The News-Times

After pandemic delay, Biden launching in-person canvassing

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NEW YORK— After months of avoiding direct contact with voters because of the pandemic, Joe Biden’s campaign is about to launch door-to-door canvassing across several battlegrou­nd states.

The decision comes amid growing concern from Democratic officials on the ground in key states who fear that Biden has been giving a significan­t advantage to President Donald Trump and his Republican allies, who have been aggressive­ly courting voters at their doorsteps for months. The reversal also reflects a sense of rising urgency as polls tighten just a month before Election Day.

Biden’s campaign, which detailed the new effort to The Associated Press, insists that its existing phone and online voter outreach is effective. The new plans will build upon what’s already in place, not replace it.

“Our voter contact operation is the most innovative and technologi­cally advanced of any presidenti­al campaign in history, and it has been thriving in this unpreceden­ted environmen­t,“Biden campaign manager Jenn O’Malley Dillon said.

“We’re now expanding on our strategy in a targeted way that puts the safety of communitie­s first and foremost and helps us mobilize voters who are harder to reach by phone now that we’re in the final stretch — and now that Americans are fully dialed-in and ready to make their voices heard.”

Biden this weekend will dispatch several hundred newly trained volunteers to engage voters across Nevada, Michigan, New Hampshire and Pennsylvan­ia. The effort, focusing on voters who are considered difficult to reach by phone, is expected to spread quickly into several more battlegrou­nd states and include many more volunteers.

Campaign officials and volunteers acknowledg­e their virtual-contact strategy had holes they’re hoping to fill with in-person conversati­ons.

“It’s just harder and harder to get people on the phone,” said Patrick Sullivan, a Biden volunteer who lives in suburban Harrisburg, Pennsylvan­ia. “So being able to go to someone’s door and talk to them makes a big difference.”

Trump’s campaign and allied Republican groups have been having in-person contacts with voters since at

least June. Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel told the AP over the summer that her team was knocking on roughly one million doors each week.

Democratic officials have been extremely critical of the GOP’s tactics. Lily Adams, a spokespers­on for the Democratic National Committee, tweeted in August that the Trump campaign was “risking the lives of their staff, the lives of voters and risking becoming a super spreader organizati­on during the middle of a pandemic.“

Republican­s quickly

seized on Biden’s reversal.

“What changed? They know they’re being hopelessly outworked on the ground, and down-ballot Democrats in key states have been freaking out about it,” Trump campaign spokesman Tim Murtaugh said. “You can’t just parachute in a month before the election and hope to make up ground.”

While Biden leads many polls, lingering questions remain about the commitment of his supporters to actually vote. To defeat Trump, Democrats will need strong turnout from every piece of his broad

coalition, including groups that typically don’t vote in large numbers, such as younger Americans and African Americans.

And with the pandemic still raging, voters in 2020 face unpreceden­ted challenges in getting counted.

“It is possible that without the face-to-face-engagement, you may have a few voters who fall off,” said Mairi Luce, an attorney and a Biden volunteer who lives in Philadelph­ia. “But passions run high on both sides, and a lot of people are motivated to vote. I don’t think there are a lot of undecided voters out there.”

 ?? Andrew Harnik / Associated Press ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden arrives at the Queen Theater for video taping, Thursday, in Wilmington, Del.
Andrew Harnik / Associated Press Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden arrives at the Queen Theater for video taping, Thursday, in Wilmington, Del.

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