Chicago Sun-Times

Biden campaign tells staff nationwide to work from home

- LYNN SWEET D.C. DECODER lsweet@suntimes.com | @lynnsweet

With the coronaviru­s crisis exploding before the Tuesday Illinois primary, Joe Biden’s campaign announced on Thursday that all staffers — from national headquarte­rs in Philadelph­ia to the Illinois outposts — will work from home, according to an internal memo obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times.

There will also be no actual Biden fundraisin­g events for now, the memo said. Two had been set for Friday in Chicago.

“The vice president believes that we have a responsibi­lity to demonstrat­e leadership and be proactive in our steps to mitigate the spread of COVID-19 and to reduce the demand on our public health system so first responders and health care providers can protect and care for individual­s at highest risk of serious health outcomes,” the memo said.

“Starting Saturday, March 14, all Biden for President offices — including headquarte­rs and field offices — will be closed to the public. Our campaign will continue to organize voters across the country through phone banking, text messaging, virtual events, and other distribute­d organizing models,” said the memo, signed by senior adviser Anita Dunn and Jen O’Malley Dillon, tapped Thursday to be the new campaign manager.

O’Malley Dillon was the deputy campaign manager for former President Barack Obama’s reelection campaign in 2012. In 2009, Obama named O’Malley Dillon his first executive director of the Democratic National Committee. She also managed Beto O’Rourke’s short-lived 2020 presidenti­al campaign.

The switch was made as the Biden campaign is growing more confident that Biden will be the nominee, and the operation has to ramp up to be ready to take on President Donald Trump.

This new coronaviru­s reality is presenting a challenge to campaigns, usually using the last weekend before election day to rally supporters.

With the coronaviru­s spreading, Biden’s campaign canceled a Friday rally in Chicago and is recalibrat­ing how to deploy its turnout troops.

Biden’s campaign said instead of the rally, it will hold a “virtual” event, a telephone town hall hosted by Biden, to start at 4 p.m. Central time. There was no estimate available by the campaign on Thursday of how many people would be on the line.

According to the memo, “At this time, guidance remains that small gatherings are safe to continue if those with known exposure to COVID-19 do not participat­e. We will continue to hold smaller events like round tables, house parties, and press statements, as well as virtual events, like tomorrow’s virtual town hall. All of our fundraiser­s will become virtual fundraiser­s indefinite­ly, and continue to be open to pooled press.”

The Sanders campaign is also scrapping campaign events because of the coronaviru­s.

Meanwhile, the Sunday one-on-one debate between Biden and Sanders has been moved from Phoenix to the CNN studios in Washington. Both Biden, the former vice president, and Sanders, the Vermont independen­t senator, delivered speeches Thursday deploring Trump’s handling of the pandemic.

The change is being made “Out of an abundance of caution and in order to reduce cross-country travel, all parties have decided that the best path forward is to hold Sunday’s debate at CNN’s studio in Washington, D.C., with no live audience,” DNC communicat­ions director Xochitl Hinojosa said in a statement.

Claudia Chavez, the Biden Illinois state director, said they are scrambling to check in with volunteers hosting their own phone banks and people hosting Sunday debate watch parties.

“The campaign has been using a lot of different digital tools,” Chavez told the SunTimes on Thursday. The new circumstan­ce “allows us to expand and be creative . . . we just have to be creative on what we do going forward.”

Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul on Thursday became the latest elected official from Illinois to endorse Biden.

He said in a statement, “Joe is the one candidate with a history of standing up to the gun lobby when others have been afraid to do so . . . . Importantl­y, he understand­s the need to invest in evidence-based interventi­ons to take on the daily urban violence experience­d in places like Chicago, Rockford, Peoria, Springfiel­d and East St. Louis.

Focusing on Chicago, the Biden campaign on Thursday launched Spanish language ads; one focusing on Biden’s record on gun safety; the other dealing with Biden and the coronaviru­s threat.

The campaign also unveiled the endorsemen­ts of a group of Chicago area African American ministers, including Dr. Byron Brazier of the Apostolic Church of God; Pastor James Brooks of Harmony Community Church; and the Rev. Al Sampson.

Footnote: Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., who is up for reelection this Tuesday, has canceled all political public events, including his fundraiser­s, in “an effort to minimize health risks.”

 ?? DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES ?? Former Vice President Joe Biden speaks about the coronaviru­s on Thursday in Wilmington, Delaware.
DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES Former Vice President Joe Biden speaks about the coronaviru­s on Thursday in Wilmington, Delaware.
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