The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

BIDEN AIMS TO UNIFY HIS PARTY, NATION

Former VP planning to focus on health crisis, economy, racial justice. Thursday night’s speakers included four former rivals for nomination.

- By Steve Peoples and Alexandra Jaffe

WILMINGTON, DEL. — Joe Biden’s goal Thursday night was to start unifying divided America as well as the nation’s diverse Democrats as he prepared to accept his party’s presidenti­al nomination in the climax of recent history’s most unorthodox national convention.

For Biden, it also was a moment that marked the pinnacle — so far — of a political career spanning almost a half century.

The former vice president, who at 77 years old would be the oldest president ever elected, was being praised by family and former foes before he became the Democratic Party’s official standard bearer in the campaign to defeat President Donald Trump in November.

A day after California Sen. Kamala Harris became the first Black woman to accept a major party’s vice presidenti­al nomination, Biden campaign Co-Chair Lisa Blunt Rochester, aDelaware congresswo­man, predicted that Thursday would be “a whole ’nother level of special.”

Above all, Biden was expected to focus on uniting the deeply divided nation as Americans grapple with the long and fearful health crisis, the related economic devastatio­n and a national awakening on racial justice.

“I knew that of all the incredible candidates we have across that platform, Joe Biden was the one who could unite us. From Harlem to the heartland, he was the one who could unite us,” Blunt Rochester said in a briefing previewing the final night of the four-day convention.

The positive focus expected Thursday night marked a break from the dire warnings offered

by former President Barack Obama and others the night before. The 44th president of the United States warned that American democracy itself could falter if Trump is reelected, while Harris and 2016 presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton declared that Americans’ lives and livelihood­s are at risk.

Throughout their convention, the Democrats have summoned a collective urgency about the dangers of Trump as president. In 2016, they dismissed and sometimes trivialize­d him. In the days leading up to Biden’s acceptance speech, they cast him as an existentia­l threat to the country.

The tone signals anew that the fall campaign between Trump and Joe Biden, already expected to be among the most negative of the past half century, will be filled with rancor and recriminat­ion.

Beyond Biden’s highly anticipate­d speech, Thursday’s program was designed to highlight the diversity of the Democratic Party and the nation he hopes to lead.

Speakers included four former rivals: Pete Buttigieg, who was trying to become the nation’s first openly gay president; New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker; New York ultra-billionair­e Michael Bloomberg; and entreprene­ur Andrew Yang. Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms was also featured in addition to Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth, who lost both legs while serving in Iraq.

Biden’s Democratic Party has sought this week to put forward a cohesive vision of values and policy priorities, highlighti­ng efforts to combat climate change, tighten gun laws and embrace a humane immigratio­n policy. They have drawn a sharp contrast with Trump’s policies and personalit­y, portraying him as cruel, self-centered and woefully unprepared to manage virtually any of the nation’s mounting crises and policy challenges.

It’s unclear if tearing down Trump will be enough to propel Biden to victory in November.

Just 75 days before the election, the former vice president must energize the disparate factions that make up the modern Democratic Party — a coalition that spans generation, race and ideology. And this fall voters must deal with concerns over the COVID-19 pandemic that has created health risks for those who want to vote in person — and postal slowdowns for mail-in ballots, which Democrats blame on Trump.

The pandemic has also forced Biden’s team to abandon the typical pageantry and rely instead on a highly produced, all-virtual affair that has failed to draw the same television ratings as past convention­s.

The silence was noticeable Wednesday night, for example, as Harris took the stage to make history in a cavernous hall inside the Chase Center in Wilmington. She was flanked by American flags but no family, and her audience consisted of a few reporters and photograph­ers.

It’s Trump’s turn next. The Republican president, who abandoned plans to host his convention in North Carolina and in Florida, is expected to break tradition and accept his nomination from the White House lawn next week.

The night before Biden’s speech, Harris, a 55-yearold California senator and the daughter of Jamaican and Indian immigrants, addressed race and equality in a personal way Biden cannot when he formally accepts his party’s presidenti­al nomination.

“There is no vaccine for racism. We have got to do the work,” Harris declared.

“We’ve got to do the work to fulfill the promise of equal justice under law,” she added. “None of us are free until all of us are free.”

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ex-Vice President Joe Biden, seen on stage Wednesday after Sen. Kamala Harris spoke in Wilmington, Delaware, was expected to have a positive focus in his Thursday night speech.
CAROLYN KASTER / ASSOCIATED PRESS Ex-Vice President Joe Biden, seen on stage Wednesday after Sen. Kamala Harris spoke in Wilmington, Delaware, was expected to have a positive focus in his Thursday night speech.

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