The Daily - On the Ballot in South Carolina: Biden’s Pitch to Black Voters
Episode Date: February 2, 2024The Democratic presidential nomination process begins tomorrow in South Carolina, and President Biden is running largely uncontested. But his campaign is expending significant resources in the race to... try to reach a crucial part of his base: Black voters.Maya King, a politics reporter at The Times, explains.Guest: Maya King, a politics reporter for The New York Times.Background reading: In South Carolina, Mr. Biden is trying to persuade Black voters to reject Trump.South Carolina was the home of Mr. Biden’s political resurrection in the primaries four years ago, and it is reaping the rewards.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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From New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, when the Democratic presidential nomination process
begins tomorrow in South Carolina,
the question is not who will win,
but whether President Biden can fix his growing problem
with Black voters.
My colleague, Maya Kim, explains.
It's Friday, February 2nd.
So, Maya, after weeks of covering the Republican presidential nomination process in Iowa and then New Hampshire,
we are now officially ready to turn to the Democratic nomination process.
And that begins in South Carolina, not where it used to begin, which was in Iowa, along with the
Republicans starting there. And just to begin, remind us why South Carolina is going first this
year. So this process really started four years ago when Black voters in South Carolina turned
out in large numbers to vote for then-candidate Biden, effectively saving his campaign. He was
really trailing in Iowa and in New Hampshire. And it was when he got to South Carolina
that all of these Black voters, seeing him as really the most pragmatic option, turned out in
these large numbers to vote for him. And he took that momentum from
South Carolina to Super Tuesday, where he won pretty overwhelmingly. And then, of course,
was then the Democratic Party's nominee for president. Right. And Biden's very explicit
about this and proud of it. He will frequently say, Black voters in South Carolina saved,
will frequently say, Black voters in South Carolina saved, revived my primary campaign,
and they are the reason I'm president. He is not quiet about the role that South Carolina has played in his life and certainly in his political livelihood. President Biden really points to
South Carolina and Black voters here as a really key part of his coalition. And it's the reason why he openly says he asked
the Democratic Party to put South Carolina first in the order of early primary states,
putting Black voters, Black Americans in the driver's seat, being the first Democrats in
the country to decide who they want to be president. And there's not a lot of suspense around what's going to happen tomorrow.
The primary here in South Carolina is largely uncompetitive.
It's very clear that Biden will be victorious.
However, we're not really watching for the election results.
We're more looking at what's happening outside of them
and some of the dynamics that have caused Democrats
to really hone in on South Carolina.
And it's because they've identified in polling,
in focus groups and conversations,
a real problem with one of the key coalitions
that they will need in November, and that's Black voters.
And that's why South Carolina for the last several weeks has been something of a
laboratory or a proving ground of sorts for Democrats as they try to form a message that
would excite and galvanize Black voters, not just here, but across the country. Democrats hope here
is that what they learn from Black voters in South Carolina is applicable to Black voters in other parts of the country, cities like Detroit, Milwaukee, even Atlanta, with large Black communities in key swing states.
Well, Maya, remind us of just how meaningful a problem Biden has with Black voters,
according to all the data that you have been looking at. It's a pretty big problem. In 2020, President Biden won the election with about 87% of the Black vote. But polling that The Times has done
found that at this stage, he only has about 71% of support from Black voters.
That's a pretty steep decline. Sure is.
And what's even more concerning for Democrats is that former President Trump has actually
increased his support among
Black voters from 8% that he won in 2020 to about 22% that our poll found late last year.
It's a really striking drift away from Biden because a Republican presidential candidate
has not topped more than 12% from Black voters in almost 50 years. And so if former
President Trump were to really have more than 20% support from Black voters, that would be a historic
shift in Black voting behavior. I'm curious, Maya, in your reporting, what are you finding explains such a major decline in support from what you have described
as a core and historically faithful group of Biden supporters, these Black voters?
And what reasons are being offered to explain it?
I've spoken to Black voters across the country.
Hi, this is Maya King.
I'm a reporter with the New York Times.
Hi, is this Dorian?
Yes. Hi, Talitha King. I'm a reporter with the New York Times. Hi, is this Dorian? Yes.
Hi, Talitha?
Hello.
Yes.
Hello.
Hi, Avion, it's Maya King with the New York Times.
Is now a good time to chat?
One theme that's really emerged in these conversations, Michael,
has been this general feeling of malaise.
I'm just not won.
Like, they haven't won me over yet.
