The Daily - Joe Biden’s Big Win
Episode Date: March 2, 2020For more than 30 years, over three presidential runs, former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. has been waiting to notch a victory like the one he received in the South Carolina primary this weekend.... The win also prompted former Mayor Pete Buttigieg to end his presidential bid, potentially resetting the race for the Democratic nomination. How did Mr. Biden do it? And what could his success mean for Super Tuesday?Guest: Alexander Burns, who covers national politics for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading: Mr. Biden has moved quickly to capitalize on his victory and to recast the Democratic primary campaign as a two-man contest between himself and Senator Bernie Sanders.To maintain momentum, he will have to win again in some states on Super Tuesday. That effort has some notable hurdles to overcome.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today.
Joe Biden scores a lopsided victory in South Carolina,
prompting Pete Buttigieg to drop out
and potentially resetting the race for the Democratic nomination.
Alex Burns on how Biden did it and what his victory could mean for Super Tuesday.
It's Monday, March 2nd.
Alex, let's talk about what happened on Saturday night.
I'll tell you what happened to me.
The polls closed at 7 p.m.,
meaning that's when the results
are supposed to start trickling in.
Good evening.
We are coming on the air now
with breaking news
in the race for the White House.
And I went to the Times homepage
and the race had already been called.
It is now 7 o'clock on the East Coast
and Fox News decision desk
can now project.
CBS News projects.
CNN projects that Joe Biden
is the winner in South Carolina. Which is a little strange.
Well, that's what happens when there's really not much suspense involved on election night.
The fact that we could make a projection right as the polls close, it's going to be a significant win for the former vice president.
We only see it in races where the people who make these analyses and assessments
This is overwhelming what we're looking at.
believe that there's really virtually
no doubt at all about the outcome.
And in fact, where the outcome looks like
it's going to be really lopsided
in the direction of one candidate.
Numbers coming in, the raw vote total,
but we can project that it is going to be big.
It'll be dominant.
This was one of the biggest victories we've seen for any candidate in this campaign.
This was a blowout, and Biden is winning in almost every category.
Biden carried the state by almost 30 percentage points, Bernie Sanders way behind with about 20%,
third-place candidate Tom Steyer with 11%, and nobody else in double digits.
Thank you, thank you, thank you, South Carolina.
Dominant, dominant, dominant win.
Thanks to all of you, the heart of the Democratic Party, we've just won and we've won big because
of you.
I want to break down exactly how Biden won so big.
What actually happened in South Carolina in terms of who showed up and for which candidate?
So South Carolina's primary electorate on the Democratic side is always majority African-American.
And Biden carried black voters basically in every age group, especially older
Black voters who he carried by an enormous margin. When you look at Black voters who are younger,
it's somewhat more even, it's a lot more even with Bernie Sanders. But Biden's still very much
holding his own, which is usually not the case with Joe Biden and young voters. We also saw
higher turnout, higher participation in the Democratic primary among
suburban moderate white voters in South Carolina. They also favored Joe Biden. This was not a
situation of the kind we've seen in other states where Biden does very, very well with African
Americans, much less well with white voters. In South Carolina, you were looking at an electorate
that was largely African-Americans
and moderate whites,
and those two groups
are very, very Biden-friendly.
So let's start with the Black vote.
We had talked on Friday
about how Black voters
have tended to align
behind a single candidate,
behind Barack Obama,
behind Hillary Clinton,
which helps explain
why the Black vote
can become so decisive.
But there was talk this year that there would be a more fragmented black vote,
particularly along generational lines.
It sounds like that's not exactly what happened.
Well, it's not what happened in South Carolina.
Bernie Sanders did not do a whole lot better with black voters in South Carolina
this time than he did four years ago.
And the question going forward is going to be
whether Sanders can improve upon his performance
with African-Americans outside the South
in a way that right now it doesn't look like
he is doing in the South.
It's a more conservative Black electorate in the South,
although African-American primary voters everywhere
do tend to be more moderate.
And what is the significance of that high rate of white suburban turnout for Joe Biden?
