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In Joe Biden鈥檚 last stand, a test for American centrism

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Randall Hill/Reuters
Democratic U.S. presidential candidate and former U.S. Vice President Joe Biden talks with the Rev. Isaac Holt during Sunday services at Royal Missionary Baptist Church in North Charleston, South Carolina, Feb. 23, 2020.

Updated March 1, 2020: Joe Biden resoundingly won South Carolina, garnering 48% of the votes. Sen. Bernie Sanders finished a distant second with 20%, and Tom Steyer finished third at 11%.

It all comes down to South Carolina.

For 50 years, American centrists had an established way of looking at the world. And for 50 years, Joe Biden has been a standard bearer for that bipartisan way of life.

Why We Wrote This

Individuals run for president. But Joe Biden鈥檚 candidacy is more than a test of the American public鈥檚 faith in one man. It is a test of how relevant centrism is in modern American politics.

Now, after dismal showings in the first two contests and a stronger effort last weekend in Nevada, the former vice president and his brand of politics have one last chance to make a stand in this critical Southern state.

Swooping into Charleston after a second-place finish in Nevada, Mr. Biden is demonstrating there鈥檚 some fight in him yet 鈥撀燼n 鈥渆dge,鈥 as one voter said after a campaign event on Monday. This week, influential South Carolina Rep. Jim Clyburn endorsed his longtime friend, after a feisty debate performance brought praise from pundits and over $1 million in donations in a single day. South Carolina polls show him with a growing lead, and his crowds have swelled to sizes not seen since he first launched his campaign.

Still, those facts belie a tough truth: A three-time presidential candidate, Mr. Biden has never won a single primary or caucus. And even if he wins on Saturday, he faces a difficult road ahead, with little in the way of campaign infrastructure or money for TV advertising in the 14 states that will vote on Super Tuesday. More broadly, it remains unclear whether he 鈥 or any Democrat today 鈥 can successfully revive the coalition of voters that put President Barack Obama in the White House for eight years, and which the party will likely need to defeat President Donald Trump.

鈥淲hen you come off three consecutive losses, it leads people to wonder, 鈥業s this somebody who can deliver the general election to the Democrats?鈥欌 says Jennifer Lawless, a political scientist at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. She adds: 鈥淭his is an opportunity for him to really turn things around. He seems more invested in making a case for himself.鈥

It has been done before, in this very place.

South Carolina Democrats decisively threw their weight behind newcomer Barack Obama in 2008, giving him a critical boost on his path to the nomination. Looking for an experienced and affable partner to help him govern, Mr. Obama tapped Mr. Biden for the ticket. The pair won reelection in 2012.

Mr. Biden鈥檚 ties to the Democratic electorate here, which is two-thirds African American, are personal and abiding.

鈥淗e is definitely one of us, he knows us, he belongs here,鈥 says Pleshette Grant, who came to hear Mr. Biden speak at the College of Charleston on Monday.

A bond forged in faith

As vice president, Mr. Biden prayed with families after a white supremacist killed nine black parishioners at Charleston鈥檚 Emanuel AME Church in 2015.

That connection led to a remarkable moment at a CNN town hall on Monday, when a pastor who lost his wife in that shooting asked Mr. Biden how his faith would inform his decision-making as president.

鈥淲ell, Reverend, I kind of聽know what it鈥檚 like to lose聽family, and my heart goes out to you,鈥 responded the former vice president, who lost his wife and infant daughter in a car crash on the eve of his first Senate term, and more recently lost his son Beau to cancer. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how you鈥檝e dealt with it, Reverend. But ... I鈥檝e only been able to deal with it by realizing they鈥檙e part of my being. My son Beau is my soul,鈥 he said, fighting tears.

