Oman Daily Observer

In bid for unity, Sanders backs Biden to challenge Trump

- TREVOR HUNNICUTT & JAMES OLIPHANT

Senator Bernie Sanders on Monday endorsed his longtime rival former Vice President Joe Biden, a move aimed at unifying a Democratic Party long fractured along moderate and liberal lines ahead of the election match-up against President Donald Trump. Sanders cited the novel coronaviru­s outbreak as a reason for the party to come together behind Biden, the likely Democratic presidenti­al nominee after the progressiv­e firebrand Sanders suspended his White House campaign.

Sanders’ endorsemen­t during an online campaign event came as Biden’s team had already begun reaching out to advocacy groups on the left to enlist their support for the November 3 general election battle against the Republican Trump.

Before the pandemic brought the Democratic primary contest to a virtual halt, Biden had built up a commanding delegate edge over Sanders, leading the US senator from Vermont to declare last week he saw no viable path to the nomination.

Even so, it remained unclear how soon Sanders, who is especially popular with liberal young voters, would rally behind Biden, whose support comes chiefly from the party’s older moderates.

Sanders’ quick move to back Biden made for a stark contrast to 2016, when Sanders waited until the eve of the summer Democratic National Convention to support the then-nominee, Hillary Clinton.

In the online event, Sanders called on Democrats, independen­ts and Republican­s “to come together in this campaign to support (Biden’s) candidacy, which I endorse, to make certain that we defeat somebody who I believe ... is the most dangerous president in the modern history of this country.”

Biden responded by terming Sanders “the most powerful voice for a fair and more just America.”

With social distancing in widespread effect, Biden has been forced to move the bulk of his campaign to online events and has watched as the global pandemic had relegated the US presidenti­al race to the back burner.

The Sanders endorsemen­t gives him a much-needed jolt of energy and attention.

As the last two standing in a bruising Democratic primary, Biden and Sanders represente­d the conflict raging within the party between its moderate and liberal wings, with moderates claiming expansive progressiv­e policies would alienate centrist voters needed to beat Trump. But Biden and Sanders, contempora­ries who both have served in the Senate, largely treated each other with civility, even when some on the left wanted Sanders to be more critical of Biden’s moderate approach.

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