The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Biden advises: Turn down the partisan heat

- By Mark Pazniokas CTMIRROR.ORG

HARTFORD — Former Vice President Joe Biden, a target of the pipe bombs mailed to critics of President Donald J. Trump, called on both parties Friday to lower the temperatur­e of political discourse in America while heading a Democratic rally framing the 2018 election in urgent and even apocalypti­c terms.

“This country has to come together,” Biden told a partisan audience that a party spokesman said topped 1,300 in a packed gymnasium and an overflow room. “Our political opponents are not our enemies.”

But conciliati­on was a fleeting message at an event built around anger directed at Trump and Republican­s in Washington. Opposition to the president has been an organizati­onal principle of Connecticu­t Democrats since election night in 2016, and Biden and the Democratic ticket repeatedly returned to a need to resist the GOP.

“Stay angry — vote. And take five people to the polls with you,” said U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat not on the midterm election ballot.

With measures of defiance and regret, Blumenthal and Biden each mentioned the bombs mailed to a number of high-profile Democrats, including former President Barack Obama, former Secretary of State

Hillary Clinton and Biden.

“We know in this nation ballots always win against bombs,” Blumenthal said.

Biden was joined on stage by the gubernator­ial nominee, Ned Lamont, U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, and Jahana Hayes, the former U.S. teacher of the year who is trying to become the first black woman elected to Congress from New England. All the speakers cast the election as a fight over what it means to be an American.

“Democracy is on the ballot, my friends,” said Murphy, who is seeking re-election to a second term.

Lamont equated his Republican opponent, Bob Stefanowsk­i, with Trump, the president Stefanowsk­i says deserves an A grade for his time in office. Lamont mocked Stefanowsk­i’s promise to phase out the income tax over eight years, calling it a “Trumpian tax scheme.”

The most recent poll shows Lamont with a lead over Stefanowsk­i that falls within the margin of error.

“I need you every day for the next 11 days to roll up your sleeves and fight,” Lamont said.

But the urban rally came amid concerns the campaign has yet to energize voters in the cities, where Democrats tend to win or lose statewide elections.

“The energy and enthusiasm is low,” said Steve Harris, a former Hartford councilman who is a district Democratic leader in the city’s North End. “It’s going to be a ground game, knocking on doors and pulling votes.”

Jean Holloway, a naturalize­d U.S. citizen from Jamaica and long-time political activist, said she believes the city’s West Indian population can and will be energized by Trump’s antagonist­ic views to immigrants, including an investigat­ion launched in June looking for fraud in the citizenshi­p process by long-term citizens.

“After 40 years in this country, he is going to look at my papers?” Holloway said.

Biden has traveled the country in October campaignin­g for Democratic U.S. Senate, U.S. House and gubernator­ial candidates in tight races in a number of states, including Kentucky, Florida, Indiana, Nevada, Ohio, Michigan and New York.

His re-emergence has stoked speculatio­n that he might run for president in 2020.

Ron Schurin, political science professor at the University of Connecticu­t, said Biden is campaignin­g not only for Democrats in tight races, but for himself.

“He’s coming here and other places on behalf of Joe Biden and as a potential 2020 candidate,” Schurin said. “Which is not to say that he doesn’t sincerely support Lamont and Hayes.”

In a recent CNN poll, Biden was the favored candidate among Democrats to run for president in 2020. He was received 33 percent of the support of those polled, followed by Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders who received 13 percent and California Sen. Kamala Harris who received 9 percent.

Time is not on Biden’s side. He turns 76 next month and would be 78 in November of 2020, nine years older than Ronald Reagan when he took office. Trump was 70 when he took office.

Schurin called Biden a “unifying Democrat,” who isn’t as divisive as other high-profile Democrats, but can still energize the base.

“Hayes is in a better position that Lamont because the polls are very tight in the governor’s race, but he will help both candidates mobilize the Democratic base,” Schurin said.

 ?? Jessica Hill / Associated Press ?? Former Vice President Joe Biden speaks at a rally supporting Democrats as Ned Lamont for candidate for governor, left, and Jahana Hayes, candidate for the 5th District, look on in Hartford on Friday.
Jessica Hill / Associated Press Former Vice President Joe Biden speaks at a rally supporting Democrats as Ned Lamont for candidate for governor, left, and Jahana Hayes, candidate for the 5th District, look on in Hartford on Friday.
 ?? Jessica Hill / Associated Press ?? U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy embraces candidate for congress Jahana Hayes at a rally in Hartford on Friday.
Jessica Hill / Associated Press U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy embraces candidate for congress Jahana Hayes at a rally in Hartford on Friday.

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