Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Biden campaign HQ set in Milwaukee

Democrats to operate 44 offices across Wisconsin

- Molly Beck

MADISON - President Joe Biden will base his Wisconsin campaign operation out of Milwaukee ahead of the 2024 election, the first time a Democratic presidenti­al nominee has made the state’s largest city a state campaign headquarte­rs in at least two decades.

Biden campaign officials said Tuesday the move to center efforts in Milwaukee reflects the campaign’s focus on Black and Latino voters and suburban women in the Milwaukee area. The headquarte­rs, the exact location of which was not immediatel­y disclosed, will be one of 44 offices across the state operated by the Biden campaign and state and national Democrats, according to the Biden campaign.

“Our headquarte­rs and the 43 other offices will serve as home bases for voters rallying behind President Biden and Democrats’ agenda of defending our democracy, protecting women’s reproducti­ve freedoms, and lowering costs for families,” Garren Randolph, campaign manager for Biden’s Wisconsin campaign arm, said in a statement.

Biden’s campaign headquarte­rs open a day before the president is scheduled to spend the night in Milwaukee on a tour of the upper Midwest, stopping in Milwaukee on Wednesday and Saginaw, Mich., on Thursday.

His Wisconsin stop is the latest in a string of visits from Biden and his surrogates in recent weeks, including Vice President Kamala Harris, first lady Jill Biden and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen. Former President Donald Trump, the presumptiv­e Republican nominee for president, has not yet visited Wisconsin this election cycle.

Milwaukee is its own battlegrou­nd within one of the country’s few swing states, with both of the major parties vying to win over Black voters at a time when enthusiasm for voting is down.

Since 2004, turnout among Black voters in Milwaukee has significantly lagged white voter turnout during presidenti­al contests, with the exception of 2012 — when then-President Barack Obama’s reelection bid triggered unpreceden­ted levels of voting in the city.

The turnout in majority-Black wards almost was 79% in 2012, compared with an average of 81% in majority-white wards.

The Republican Party of Wisconsin in 2020 opened an office on the north side of Milwaukee in an effort to reach Black and Latino voters. RPW chairman Brian Schimming told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel in the fall the party’s chief priority ahead of the 2024 election cycle was to staff up the office.

Schimming said the new Biden headquarte­rs won’t “erase the damage of Bidenomics for working people.”

“Instead of asking for their votes, Joe Biden should spend his time in Milwaukee apologizin­g for his failed policies,” Schimming said.

A spokesman for Trump’s campaign did not respond to a request for comment.

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