Houston Chronicle Sunday

Williamson launches a long shot challenge against Biden

- By Will Weissert

WASHINGTON — Self-help author Marianne Williamson, whose 2020 White House campaign featured more quirky calls for spiritual healing than actual voter support, launched another longshot bid for the presidency on Saturday, becoming the first Democrat to formally challenge President Joe Biden for the 2024 nomination.

“I, as of today, am a candidate for the office of president of the United States,” she said in a campaign kickoff in the nation’s capital.

The 70-year-old onetime spiritual adviser to Oprah Winfrey will almost certainly provide only token primary opposition — a testament to how strongly national Democrats are united behind Biden. Still, she tweaked the president, a longtime Amtrak rider, by holding her opening rally at the presidenti­al suite at Union Station, Washington’s railway hub.

Biden gave his own speech from Union Station, close to the Capitol, just before last November’s elections, when he led Democrats to a surprising­ly strong showing, urging voters to reject political extremism and saying “democracy itself” was at stake.

Williamson, whose red, blue and black campaign signs feature the dual slogans “A New

Beginning,” and “Disrupt the System,” plans to campaign in early-voting states on the 2024 election calendar, including New Hampshire, which has threatened to defy a Bidenbacke­d plan by the Democratic National Committee to have South Carolina lead off the nominating contests.

Democrats and Republican­s in New Hampshire have warned that if Biden skips the state’s unsanction­ed primary and a rival wins it, that outcome could prove embarrassi­ng for the sitting president — even if that challenger has no real shot of actually being the nominee.

“You can appreciate what the president has done, defeating the Republican­s in 2020, and still feel that it is time to move on,” Williamson said in a recent interview with “Good Morning New Hampshire.”

Biden, 80, is the oldest president in U.S. history and would be 86 at the end of a second term. Most people in the United States — and even most Democrats — say they don’t want him to run again, according to a poll from The Associated PressNORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

The president is expected to announce in the coming weeks that he’s running again. First lady Jill Biden recently told the AP that there was “pretty much” nothing left for the president to do but pick a time and place to announce his reelection bid.

Williamson insists her 2024 campaign is about far more than just making a statement.A

Texas native who now lives in Beverly Hills, Calif., Williamson is the author of more than a dozen books. In the 1980s, she opened the Center for Living in Los Angeles, and later New York, which worked to support people with HIV and AIDS. She ran an unsuccessf­ul independen­t congressio­nal campaign in California in 2014 and supported Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders’ 2016 progressiv­e challenge of eventual Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton.

In 2020, Williamson was best known for wanting to create a Department of Peace and arguing the federal government should pay massive financial reparation­s to Black Americans as atonement for centuries of slavery and discrimina­tion.

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