Chattanooga Times Free Press

Biden to speak at Morehouse commenceme­nt

- BY ERNIE SUGGS AND GREG BLUESTEIN

President Joe Biden will deliver the commenceme­nt address at Morehouse College’s May 19 graduation ceremony, according to three officials with direct knowledge of the decision.

His remarks in Atlanta come as Biden has been trying to shore up his appeal to young Black voters ahead of a rematch against former President Donald Trump in November. Georgia is crucial to both campaigns, who see the state as a pivotal November battlegrou­nd.

In 2013, Barack Obama became the first sitting president to give the commenceme­nt address at Morehouse, the historical­ly Black college near downtown Atlanta. Officials at Morehouse College would not comment on the Biden speculatio­n Monday.

Biden is familiar with Atlanta’s Black colleges. In 2022, Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris visited the Atlanta University Center, which includes Morehouse, to promote voting rights legislatio­n. Biden visited Morehouse in 2015 to raise awareness of a federal effort to address sexual assaults on college campuses.

A Biden appearance at the nation’s only HBCU for Black men could be critical as the country heads toward a long summer of presidenti­al campaignin­g.

Biden and his Republican challenger Donald Trump are virtually tied in many polls, so Black voter turnout promises to be crucial.

In 2020, 95% of Black women and 87% of Black men voted for Biden — representi­ng the two most loyal demographi­c groups.

Arguing that Trump’s record on the economy and his passage of a criminal justice law were more beneficial for Black communitie­s, Republican­s have tried to drive a wedge between Black voters and the Democratic Party. Trump supporters have even suggested that his recent legal troubles were appealing to Black voters.

Democrats have dismissed Republican talking points as disinforma­tion, but in a recent Wall Street Journal poll, about 30% of Black men said they were either definitely or probably going to vote for the former Trump in November.

Biden has also tried to shore up support among young voters through his attempts to reduce or eliminate student loan debt. Four years after graduation, Black students owe an average of 188% more than white students borrowed, according to the Education Data Initiative, a research organizati­on.

Biden’s support of Israel in its ongoing war against Hamas could bring some challenges on campus for the president.

More than 1,100 people signed an online petition created in February urging the Atlanta University Center Consortium to publicly express its solidarity with the Palestinia­n people.

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