If Joe Biden is going to end up as the Democratic nominee, it has always been clear that he
has needed to join his strong support with Black voters with a couple other big constituencies
in the Democratic Party, including a good chunk of white voters.
other big constituencies in the Democratic Party, including a good chunk of white voters. He has so far done far better with less educated rural areas, as well as heavily African-American parts of the electoral map, that's actually a pretty encouraging picture for Joe Biden nationally. He has been trying to make the case to Democrats in this race that he is the
candidate who is best equipped to reassemble the coalition that has won them such a series of
electoral victories in the Trump era, in the 2018 midterm elections, when Democrats pieced together
strong turnout among their core base constituencies with moderate voters in those suburbs. If Biden can
week after week point to the results of primary elections and say, look at what I'm doing, it's
what we did in the midterms, it's what we need to do in November, that gives him a strong moral
case to make for the nomination. So Biden's basically saying, think of me like these House freshmen in the purple districts who won in 2018 and helped the House flip to Democrats.
Right. And in South Carolina, we saw the first realalescing of moderate constituencies across the political map or whether we are still going to see Bernie Sanders recording victory after victory on the strength of his very intense, hardcore coalition on the left while the moderate vote remains splintered. Because in South
Carolina, the moderate constituencies are really, really well aligned for Joe Biden. He is deeply
familiar with the politics of South Carolina, has decades-long relationships with many of the most
important political figures in the state. He's not going to be able to say that everywhere. And what we will see as the primary proceeds is how much what we saw in South Carolina is a result of Joe Biden's
distinctive relationship with that state. And you can easily see the race reverting to the pattern
that we've seen in other states so far, where Bernie Sanders has his very energetic plurality
coalition,
and Joe Biden is still jockeying for support against folks like Klobuchar, to some extent Warren,
and as of the next round of primaries, Mike Bloomberg.
Bernie Sanders has a huge head start organizationally, financially, in a lot of the contests around the country.
He has had the momentum from Iowa,
New Hampshire, and Nevada at his back. Biden needs to turn around his campaign in a very,
very short period of time. It's not impossible by any stretch, but I don't think that anybody close to Joe Biden looks at him today as anything besides something of an underdog.
Hmm. We'll be right back. anything besides something of an underdog.
We'll be right back.
So, Alex, let's talk about how all this helps inform what's going to happen tomorrow, Super Tuesday.
Fourteen states are going to vote on the same day.
And if I'm not mistaken, something like 30 percent of that electorate will be African-American.
First of all, what do you think matters about what happened in South Carolina in terms of what might happen on Super Tuesday.
So the Super Tuesday map is enormous and enormously diverse.
And there are states like South Carolina where Black voters could end up playing a decisive role.
Up to this point, we have seen that electorate
divided between a couple different options,
most importantly between Biden and Bloomberg.
And why are they choosing between Biden and Bloomberg?
Well, especially older African-American voters entered this primary season really favorably disposed towards Joe Biden.
You had this enormous reservoir of goodwill based on Biden's service as Barack Obama's vice president.
And then he had a bunch of really weak debates,
and he got clobbered in Iowa, and he got clobbered even more in New Hampshire.
And suddenly, voters across the board, including African-American voters,
started to wonder, is this guy really the strongest option for the general election?
And at exactly the moment that those doubts were starting to really percolate in earnest.
A great president and an effective mayor, leadership that makes a difference.
He's been a leader throughout the country for the past 12 years.
Mr. Michael Bloomberg is here.
Mike Bloomberg shows up with $500 million in television ads,
many of them showing him side by side with Barack Obama.
I want to thank the mayor of this great city,
Mayor Bloomberg, for his extraordinary leadership.
And talking about his record on issues like gun control
that are very, very important to Black voters
in Democratic primaries.
The hope for Joe Biden going into Tuesday
is that those voters who were with him at the start
and drifted away and were drawn in by Mike Bloomberg
will look at his own win in South Carolina and at Bloomberg's pretty rocky couple weeks on the trail and sort of go home.
Right. And to look at Biden and say, you know what, I had my doubts about this guy, but there's a reason I liked him at the beginning and I'm going to vote for him now.
So let's talk about this white suburban voter that we've been discussing on Super Tuesday.
This is someone who will be decisive in states like Virginia, right?
Right.
And what's the dynamic in there?
So this is another constituency where, at the start of the race, Biden was doing pretty well in those areas. You're talking about a sort of educated white professional
class that certainly isn't interested in Medicare for all and definitely wants to beat Donald Trump.
And if Joe Biden had come into this race as a swaggering dominant frontrunner and had blown
away the competition and debates, I think he would be rolling in those areas. That's obviously not
what happened. And for most of the last year, you have seen those
voters feel pretty drawn to a sequence of alternatives. Elizabeth Warren, Pete Buttigieg,
briefly Amy Klobuchar, even Kamala Harris, when you look back to last summer. These are people
who are looking for a winner and they're looking for somebody who's not necessarily super ideological.
who's not necessarily super ideological.
