Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Obama, Clinton, name entertaine­rs help Biden raise record $26 million

- By Colleen Long and Chris Megerian The Associated Press

Barack Obama, Bill Clinton and some big names from the entertainm­ent world teamed up Thursday night to deliver a rousing New York embrace of President Joe Biden that hauled in a record-setting $26 million-plus for his reelection campaign.

The mood at Radio City Music Hall was electric as Obama praised Biden’s willingnes­s to look for common ground and said, “That’s the kind of president I want.”

Clinton said simply of the choices facing voters in 2024, “Stay with what works.”

Biden went straight at Donald Trump, saying his expected GOP rival’s ideas were “a little old and out of shape.”

Moderator Stephen Colbert, in an armchair conversati­on with the trio, called them “champion talkers” and joked that the three presidents had come to town “and not one of them is here to appear in court,” a dig at Trump’s legal troubles.

The eye-popping fundraisin­g haul was a major show of Democratic support for Biden at a time of persistent­ly low poll numbers. The president will test the power of his campaign cash as he faces off with Trump, who proved with his 2016 win over Democrat Hillary Clinton that he didn’t need to raise the most money to seize the presidency.

During the nearly hourlong conversati­on, Obama and Clinton talked of how hard Biden’s job is.

They spoke of loneliness and frustratio­n over policies that work but aren’t immediatel­y felt by the public. They gave an insider’s view of the office as they sought to explain why Biden was best for the job.

“It is a lonely seat,” said Obama, who had hitched a ride to New York on Air Force One with Biden.

The talk was by turns humorous and serious, ending with all three donning sunglasses in the mostly dark music hall, a nod to the trademark RayBan sunglasses that Biden often wears.

Whirlwind schedule

The sold-out Radio City Music Hall event was a gilded exclamatio­n mark on a recent burst of campaign travel by Biden, who has visited several political battlegrou­nds in the three weeks since his State of the Union address served as a rallying cry for his reelection bid. Thursday’s event also brought together more than three decades of Democratic leadership.

The music hall’s marquee advertised the big-dollar night as “An Evening with Joe Biden Barack Obama Bill Clinton.” NYPD officers lined surroundin­g streets as part of a heavy security presence.

Protesters angry at Biden’s handling of the war in Gaza and strong support of Israel briefly disrupted the show, drawing a pledge from Biden to keep working to stop civilian deaths, particular­ly of children. But he added, “Israel’s existence is at stake.”

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