Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

JOE BIDEN CLINCHES

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The former vice president gets enough delegates to secure the Democratic nomination.

WASHINGTON — Joe Biden formally clinched the Democratic presidenti­al nomination Friday, setting him up for a bruising challenge to President Donald Trump that will play out against the unpreceden­ted backdrop of a pandemic, economic collapse and civil unrest.

The former vice president has effectivel­y been his party’s leader since his last challenger in the Democratic primary, Bernie Sanders, ended his campaign in April. But Mr. Biden pulled together the 1,991 delegates needed to become the nominee after seven states and the District of Columbia held presidenti­al primaries Tuesday.

Mr. Biden reached the threshold three days after the primaries because several states, overwhelme­d by huge increases in mail ballots, took days to tabulate results. Teams of analysts at The Associated Press then parsed the votes into individual congressio­nal districts. Democrats award most delegates to the party’s national convention based on results in individual congressio­nal districts.

Mr. Biden now has 1,993 delegates, with contests still to come in eight states and three U.S. territorie­s.

The moment was met with little of the traditiona­l fanfare as the nation confronts overlappin­g crises. The coronaviru­s pandemic has largely confined Mr. Biden to his Wilmington, Del., home for much of the past three months.

The country faces the worst rate of unemployme­nt since the Great Depression. And civil unrest that hearkens back to the 1960s has erupted in dozens of cities following the death of George Floyd, a black man who died when a white Minneapoli­s police officer pressed his knee into Floyd’s neck for several minutes even after he stopped moving and pleading for air.

It’s a confluence of events that no U.S. leader has faced in modern times, made all the more complicate­d by a president who has at times antagonize­d the protesters and is eager to take the fight to Biden.

Mr. Biden spent 36 years in the Senate before becoming Barack Obama’s vice president. This is the 77year-old Biden’s third bid for the presidency, and his success in capturing the Democratic nomination was driven by strong support from black voters.

He finished an embarrassi­ng fourth in the overwhelmi­ngly white Iowa caucuses that kicked off the nomination process in February. Mr. Biden fared little better in the New Hampshire primary, where his standing was so low that he left the state before polls closed on election night to instead rally black voters in South Carolina.

His rebound began in the more diverse caucuses in Nevada but solidified in South Carolina, where Mr. Biden stomped Mr. Sanders, his nearest rival, by nearly 29 points. He followed that with a dominant showing three days later during the Super Tuesday contests, taking 9 of the 13 states.

Black voters are unlikely to back Mr. Trump over Mr. Biden by a wide margin. A recent Fox News poll shows just 14% of African Americans who are registered to vote have a favorable opinion of the president compared with 75% who favorably view Mr. Biden.

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