Call & Times

With wins in 7 states and DC, Biden closes in on nomination

- By STEVE PEOPLES AP National Political Writer

Joe Biden is on the cusp of formally securing the Democratic presidenti­al nomination after winning hundreds more delegates in primary contests that tested the nation’s ability to run elections while balancing a pandemic and sweeping social unrest.

Biden could lock down the nomination within the next week as West Virginia and Georgia hold primaries.

On Tuesday, voters across America were forced to navigate curfews, health concerns and National Guard troops – waiting in line hours after polls closed in some cases – after election officials dramatical­ly reduced the number of in-person voting sites to minimize the spread of the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Biden and President Donald Trump easily swept their respective primary contests that ranged from Maryland to Montana and featured the night’s biggest prize: Pennsylvan­ia. The two men are certain to face each other on the presidenti­al ballot in November, yet party rules require them first to accumulate a majority of delegates in the monthslong state-by-state primary season.

Trump secured the Republican presidenti­al nomination in March.

Pennsylvan­ia, which offered Tuesday’s largest trove of delegates, also represente­d a significan­t test case for Republican­s and Democrats working to strengthen their operations in a premier general election battlegrou­nd.

Voters were forced to brave long lines in “militarize­d zones” because officials consolidat­ed the vast majority of polling places in Philadelph­ia to minimize health risks, according to Erin Kramer, executive director of One Pennsylvan­ia. She noted that some polling places in African American communitie­s are in police stations.

“Having to stand in line while police officers are entering and exiting the building on police business is not exactly how people want to spend their Election Day,” Kramer said.

Biden was in Philadelph­ia earlier Tuesday to deliver remarks about the civil unrest that has erupted across the nation after the police killing of George Floyd. He didn’t talk about the primary, instead focusing his attention on Trump, whom Biden blasted as “more interested in power than in principle.”

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders is not actively campaignin­g for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination, having suspended his operation and endorsed Biden, but his name appeared on the ballots. On the eve of Tuesday’s primaries, senior adviser Jeff Weaver encouraged progressiv­es to vote for Sanders anyway to help maximize his influence in the direction of the Democratic Party.

The comments served as a reminder that Biden may have no legitimate Democratic rivals remaining but must still win over skeptical activists from his party’s far-left flank, who worry he’s too close to the political establishm­ent.

Party unity was an afterthoug­ht this week, however, as more immediate health and safety concerns dominated the national conversati­on. The coronaviru­s death toll has surged past 100,000 nationwide, and thousands of new cases are reported each day.

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