The Daily - Joe Biden’s Record on Race
Episode Date: July 3, 2019In the contest to become the Democratic candidate for president, Joseph R. Biden Jr. is being asked to confront his record on race, including past positions that some in his party now see as outdated ...and unjust. We look at the policies Mr. Biden embraced and how they were viewed at the time. Guest: Astead W. Herndon, who covers national politics for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading:Mr. Biden’s efforts to play down his role in overhauling crime legislation with segregationist senators in the 1980s and ’90s is at odds with his actions and rhetoric back then.Though a liberal on most civil rights issues, Mr. Biden was a leading opponent of busing as a tool to integrate schools.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, in the Democratic race for president,
Joe Biden is being asked to confront a record on race
that some in his party now see as outdated and unjust.
A stead-hernded on the policies Biden embraced, in his party now see as outdated and unjust.
A stead Herndon on the policies Biden embraced and how they were viewed when he embraced them.
It's Wednesday, July 3rd.
I do not believe you are a racist.
And I agree with you when you commit yourself to the importance of finding common ground.
But I also believe, and it's personal, and it was actually very, it was hurtful,
to hear you talk about the reputations of two United States senators who built their reputations
and career on the segregation of race in this country. And it was not only that, but you also
worked with them to oppose busing. And, you know, there was a little girl in California who was part
of the second class to integrate her public schools.
And she was bused to school every day.
And that little girl was me.
So I will tell you that on this subject, it cannot be an intellectual debate among Democrats.
We have to take it seriously.
We have to act swiftly.
We have to take it seriously.
We have to act swiftly.
Instead, to the average American watching the debates last week,
what do you think that this now famous confrontation between Joe Biden and Kamala Harris seemed to be about?
On its most literal level, it was two top-tier Democrats
having the most confrontational, direct moment we've seen in the primary so far.
I'm going to have this campaign litigated on who supports civil rights and whether I did or not.
I'm happy to do that.
I was a public defender.
I didn't become a prosecutor.
I came out and I left a good law firm to become a public defender when, in fact, my city was in flames because of the assassination of Dr. King.
But in the bigger, more abstract view, these were two different generations of Democrats.
One, a barrier-breaking, younger Black senator, pushing the old guard,
pushing the old guard, the senator who came in the 1970s, who had relationships with segregationists and avowed racists. She was pushing him on racial issues and trying to
hold him accountable for how the Democratic Party has handled issues of race for decades
leading up to this point.
But it also felt like this was about the details of a specific policy that Biden was a part of. And most of us probably don't really understand what his intentions were or what the context of that policy was.
So take us back to that time. Where was Joe Biden in his political career?
Where was Joe Biden in his political career?
Well, Joe Biden began as a lawyer in Wilmington and eventually a city counselor in the county.
And he was emerging at a really racially contentious time within the city and state.
In April, after the murder of Martin Luther King, the National Guard was called out in several cities to put down riots.
One of these cities was Wilmington, Delaware. But now in Wilmington, the National Guard is still on duty and the governor, Charles Terry, has no plan to send it back. And Joe Biden runs for Senate
in 1971 as a new type of Democrat. I'm Joe Biden and I'm a candidate for the United States Senate. A Democrat who understands
Black communities
and has personal and deep relationships
in those communities, but as
a Democrat who can also unite
the kind of outer portions of the state
which solve those issues very
differently. Politicians have done
such a job on the people that the people
don't believe them anymore, and I'd
like a shot at changing that.
Joe Biden himself tells a story about how he was the only lifeguard at a newly integrated
pool in Wilmington.
I applied to the city of Wilmington for a job and for, I was the only white employee
here.
And I learned so much. for a job and for, I was the only white employee here.
And I learned so much. And I realized I lived in a neighborhood
where I'd turn on the television
and I'd see and listen to Dr. King and others,
but I didn't know any black people.
No, I really didn't.