And there is a hunger, I think,
especially among a lot of high-information white voters,
people who follow the news really closely to sort of glom onto whoever the hot new thing is.
That has been Pete Buttigieg for much of this race.
Recently, you have seen a lot of interest in Mike Bloomberg,
people who just feel like they are new and different
and look like winners.
Right now, Biden has, again, a narrow window to look to those people and say, listen, your choices are me and Bernie Sanders. Who are you more comfortable with?
Mike Bloomberg's original rationale for entering the race was that Biden had to collapse.
And he was collapsing, right?
I mean, he was doing very badly in those first few primaries.
And the thesis from Mike Bloomberg was the reason to keep spending all this money is to emerge as the alternative to Biden out of the ashes of the Biden campaign.
But there are no ashes at this moment in the Biden campaign.
He's doing quite well.
So is this a Super Tuesday in which Mike Bloomberg has no real rationale?
Well, we're going to find out on Tuesday. I do think his rationale is a lot more strained right now than it was a week or two weeks ago. You know, part of it is about Biden being more resilient
than I think a lot of the Bloomberg folks expected. Part of it is about Bloomberg himself
having had such a rough couple of weeks on the campaign trail. This is how you describe your policing policy as mayor. Quote, we put all the
cops in the minority neighborhoods. And you explain that as, quote, because that's where all the crime
is. You went on to say, and the way you should get the guns out of the kids' hands is to throw
them against the wall and frisk them. You've apologized for that policy. But what does that
kind of language say about
how you view people of color or people in minority neighborhoods? Bloomberg had really set himself up
as this imposing alternative for moderate voters and for even non-moderate voters who are mostly
just interested in beating President Trump. And a lot of those people saw him on the debate stage
and concluded, this guy is actually
not so imposing after all. Well, if I go back and look at my time in office, the one thing that I'm
really worried about, embarrassed about, was how it turned out with stop and frisk.
And that probably needed to happen in order for Biden to make the kind of comeback
that he is attempting now. Okay, so tell us about the other key voters that we're going to be seeing
on Super Tuesday, the other demographics. When you look at the eastern and southern states,
it is mostly about the moderate whites and African-Americans that we've been talking about so far.
And then when you start to move further west, that's when Latino voters become extremely important and Asian-American voters as well.
The biggest states on the Super Tuesday map are Texas and California.
And if any candidate wins either of those states, and certainly if any candidate wins both of those states, it gives them an enormous claim to lead the Democratic Party nationally.
It potentially establishes them with a huge lead in the national delegate count.
And right now, the only candidate who looks like they're in a solid position to win both of those states is Bernie Sanders.
Now, there's a strong case to make right now that someone like a Biden
or maybe even a Bloomberg has the chance to pull off an upset in Texas. That's a state that has a
more moderate electorate overall, where Latino voters are more moderate than they are in
California, and where you do have a ton of those moderate white-collar suburbs that are so wary
of Bernie Sanders. When you move into a state
like California, it is just a much, much more liberal primary electorate from top to bottom.
And every poll that we have seen out of California so far has suggested that Bernie Sanders has a
pretty solid and maybe even dominant lead in the state. So we could end up in a really unusual
kind of situation on the night
of Super Tuesday, where for much of the night, it looks like Joe Biden or Mike Bloomberg or another
candidate is doing pretty well because of the makeup of the states that are in the eastern
time zone and the central time zone. And then as we move closer to the West Coast, suddenly Bernie
Sanders leaps out ahead and it becomes clear that actually he is
the guy who has had the upper hand all along. And that's what we will discuss at 4 a.m. with you
on Wednesday morning. I'm looking forward to it. So, Alex, what you're describing in the broadest
terms sounds like a Super Tuesday evening in which as we move across the country from east to west, we go from states that
are likely to break for moderates and are more testing the question of Biden versus Bloomberg
than they are Sanders versus all the moderates left in the race. And then we head to states
as we head west that are likely to break for Sanders and are demonstrating what sort of coalition he has built and how strong it's going to be.
I think that's basically right.
I think in the east, there still is the dynamic of Sanders versus all the moderates.
