Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Biden apologizes for words on segregatio­nists

Candidate could face heat in South Carolina

- By Meg Kinnard and Juana Summers

SUMTER, S.C. — Former Vice President Joe Biden apologized Saturday for recent comments about working with segregatio­nist senators in his early days in the U.S. Senate, saying he understand­s now his remarks could have been offensive.

“Was I wrong a few weeks ago?” Biden asked a mostly black audience of several hundred in Sumter during the first day of a weekend visit to South Carolina. “Yes, I was. I regret it, and I’m sorry for any of the pain of misconcept­ion that caused anybody.”

Biden’s comments came as he and rival presidenti­al candidate Kamala Harris were set to circle each other while campaignin­g Sunday in South Carolina, the first Southern state to vote in next year’s primary and a crucial proving ground for candidates seeking support of black Democrats. Biden defended his record on racial issues and reminded voters of his ties to former President Barack Obama, whose popularity in South Carolina remains high.

The former vice president and the California senator probably will be pressed on their tense debate exchange over race and federally mandated school busing. Though the issue is not at the forefront of the 2020 primary, it could resonate in a state with a complicate­d history with race and segregatio­n.

Without naming Harris, Biden on Saturday referenced what he characteri­zed as expected attacks from other campaigns.

“I’m going to let my record stand for itself and not be distorted or scared,” Biden said. He recalled his support of Obama’s criminal justice reforms and pointed out areas in which he disagreed, such as the three-strikes policy that led to longer sentences for repeat offenders.

“I’m flawed and imperfect like everyone else. I’ve made the best decisions that I could at the moment they had to be made,” Biden said. “If the choice is between doing nothing and acting, I’ve chosen to act.”

Several Harris supporters in the state said her pointed and personal critique of Biden, who opposed busing mandates in the 1970s, struck a chord in South Carolina. Marguerite Willis, a recent Democratic candidate for governor, said that when Harris spoke in last month’s debate about her own experience­s being bused as a child, the entire room where Willis was watching the debate grew quiet.

“Growing up here in South Carolina, that’s meaningful to us,” said Willis, who is white. Schools were segregated when she was a child, and she recalled not meeting a black girl her age until leaving the state for college. “So when she talked about being bused, it was powerful for me and I’m sure it’s powerful for a lot of people here who have experience­s of their own.”

On the subject of busing, Biden told voters: “I don’t believe a child should have to get on a bus to attend a good school. There should be first-rate schools of quality in every neighborho­od of this nation, especially in 2019 America.”

 ?? Meg Kinnard The Associated Press ?? Former Vice President Joe Biden, a Democratic presidenti­al candidate, speaks at a campaign event Saturday in Sumter, S.C. He defended his record on racial issues.
Meg Kinnard The Associated Press Former Vice President Joe Biden, a Democratic presidenti­al candidate, speaks at a campaign event Saturday in Sumter, S.C. He defended his record on racial issues.

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