You didn't know any white people either.
That's the truth.
It was part of his identity and part of his brand that he cared about civil rights, understood the plight of African Americans in Wilmington.
But also he understood that kind of outer white Delaware was really motivated around grievance at the time. In 1971, a group of Black students had filed a lawsuit
in hopes to get the schools to further desegregate. And so the question of school
segregation and school integration was very much on the forefront of the state's politics.
And at the exact same time, that's when the young Joe Biden makes his way to Capitol Hill.
And what was Biden's position when it came to desegregation?
Where the court has concluded that a school district, a state, or a particular area
has intentionally attempted to prevent black or any group of people from attending a school, the court
should and must declare that to be unconstitutional and thereby move from there to impose a remedy
to correct the situation.
Joe Biden takes the position, as many other politicians did at that time, that they were
not opposed to the idea of integration.
What they were opposed to was the remedy.
I have argued that the least effective remedy to be imposed is the busing remedy.
You get a court order in the late 70s that says that Delaware schools are too racially segregated
and they must form a plan for racial integration.
and they must form a plan for racial integration.
And a plan is instituted by the courts that says from the city in Wilmington,
which is majority Black, and the suburbs outside of it, that both those groups of students were for some portion of their schooling
going to have to bus to the opposite community.
So for the kind of inner city students, which are majority Black, they were going to have to go out to the suburbs
for six years. And the outer suburbs were going to have to come into Wilmington schools
for about three years. So this becomes the plan that's put in place that inflames those racial tensions on both sides of the state.
And what is Biden's opposition to that specific solution?
That the idea of integration was not a problem, but it was how the courts were forcing them to
go about it. You have to think if you were a parent in the suburbs, which is almost exclusively white, but made that choice
for your family almost entirely around the school district that your child was supposed to go into.
And then there is a court order that comes down that says not only are different people coming
to that school, but that your child is going to be put on a bus to a different school.
That is the logic that those parents used to oppose the idea of busing.
And so at one point in 1975, Joe Biden says, the real problem with busing is you take people who aren't racist, people who are good citizens, who believe
in equal education and opportunity, and you stunt their children's intellectual growth by busing
them to an inferior school, and you're going to fill them with hatred. So Biden is sympathizing
with white parents in the suburbs who are suddenly feeling dislocated by this decision. But what about Black parents in the city
whose children would be bused
to these theoretically better schools in the suburbs?
What is Biden saying to them?
This is an important point.
Although the kind of white suburbs
were almost uniformly against busing,
somewhat because of the method
and sometimes because of pure racism.
In Black communities, particularly in Wilmington, there is not universal agreement on this issue.
There is universal consensus that integration is important and that their schools had not
been adequately funded or not been adequately supported by the state.
But when you look at polling and when you talk to people at the time,
the actual issue of busing is controversial.
Remember, these parents themselves
had to send their children further away
into neighborhoods and communities
that may have not always been welcoming to those students.
So it wasn't universally loved.
In one poll, about 40% of black parents supported the idea, 40% were against it, around 20% were unsure.
Joe Biden tries to take a nuanced position where sometimes it seems like he is a vocal opponent of the idea of busing and that he is signaling to kind of white Delaware that he is their advocate.
And on the issue that the argument is about, and that is whether or not busing serves a,
is A, required constitutionally, and B, has a utilitarian value for desegregation,
I come down on the side of A, it is not constitutionally required, and B, it is not a useful tool.
But there's other times when he sounds very much like many of the Black leaders in Wilmington
who say, I don't know if I like this remedy, but I do know that the issue of integration
is really important. So he's kind of firmly in the middle. And that kind of middle ground
is something we see him stake on a number of issues, most notably crime,
where he takes the kind of position and relies on those personal relationships with Black communities
while, according to his critics, legislating in the interest of white ones. We'll be right back.
So Joe Biden takes the middle ground or the middle ground for that time on busing.
