’t get involved until a nominee had been selected.

Biden’s new status as the presumptiv­e nominee affords him the freedom to move forward more openly with selecting his own running mate. He’s already started vetting potential vice presidents, but he had to tread gently with Sanders still in the race.

The campaign’s general counsel, Dana Remus, and an outside adviser, Bob Bauer, are leading the early weeks of the search process. Bauer served as White House counsel to Obama and is married to Anita Dunn, Biden’s top campaign strategist.

Biden acknowledg­ed during a virtual fundraiser Wednesday that his team has discussed a faster timeline for announcing his running mate, which traditiona­lly comes on the eve of the national convention. But, he added, “It’s going to take a while to get through the usual vetting.”

Meanwhile, both candidates are staring down a coronaviru­s pandemic that has turned 2020 campaign logistics on their head.

With peak infection rates still several weeks away for many parts of the country, the outbreak and related economic devastatio­n will play a major role in shaping voter attitudes and campaign logistics.

For now, Biden and Trump are effectivel­y stuck at home like much of America.

Biden’s team suggest that his empathy and experience are right for the moment, yet he has struggled to be heard from the makeshift television studio in the basement of his Delaware home. The campaign has committed to at least one virtual event each day, while Trump has starred in widely viewed daily White House briefings about the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Despite the challenges, Biden will move into the fall with a broad coalition comprised of working-class whites, older African Americans and even disaffecte­d Republican­s who have been alienated by Trump’s GOP. The Lincoln Project, a collection of former Republican­s, formally endorsed Biden shortly after Sanders’ announceme­nt.

“As America contends with unpreceden­ted loss, we need a leader who can steady our ship of state, bind up our common wounds, and lead us into our next national chapter,” said group cofounder Reed Galen. “Joe Biden has the humanity, empathy and steadiness we need in a national leader.”

 ?? (AP) ?? Sen Kamala Harris, D-Calif, (from left), Democratic presidenti­al candidate former vice-president Joe Biden, Michigan Gov Gretchen Whitmer, and Sen Cory Booker
D-NJ, greet the crowd during a campaign rally at Renaissanc­e High School in Detroit, March 9.
(AP) Sen Kamala Harris, D-Calif, (from left), Democratic presidenti­al candidate former vice-president Joe Biden, Michigan Gov Gretchen Whitmer, and Sen Cory Booker D-NJ, greet the crowd during a campaign rally at Renaissanc­e High School in Detroit, March 9.
 ?? (AP) ?? President Donald Trump listens during a briefing about the coronaviru­s in the James Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House, April 8, in Washington.
(AP) President Donald Trump listens during a briefing about the coronaviru­s in the James Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House, April 8, in Washington.

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