The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Michigan primary could make or break Sanders

- By Will Weissert and Alexandra Jaffe

The Vermont senator could be relegated to the role of protest candidate as Joe Biden pads his delegate lead.

Former Vice President Joe Biden and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders looked for a win in Michigan on Tuesday to prove they have the backing of working-class voters in a critical Midwestern battlegrou­nd state that helped put President Donald Trump in the White House.

But whereas a victory would simply pad the lead of a suddenly confident Biden fresh off a Super Tuesday rout, a loss could hammer a Sanders campaign that is struggling to find big wins in the upcoming Democratic presidenti­al primary states. Michigan is the biggest prize on a night when Missouri, Mississipp­i, North Dakota, Idaho and Washington state all vote.

“You’re the best damn workers in the world,” Biden shouted through a megaphone while touring a Detroit auto plant as workers in hard hats chanted, “Joe! Joe!”

Biden now frequently ticks off the names of six former presidenti­al rivals who have endorsed him in the past week, saying he is “the candidate that they think can win.” The former vice president has campaigned in recent days with two of them, Sens. Cory Booker and Kamala Harris, and appeared with Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. All three have been mentioned as possible vice presidenti­al picks.

It wan’t all good feelings, though. While rallying at the auto plant, Biden was interrupte­d repeatedly by protesters angered by Biden’s support for the North American Free Trade Agreement and reluctance to embrace sweeping environmen­tal proposals outlined in the Green New Deal. In a scuffle with demonstrat­ors, Biden senior adviser Symone Sanders was knocked to the ground but was unhurt. Less than a week ago, she tackled a protester who rushed the stage as Biden spoke in California.

Biden also endured a testy exchange with a worker who accused him of “actively trying to end our Second Amendment right.”

Biden said that while he supports the Second Amendment, “Do you need 100 rounds?”

Biden’s gun control plan reinstates the assault weapons ban and includes a voluntary buyback program for assault weapons, stopping short of a mandatory buyback program that some of his opponents had supported in the primary.

Trump won Michigan by about 10,000 votes in 2016. That was even closer than Pennsylvan­ia or Wisconsin, which, along with Michigan, are credited with handing the president a narrow Electoral College victory as Hillary Clinton clinched the popular vote.

Sanders, who added credibilit­y to his insurgent 2016 primary challenge of Clinton with a win in Michigan, has predicted he’ll emerge victorious there Tuesday. If he doesn’t, though, he might be relegated to the role of simple protest candidate as Biden piles up a wide lead in delegates to the Democratic National Convention this summer in Milwaukee.

Although he has rejected notions he could drop out of the race if Tuesday goes badly, Sanders was visiting polling stations in Detroit on Tuesday, scrounging for late-breaking supporters. He’s said he’s now battling the “Democratic establishm­ent” and scoffed at suggestion­s that so much of the party’s elite supporting his opponent means Biden is more electable.

“In a general election, which candidate can generate the enthusiasm and the excitement and the voter turnout we need?” Sanders asked. “If you want to defeat Trump, which all Democrats do and the majority of independen­ts do and some Republican­s do, we are that campaign.”

Detroit neighbors Fayette Turner and Margaret Marsh were split on which to support: Turner voted for Sanders, while Marsh voted for Biden. But they agreed on one thing.

“Anybody but Trump,” Turner, 64, said.

Marsh, 69, said her family has identified as Republican her entire life — until Trump took office.

“The people I like best, they’re all gone,” Marsh said. “I think Biden’s the sanest one left. Hopefully, he’ll have a good vice president.”

Voting didn’t go smoothly everywhere. Early Tuesday, the mayor of Kansas City, Missouri, tweeted that he had been turned away from voting because “I wasn’t in the system, even though I’ve voted there for 11 years.”

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 ?? PAUL SANCYA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., visits principal DaRhonda Evans-Stewart, left, and social worker Kim Little outside a polling location Tuesday at Warren E. Bow Elementary School in Detroit.
PAUL SANCYA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., visits principal DaRhonda Evans-Stewart, left, and social worker Kim Little outside a polling location Tuesday at Warren E. Bow Elementary School in Detroit.
 ?? PAUL VERNON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Joe Biden hugs Crystal Turner of Columbus, Ohio, with Moms Demand Action during a campaign rally Tuesday.
PAUL VERNON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Joe Biden hugs Crystal Turner of Columbus, Ohio, with Moms Demand Action during a campaign rally Tuesday.

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