Referencing his Roman Catholic faith, Mr. Biden said, 鈥淔or me, it鈥檚 important because it gives me some reason to have hope and purpose.鈥 He added: 鈥淚t took a long time for me to get to the point to realize that that purpose is the thing that would save me. And it has.鈥

The emotional exchange underscored what may be one of Mr. Biden鈥檚 most powerful assets as a candidate 鈥 not his decades of governing experience or his connection to Mr. Obama, but his humanity. The tragedies he鈥檚 endured in the public eye, and his ability to wrest meaning from them,聽connects him to many voters in a way that transcends politics.

鈥淚t is the president who has the responsibility to demonstrate not only empathy and compassion but also a vision for moving forward,鈥 says Professor Lawless. 鈥淏iden鈥檚 life story embodies that.鈥

Randall Hill/Reuters
Supporters of Democratic U.S. presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden listen to him speak at a campaign rally on the night of the New Hampshire primary in Columbia, South Carolina, Feb. 11, 2020.

Still, it鈥檚 unclear whether that sense of personal connection, and a campaign centered around decency and restoration, will be enough. Throughout much of this cycle, the party鈥檚 energy has seemed to be with the fiery left-wing candidacy of Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, whose passionate call to overhaul a system he says is rigged against average Americans has inspired many young people and newcomers to get involved.

鈥淛oe Biden is a decent, inherently good person who does respect America, its laws, its morals, and its mores,鈥 says Dalhi Myers, a young Richland County Council member who switched her endorsement from Mr. Biden to Mr. Sanders in January. 鈥淏ut I did not think [the Biden campaign] was well placed to bring people into the fold.鈥

Many younger Democrats see Mr. Biden as 鈥渂asically a mainstream Republican,鈥 says J. Miles Coleman, a political analyst at 鈥淪abato鈥檚 Crystal Ball鈥 in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Perhaps even more problematic are concerns about his skills as a candidate. Many of Mr. Biden鈥檚 debate performances and campaign events have been lackluster, to put it kindly, with a frequent tendency to go off-script and lose the thread.

鈥淭he idea of Biden is much better than the reality of Biden on the campaign trail,鈥 says Allan Lichtman, a political scientist at American University in Washington.

Still, most head-to-head polls to date show Mr. Biden defeating President Trump by a wider margin in key swing states than any other Democrat. And the Trump campaign has seemed more worried about his candidacy than any other 鈥 as seen in President Trump鈥檚 effort to get Ukraine to investigate the former vice president and his son.

On Wednesday, former President Obama asked South Carolina TV stations to yank ads by a pro-Trump PAC featuring a clip of him using the term 鈥減lantation politics鈥 in a way that misleadingly implied he was talking about Mr. Biden.

The comeback candidate?

The other thing Mr. Biden may have going for him is Americans鈥 love of a comeback.

鈥淲hen his back is against the wall, Biden does come out swinging and fighting,鈥 says Barbara Perry, director of presidential studies at the University of Virginia. In some ways, she adds, 鈥渋t is amazing that Biden has overcome these horrible tragedies to the point where he can still be out on the public stage fighting for the American people.鈥

Tall and straight as a two-by-four, with a reedy punch to his at times scattershot delivery, Mr. Biden strides the stage at an event at the College of Charleston, vigorously stabbing at the air with his finger.

In response to Mr. Sanders鈥 calls for free college education, Mr. Biden offers what he calls a more 鈥渞eality-based鈥 proposal on college debt, including forgiveness of 10% of loan balances per year of service to the country.

He also talks about gun violence 鈥 an issue of particular importance to the African American community, and one where Mr. Sanders, who in the past voted against the Brady Bill and in support of a bill shielding gun manufacturers from lawsuits, may be vulnerable.

鈥淚 defeated the NRA twice,鈥 Mr. Biden says.

Indignantly referring to the president as 鈥渢hat fella,鈥 he calls the Trump administration 鈥渕ore George Orwell than George Washington.鈥

Then, the veteran politician who first came to Washington when Richard Nixon was president, grew thoughtful.

鈥淲e have to remember that it鈥檚 an idea that holds our country together 鈥 an idea,鈥 he says. 鈥淭his is really about the soul of America. This is where we can turn it around. It is all within your power. You can win this election right here.鈥澛

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