How do we then see that in his approach to crime?
This one's a little different
because while Biden on busing
was seen as a kind of emblematic
of the larger democratic stance,
with crime, he was really kind of pushing the boundaries.
At that time, particularly in the 80s and 90s, was a kind of moral panic happening throughout the country.
Crack, the most addictive form of cocaine, is now sweeping New York.
Around the explosion of drugs in cities.
It's going nationwide, especially among the young.
A drug so pure and so strong strong it might just as well be called
crack of doom. And the violent crime that
often associated and came with
them. It's the devil. See, this
cocaine ain't nothing but the devil. And the
devil telling me to do it. And Biden,
as someone who had come up in Wilmington,
a community that was experiencing
these things closely,
he had
Black community leaders, neighbors of his, saying the issue was
very important, but that they were looking at kind of root cause problems of why crime was happening.
They were talking about issues like education or job opportunities and the like. When the outer
Wilmington and the kind of all-white suburbs, you were hearing a more vocal cry for increasing cops, increasing prisons and really cracking down on those tough on crime measures that came to the cities.
So, again, Biden is caught between political problem, but also one that's divided pretty clearly on racial lines.
And so what does he do? The truth is,
every major crime bill since 1976 that's come out of this Congress has had the name of the Democratic senator from the state of Delaware, Joe Biden, on that bill? There's this split screen of Joe Biden that you often hear
about when you talk to people in Wilmington. There is the neighbor who would go to Black churches,
would know the kind of leaders by name and the issues they were advocating for. But then in
Washington, you have a Joe Biden that is using those stories of Wilmington to kind of pass more tough on crime measures that some in that community say they weren't asking for.
In 1977, he first proposes mandatory minimums for drug sentences.
And through the 80s, in his connection with Strom Thurmond, they end up passing a really kind of significant set of bills.
Not enough prosecutors to convict them, not enough judges to sentence them,
and not enough prison cells to put them away for a long time.
In 1984, that establishes mandatory minimums. In 86, the Anti-Drug Abuse Act creates harsher
sentences for crack than powder cocaine.
And it kind of builds up into the early 90s when Bill Clinton is elected president of the 94 bill.
Thank you, Mr. Vice President, for your introduction and for your labors on this bill.
The three strikes and you're out kind of policy.
Three strikes and you're out will be the law of the land.
Three strikes and you're out will be the law of the land.
Or if you had three instances of drug offenses or violent drug offenses, it would be an instant life sentence.
We have the tools now. Let us get about the business of using them.
And what do we understand about how the Black community back in Delaware felt about these tough crime measures at the time?
Joe Biden talks about, to this day, in his presidential campaign,
they make a big point to say that the Congressional Black Caucus overwhelmingly voted for the bill
and that Black leaders at the time were very supportive of the bill.
That is partly true.
The Congressional Black Caucus certainly backed the bill
after showing some initial wariness, the majority of its members voted for it. bill. That is partly true. The Procrastinative Black Caucus certainly backed the bill after
showing some initial wariness the majority of its members voted for. There were some vocal
black mayors who were calling for these particular measures, but there were also some who were against
it.
The head of the Congressional Black Caucus spoke out against it.
Representatives like Bobby Scott said they knew that the kind of increase of police in these neighborhoods would cause detrimental effects.
Right. So what turns out to be, over time, the actual impact of all of these bills, including the biggest of them all, that 1994 crime bill, in the years that followed. The undeniable impact is an explosion
of America's prison population
that has disproportionately affected
Black and brown communities.
So coming out of the 80s and 90s,
you have a pretty clear articulation
from then-Senator Biden
that cops and the expansion of cops
is a preventative measure.
In a nutshell, the president's plan doesn't include enough police officers to catch the violent thugs, that cops and the expansion of cops is a preventative measure.
In a nutshell, the president's plan doesn't include enough police officers to catch the violent thugs.
