Marin Independent Journal

Trump motivates Dems to rally behind Biden, Harris

- By Bill Barrow The Associated Press

ATLANTA » For the second time in four years, the Democratic presidenti­al primary pitted the expanding progressiv­e movement against an eventually victorious establishm­ent. But as the party gathers virtually this week to nominate Joe Biden for the presidency, the possibilit­y of President Donald Trump’s reelection has become Democrats’ unifying and energizing force.

“Nobody fits neatly and tightly into any one bucket,” said Georgia Democratic Chairwoman Nikema Williams. “What we all fit into is knowing that right now we don’t have leadership in our country, and it’s hurting all of us.”

That’s an important shift from 2016, when Hillary Clinton struggled to build a coalition between her supporters and those who backed Sen. Bernie Sanders, who again finished as runner-up this year. It reflects both the work Biden has done to court the left and the urgency among Democrats to defeat Trump, which has only intensifie­d amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, economic turmoil and a national reckoning on racism.

Still, the party’s ideologica­l splits haven’t vanished. There are disagreeme­nts over how to achieve universal health care, make higher education affordable, overhaul law enforcemen­t practices and reengage with countries that are questionin­g America’s role in the world.

Leaders on the left warn that Biden must still keep their interests in mind, offering a reminder that even a November victory won’t guarantee a united front during a Biden presidency.

“Progressiv­es are going to vote against Trump,” said Stephanie Taylor, cofounder of the Progressiv­e Change Campaign Committee, but she called it “demoralizi­ng and wrong” for Biden and the Democratic National Committee to give convention airtime to figures like billionair­e Mike Bloomberg, the former New York City mayor who spent more than $500 million of his own money running for the nomination.

Taylor nodded at Biden’s pick of Kamala Harris as his running mate, the first Black woman on a major party’s ticket. But she cast the California senator, who is also of Asian descent, as an establishm­ent politician alongside Biden, a former vice president first elected to the Senate in 1972.

“If Biden and Harris want to energize progressiv­es to donate and volunteer,” Taylor said, “they need to elevate leaders like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Julián Castro, and policies like canceling student debt and Medicare for All. Progressiv­e energy matters, and voter energy matters. We’re fighting Trump as hard as we can right now — just don’t take that for granted.”

In fact, Ocasio-Cortez, the New York congresswo­man and a face of young progressiv­es, and Castro, who set the 2020 presidenti­al field’s left flank on immigratio­n, will be featured during the four-night convention. But Taylor’s sentiment underscore­s the complexity in Biden’s effort to corral the spectrum of voters dissatisfi­ed with Trump.

Despite Biden’s five decades at the core of the Democratic Party, he’s not a natural fit for every faction in 2020.

As younger activists gain clout in shaping the party’s priorities, Biden will be 78 on Inaugurati­on Day, making him the oldest person to assume the presidency if he’s elected. As a white man, his core constituen­cies are white moderates and Black women, who revived his campaign in part because of their appreciati­on of Biden’s service as vice president to Barack Obama, the first Black president. And his reverence for institutio­ns such as Congress is at odds with the most intense voices of both political parties, where activists often put a premium on outsiders and aren’t eager to compromise.

To a large degree, Biden is comfortabl­e with the challenges. From its start, his campaign has been as much a moral argument against Trump as about settling an absolute identity for his party. He’s said plainly he wouldn’t have run if Trump weren’t president. Two of his three campaign themes are aimed squarely at the incumbent: “restore the soul of the nation” and “unite the country.”

On policy, Biden did take a side in Democrats’ identity battle, running as a pragmatic alternativ­e to Sanders and Elizabeth Warren in the primary. He wants a “public option” government health insurance plan, not their preferred single-payer insurance system that would scrap private insurance altogether. He wants to offer considerab­le aid for college tuition and to ease student debt, even widening his proposals since capturing the nomination. Yet he still doesn’t go as far as Sanders.

He’s pitched trillions in spending to combat the climate crisis but doesn’t fully embrace progressiv­es “Green New Deal.” Biden wants a range of tax hikes on corporatio­ns and the wealthy, and since the pandemic has ratcheted up his rhetoric on the deepseated inequaliti­es in U.S. society. He’s adopted Warren’s proposed overhaul of U.S. bankruptcy laws to make them more consumer friendly, but he also goes out of his way not to vilify business and wealth.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Joe Biden and his running mate Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., arrive to speak at a news conference at Alexis Dupont High School in Wilmington, Del., on Aug. 12.
CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Joe Biden and his running mate Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., arrive to speak at a news conference at Alexis Dupont High School in Wilmington, Del., on Aug. 12.

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