Miami Herald (Sunday)

Biden, Harris prepare to travel more as campaign heats up

- BY BILL BARROW AND WILL WEISSERT Associated Press

After spending a pandemic spring and summer tethered almost entirely to his Delaware home, Joe Biden plans to take his presidenti­al campaign to battlegrou­nd states after Labor Day in his bid to unseat President Donald Trump.

No itinerary is set, according to the Democratic nominee’s campaign, but the former vice president and his allies say his plan is to highlight contrasts with Trump, from policy arguments tailored to specific audiences to the strict public health guidelines the Biden campaign says its events will follow amid COVID-19.

That’s a notable difference from a president who on Thursday delivered his nomination acceptance on the White House lawn to more than 1,000 people seated side-by-side, most of them without masks, even as the U.S. death toll surpassed 180,000.

“He will go wherever he needs to go,” said Biden’s campaign co-chairman Cedric Richmond, a Louisiana congressma­n. “And we will do it in a way the health experts would be happy” with and “not the absolutely irresponsi­ble manner you saw at the White House.”

Richmond said it was “always the plan” for Biden and his running mate Kamala Harris to travel more extensivel­y after Labor Day, the traditiona­l mark of the campaign’s home stretch when more casual voters begin to pay close attention.

Trump and Republican­s have for months mocked Biden as “hiding in his basement,” because Biden has anchored his campaign from his Wilmington, Delaware, residence since mid-March, when public health officials first recommende­d that Americans severely limit close social contact.

Biden has conducted online fundraiser­s, campaign events and television interviews from his home, but traveled only sparingly for speeches and roundtable­s with a smattering of media or supporters. His only confirmed plane travel was to Houston, where he met with the family of George Floyd, the Black man who was killed by a white Minneapoli­s police officer on May 25, sparking nationwide protests. Even some Democrats worried quietly that Biden was ceding too much of the spotlight to Trump. But Biden aides have defended their approach. “We will never make any choices that put our staff or voters in harm’s way,” campaign manager Jen O’Malley Dillon said in May.

Throughout his unusual home-based campaign, Biden blasted Trump as incompeten­t and irresponsi­ble for downplayin­g the pandemic and publicly disputing the government’s infectious disease experts. Richmond said that won’t change as Biden ramps up travel.

“We won’t beat this pandemic, which means we can’t restore the economy and get people’s lives back home, unless we exercise some discipline and lead by example,” Richmond said, adding that Trump is “incapable of doing it.”

As exhibited by his acceptance speech Thursday, Trump is insistent on as much normalcy as possible, even as he’s pulled back from his signature indoor rallies after drawing a disappoint­ing crowd in Tulsa, Oklahoma on June 20. Trump casts Biden as wanting to “shut down” the economy to combat the virus. “Joe Biden’s plan is not a solution to the virus, but rather a surrender,” Trump declared on the White

House lawn. The Democrat also has called for a national mask mandate, calling it a necessary move for Americans to protect each other. Harris on Friday talked about the idea in slightly different terms than Biden, acknowledg­ing that a mandate would be difficult to enforce.

“It’s really a standard. I mean, nobody’s gonna be punished. Come on,” the California senator said, laughing off a question about how to enforce such a rule during an interview that aired Friday on “Today.” “Nobody likes to wear a mask. This is a universal feeling. Right? So that’s not the point, ‘Hey, let’s enjoy wearing masks.’ No.”

Biden and Harris have worn protective face masks in public and stayed socially distanced from each other when appearing together at campaign events.

 ?? ERIN SCHAFF The New York Times ?? Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden, with his running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), says he will hit the campaign trail after Labor Day.
ERIN SCHAFF The New York Times Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden, with his running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), says he will hit the campaign trail after Labor Day.

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