And the very fact that there is a realistic chance that Bernie Sanders can win states like Virginia and North Carolina is a testament to just how fragmented
the moderate vote has been for most of this race. And it is entirely plausible that from start to
finish on Super Tuesday, Bernie Sanders dominates from coast to coast, that moderate voters in the
East are split between Biden and Bloomberg, and moderate voters in the West are split between
them as well. And Bernie Sanders, by varying margins with coalitions
from 25% of the vote to 40% of the vote,
just dominates the night.
That is a real possibility.
It is also a possibility
that Sanders is going to find
that having a hardcore base
that makes up about a quarter
of the Democratic vote
in a lot of these more moderate
and diverse states
is actually not enough to win in a scenario where somebody, most likely Joe Biden,
has emerged as a standard bearer for folks closer to the political middle.
That's interesting. So the version of this, Alex, where Sanders essentially walks away
with the nomination after Super Tuesday, is the version of this where the question facing voters of Biden versus Bloomberg
actually costs both Biden and Bloomberg the win in the East and the South by splitting the vote.
The version of this where it's much less clear, and there's really no clear winner coming out of
this, is if Biden manages to pull together the moderate vote in those places.
I think that's right.
I think we should think about Super Tuesday in terms of sort of two big questions.
The first is, does Bernie Sanders become a dominant frontrunner?
Does he manage to just roll over the divided moderate wing of the Democratic Party and run up the kind of delegate lead
that would make him a prohibitive favorite to go into the Milwaukee convention with a
wide lead in the delegate count.
If that happens, then everybody else in this race, including Joe Biden, is going to need
to really assess what kind of path forward they think they have, and whether it's really worth waging a 50-state war against Sanders
in order to try to take away the nomination at a convention
where Sanders will enter as the clear leader.
If the answer to that question is no,
if Bernie Sanders is not an overwhelming favorite after Super Tuesday,
then I think the second question
is, is Joe Biden the clear runner-up or the clear alternative to Bernie Sanders? Because that is
what has eluded Biden and every other moderate candidate in this race so far is a moment of
clarity that signals to the entire country, this is a two-person race between a left-wing candidate and me.
Biden hopes that South Carolina
has set that process in motion.
It needs to come to fruition
in very, very short order on Super Tuesday.
And then from there,
this narrows to a Biden-Sanders race.
And then the campaign moves to places like Michigan
and Arizona and Georgia and Florida that will really test the mettle of these two guys as head-to-head candidates in states that are super important in a general election.
Thank you, Alex.
Thank you.
Today is a moment of truth.
After a year of going everywhere, meeting everyone, defying every expectation, seeking every vote,
the truth is that the path has narrowed to a close for our candidacy, if not for our cause.
On Sunday night, during a speech from his hometown of South Bend, Indiana,
Pete Buttigieg said he was ending his presidential campaign
because he was concerned about the impact of staying in the race.
We have a responsibility to consider the effect of remaining in this race any further.
Our goal has always been to help unify Americans to defeat Donald Trump and to
win the era for our values. Without mentioning Sanders, Buttigieg said it was time for the
Democratic Party to coalesce around a single moderate alternative.
We need leadership to heal a divided nation, not drive us further apart.
We need a broad-based agenda that can truly deliver for the American people, not one that gets lost in ideology.
We need an approach strong enough not only to win the White House,
but to hold the House, win the Senate, and send Mitch McConnell into retirement.
But to hold the House, win the Senate, and send Mitch McConnell into retirement.
Buttigieg was the second Democratic candidate to drop out of the race since the South Carolina primary.
Tom Steyer quit the race on Saturday night.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
Washington state has declared a state of emergency after multiple cases of the coronavirus were detected near Seattle, where a man died from the virus, becoming the first U.S. fatality from the epidemic.
Researchers studying infections in Washington said that the coronavirus may have been spreading there for weeks, undetected,
raising the possibility that up to 1,500 people may have been infected. We cannot make predictions as to how many cases we'll have, but we will have more and we will have more community cases.
It's simply just a matter of math.
So far, the United States has tested very few Americans for the virus.
But during an interview on Sunday with CBS's Face the Nation, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, Alex Azar, said that testing would begin to dramatically expand.
In terms of testing kits, we've already tested over 3,600 people for the virus.
We now have 70, the capability in, out in the field to test 75,000 people. And within the
next week or two, we'll have a radical expansion even beyond that of the testing that's available.
In Washington state...
even beyond that, of the testing that's available.
In Washington state, the places that have... That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.