The Columbus Dispatch

Biden marks Iowa rise from caucus collapse to fall contender

- Zeke Miller, Alexandra Jaffe and Thomas Beaumont

DES MOINES, Iowa – When Joe Biden was last in Iowa, his presidenti­al campaign was on the verge of collapse and he was soundly trounced in the caucuses by a former Indiana mayor nearly 40 years his junior. He returned Friday as the Democratic nominee, believing he’s just days away from becoming president-elect.

Biden’s trip reflects the remarkable arc of his third presidenti­al campaign. He entered the race as the most experience­d candidate in a crowded primary, but was overshadow­ed by fresh faces who dazzled Democratic voters and nearly ran out of money.

But Democrats have rallied behind Biden as their best candidate to defeat President Donald Trump and unify a country facing health, economic and social crises. And the money woes that hampered Biden during the primary have vanished as he has built a nearly two-to-one cash advantage over Trump that has allowed him to flood the airwaves and make ambitious plays for states like Iowa, which flipped to Republican in 2016.

The dramatic nature of Biden’s rise is eclipsed only by the challenges faced by Trump – whose confidence in his reelection was dealt a devastatin­g blow by the coronaviru­s pandemic this spring, with the public health and economic crises still rearing their heads in the days leading up to the close of polling.

“I don’t take anything for granted,” Biden told reporters Friday. “We’re gonna work for every single vote up ‘til the last minute.”

With four days until the election and more than 80 million votes already cast, time is running out for Trump and Biden to change the shape of the race. Biden is leading most national polls and has a narrow advantage in many of the crucial battlegrou­nds that could decide the race.

Friday marked the beginning of the crucial final stretch before the election. Trump’s closing sprint to Election Day also includes four stops in Pennsylvan­ia on Saturday and nearly a dozen events in the final 48 hours across states he carried in 2016.

After Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota on Friday, Biden will hit Michigan on Saturday, where he will hold a joint rally with former President Barack Obama.

Biden will close out his campaign Monday, hitting a familiar battlegrou­nd: Pennsylvan­ia, the state where he was born and the one he has visited more than any other this campaign. The Biden campaign announced the candidate, his wife Jill, running mate California Sen. Kamala Harris and her husband, Doug Emhoff, plan to “fan out across all four corners of the state.”

Harris was set to campaign across Texas on Friday, aiming to chip into Republican­s’ historic advantage in the diversifyi­ng and increasing­ly competitiv­e state.

Trump’s Milwaukee stop is his first since January, when he rallied supporters the day of a Democratic debate in Iowa ahead of the presidenti­al caucuses. It comes as Trump appears to lag in recent polling.

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