He felt that the kind of presence of police officers,
the increased presence of police officers in these communities,
would inherently mean that crime would go down.
As the years have gone on, it has become clear that the actual effect was not that, but was the disruption of the communities themselves.
When I was in Wilmington talking to folks there, they were saying by 1994, it was already clear that the tough on crime kind of measures of the 80s weren't working on the streets. It was not decreasing crime, but more importantly, it was causing a kind of incarceration effect
that didn't have the terminology for mass incarceration
that we now call it, but it was clear
that kind of communities were getting ruptured
by the increase in sentences
and the increased focus on tough-on-crime measures.
And of course, the legacy of busing is that we've seen a resegregation of the U.S. school system
because the job was never really done.
Exactly. There is a narrative that busing failed.
But the truth is kind of murkier.
Busing as a policy often did achieve its goals and racially integrate the places it was instituted.
What failed was the political will to keep those measures in place that made integration happen and to see racial integration of schools as a necessary problem to solve.
of schools as a necessary problem to solve. So in the last decades, you have not only a return to pre-busing segregation levels, but in some places you have racial segregation in schools
becoming even worse than they were, or just as bad as they were at the time of Brown v. Board of Education.
So, Ested, it seems like what we're seeing in the debate last week, in this exchange between Harris and Biden,
was that Biden is going to have to confront these past policies as their legacies are understood in the current moment.
And that means complicated legacies with real implications,
many of them quite negative for the Black community.
Joe Biden is being, his whole record is being examined in new ways.
He's run for president twice before, but never as a frontrunner
and never as someone who enjoys
this amount of support
among Black communities.
Remember, this is still the vice president
to the first Black president.
This is still the person
who is seen oftentimes
as the most likely to beat President Trump
in the Democratic Party,
which Black communities
have often seen as their number one goal.
So he's enjoying this kind of support, robust support among Black communities,
while at the same time, his rivals are trying to use his record,
particularly on busing and crime, to wrest away those votes.
And I think that's a really interesting question, is will
these moments, like the one Senator Harris made happen in the debate, will they start to chip away
at that image of him as a champion and an advocate for Black communities? As people come to like
understand the record, and as people come to understand the context of Delaware at the time,
will he be seen as someone who was navigating a difficult racial terrain?
Or as someone who kept Black people close, but fundamentally legislated in the interest of white communities.
And so the question is,
will voters evaluate him
for what he was trying to accomplish
in the 70s and the 80s and the 90s,
or for what we now understand
the impact of those bills
to have been up through today. I wonder if you
have any sense of how Black voters are seeing that from your reporting. I've spent a lot of time
in South Carolina, where we have the biggest population of Black voters in the early states.
And Joe Biden enjoys a large amount of goodwill in those places. What that is not is a deep connection to Joe Biden as an individual.
As I heard someone say recently, his support is wide, but it's thin.
I think that people vote on a lot of different levels.
Voting based on policy and record is one of them.
Voting based on emotion and feeling and connection is another.
And I think in this era for Democrats and particularly for Black Democrats
who feel as if Trump has brought in a new era of white identity politics,
there is voting based on fear. And what you hear in South Carolina is not that they want to vote for Joe Biden because they believe in the things that he has done.
But they see him as kind of an emergency fix to a much worse problem for them, which they believe is the presidency of Donald Trump. I said, is what you're saying that Black voters may be more inclined to go with a safe choice?
Because in their mind, in this racial climate and in this political climate, the alternative, which is not winning the presidency, is far more threatening than a Democratic candidate with a debatable historical record on race.
Yep. And I think it's important to make distinctions when we talk about
Black voters. We particularly see that kind of calculation among older Black voters and Black
voters who are in the South. Now among younger voters, we see a bigger willingness to reject
Joe Biden because of some of those records and to embrace candidates who are talking more explicitly
and openly about structural changes to create racial equity.
