Las Vegas Review-Journal

Biden campaign plans staff boost

Manager lays out plan for battlegrou­nd states

- By Bill Barrow and Will Weissert The Associated Press

Presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden will hire by June at least 600 field staffers dedicated to an “expanded map” of battlegrou­nd states, his campaign manager said Friday, despite a financial gap with President Donald Trump’s re-election behemoth.

Biden’s campaign manager, Jen O’malley Dillon, said the growth would target not only states such as Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia and Florida that Trump flipped in his 2016 victory but also states that Democrats must protect, with traditiona­lly GOP ones, including Arizona, Texas and Georgia.

O’malley Dillon, who outlined Biden’s approach in a video conference with reporters, said she expects the new workers to be “on the ground” and reaching out to voters face to face as social distancing guidelines during the coronaviru­s pandemic change before Election Day in November.

But she made no commitment for when that will be, and she reaffirmed that the campaign has no establishe­d timeline for when Biden will return to regular campaignin­g.

“We will never make any choices that put our staff or voters in harm’s way,” O’malley Dillon said. “Our expectatio­n is we have people on the ground in this campaign doing the traditiona­l work of organizing, but we will do that when safety allows, and we will not do that a day sooner.”

O’malley Dillon said that the timing of when such campaignin­g would be safe “might mean different things in different places” and that, in the meantime, Biden will continue online events and outreach.

Asked whether Biden had been tested for the coronaviru­s, O’malley Dillon said, “There’s no testing that’s happened now. There’s no plan for that.”

The organizing hires will be the most visible sign of the buildup since Biden hired O’malley Dillon as campaign manager in March. Her hiring came as Biden took command of the primary and as the pandemic brought the campaign and much of American daily life to a halt.

The hiring of new staffers is the latest push from Biden’s campaign to counter criticisms from some Democrats and progressiv­e allies that the campaign isn’t ramping up quickly enough.

Besides the personnel moves, Biden aides pointed to an increase in fundraisin­g as evidence of expansion.

The campaign said Friday that it had $103 million cash on hand at the end of April when combined with the Democratic National Committee. The April fundraisin­g total was almost $61 million between the two entities.

Trump and the Republican National Committee said this week that they had more than $250 million on hand, continuing their financial juggernaut as Trump has raised money throughout his term without any serious primary opposition.

On the bright side for Biden, the GOP operation barely outraised Biden in April, as Democrats say they will have enough money to run a winning campaign against Trump, even if they never match him dollar for dollar.

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