But among the older voters who remain the real heart and soul
of the black vote and the sizable portion
of the Democratic electorate,
it's that calculation of safety
that's really helping Joe Biden right now.
But we should also say that among those older voters, many of them can remember 1994
and remember the 1980s and may have themselves supported these bills and seen their thinking
change as well. And I think that's an important thing to not forget.
It's just as Joe Biden has evolved, so have many of these people.
And I've talked to people who don't see what he did as particularly invalidating, frankly, because they have experienced that same evolution. And sometimes I talk to people who said the 94 crime bill ruined their homes.
And they will also say they can't wait to vote for Joe Biden in the primary.
Before I start, I'd like to say something about the debate we had last night.
And I heard and I listened to and I respect Senator Harris. But, you know,
we all know that 30 seconds to 60 seconds on a campaign debate exchange can't do justice to a
lifetime committed to civil rights. Well, so, Ested, what do you make of how defensive
Biden has been to these criticisms and these questions about his legacy?
Rather than acknowledging, you know, a lot has changed since then.
I was doing what I thought was best in the moment.
I now see, I now understand that it played out differently than I expected.
This is a question I've thought a lot about.
If by the early 1990s, it was clear to the cops in the ground in
Wilmington that the tough on crime measures didn't work, that the disparities that were created in
the 80s between crack and cocaine were disproportionately hurting Black communities,
why did it take until this year for Joe Biden to acknowledge it himself? And we don't have clear
answers to that. I haven't always been right. I And we don't have clear answers to that.
I haven't always been right.
I know we haven't always gotten things right.
But I've always tried.
We know that Joe Biden very rarely apologized.
But it's not until this year that you really have an articulation from Vice President Biden that he played a role as a senator
in creating some of these disparities.
Barack and I finally reduced the disparity in sentencing,
which we've been fighting to eliminate,
in crack cocaine versus powder cocaine.
It was a big mistake when it was made.
We thought we were told by the experts that crack, you never go back.
It was somehow fundamentally different.
It's not different.
But it's trapped an entire generation.
Do you think it's possible that he might fear that if he apologizes,
that that might weaken him more with moderate voters
who don't feel that Americans should have to apologize
for that period, for those instincts,
and for those policies?
I think that's a big possibility. I also think Joe Biden was acting in what he believes was good
faith, even at that moment. And what he thinks was the evidence in front of him and the context
of the time. I think it's important to always go back to Delaware with him. And in the moment that he comes up in, it is part of his personal and political identity that he was an advocate for the black communities.
And that he was performing a new role and frankly public service to those communities that white politicians had not done in that state. And so I think
it's bigger than just the political realities of right now and what apologizing would mean.
To apologize would go to the heart of what his identity has been since he got in public office in the 1970s.
And he's just not willing to apologize for that because, in fact, he's still proud of it.
The evidence in front of us tells us that's true. He was praising the crime bill just years ago,
and he has called it, some points his greatest accomplishment.
And he has shown a real resistance
to the many opportunities that activists
and other rivals have given him
to say that those actions were a mistake.
Astead, thank you very much. We appreciate it.
Thanks for having me.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
Here's what else you need to know today.
On Tuesday, the Trump administration said it would end its attempts to ask about citizenship on the 2020 census, dropping the proposed question from the survey. ruled that the administration had failed to offer a compelling explanation for including the question,
which critics said was an attempt to discourage undocumented immigrants from filling out the census
and ultimately skew the results of the census in favor of Republicans.
And House Democrats have filed a lawsuit against the Treasury Department and the Internal Revenue Service, demanding access to President Trump's tax returns.
The lawsuit moves a months-old political dispute between Congress and the White House into the federal courts.
At the heart of the fight is whether Congress has the legal right to review the president's personal financial information.
The White House says that such requests must be limited to materials needed to draft laws.
House Democrats say that their powers are far broader and are not subject to second-guessing by the executive branch.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you on Friday after the holiday.