Everybody talks and gets everybody to vote for them,
and then when they get in the office, they don't do a lot of. Everybody talks and gets everybody to vote for them. And
then when they get in the office, they don't do a lot of the things that they say they're going to
do. And also this idea that President Biden campaigned and made so many promises to Black
voters, but did not deliver on those promises. Hmm. Like what? Student loan debt is one issue
that comes up quite a bit. He says, I'm looking at the fact that now I got a bill that I got to pay that I barely can make ends meet to pay.
So it's like, what did you really do?
A lot of Black folks that I talk to are up to their necks in student loan debt.
And they remember the promise that Democrats made to try to alleviate some of that.
Like you guys talk so much about getting it done and then the forgiveness is not but for so long, you know what I mean?
Like they'll let you not have to pay for a little bit, but then you have to wind up paying it anyway.
And they also remember how that hasn't really worked out.
And it feels like a promise that really fell through,
one that they were really looking forward to
that Democrats did not make good on.
Right, Biden attempted to make good on it
through executive action.
He has been undermined largely by Republicans
seeking to block him in the courts,
and he hasn't had a lot of success with the courts.
Right.
And how old are you?
I'm 18.
Okay, so you are...
And especially when I talk to younger voters, what they point out to me is his age.
I know a lot of people talk about how old he is and how he's like he's too old to get around or assume they'll say that he'll pass away.
They see him as this representative of a bygone era of politics that he doesn't understand or really relate to a lot
of the issues that are more relevant to their lives and that they just don't see him as a figure
who is really compelling to them who they would want to vote for and feel enthusiastic about.
Right. What do you want to see Biden do and like what should he tell people your age to get people
to listen and turn back out to vote?
I feel like an effective message would just be like, knowing that he's listening,
like maybe he doesn't know. Right. This is kind of the age and charisma question that has
trailed Biden now for years. Absolutely. Another thing that I hear a lot is, of course, the economy,
Absolutely.
Another thing that I hear a lot is, of course, the economy, that things are more expensive, that even though people are working, it's still hard for them to afford housing, to afford groceries,
and to afford being able to support their families.
At the same time, we're looking at the economy and what's best for the people.
You know, gas prices were lower.
You know, more jobs were available for people.
Prices were lower.
More jobs were available for people.
And they point to this steep uptick in prices and this general harder living
as really having been palpable under Biden's presidency.
This country is a business,
and a man with business ethics such as Trump,
you know, led to come to great.
And this is where Trump's appeal starts to really show itself.
I look at it as a business aspect and a better choice for this country, by the way that it
is, would be Donald Trump.
I spoke to a voter who said that he felt the economy was better under former President
Trump, that he looked at the former president's position as a businessman, in his words,
and said that he has a better grasp of what's happening in the economy.
Interesting.
I'm just waiting to see who's going to have the best views,
who's going to put out the best policies for the American people.
And whatever side that is, you know, that's one side I will lean to.
But today you're saying that's Trump.
Correct.
And what else are you hearing from these Black voters?
Well, something that's come up a little more recently in conversations with particularly Black organizers and community leaders and faith leaders is a real disaffection for Biden in terms of their perception of his support for the war between Israel and Hamas.
Black faith leaders are extremely disappointed in the Biden administration on this issue.
I spoke with a number of Black pastors across the country.
There are many who are, when I have conversations with them, having real issues with the White House.
Who said that the folks in their pews, their congregants, are really upset and disappointed in the Biden administration.
Babies and incubators and mothers and fathers, children, people had nothing to do with Hamas being killed.
As they see on the news, on social media, and in their feeds, these images of destruction in Gaza.
And the fact that 25,000 have been killed without the kind of outcry in America,
we know wouldn't happen if these were white people. We know that. And so there is that
commonality that Black Americans feel. And they have started to understand or feel some sort of
kinship between Palestinians and their plight and that of Black Americans, that both of these groups in some way are both oppressed people
or have a history of oppression in their respective countries.
We're giving Israel a lot of taxpayer money,
to my knowledge, with no conditions.
And Netanyahu is telling us,
just give us the money and leave us alone.
That's untenable. That's untenable.
They feel like the Biden administration has played such a role in helping finance this,
and it's really impacted their support now among a very key group of Black voters,
Black faith voters for the Biden administration.
And when you say Black faith voters, just explain that.
These are largely older Black folks, church-going folks who spend a lot of time in Black faith
spaces. And this is really a group of people that lies at the core of Biden's Black support.
These are the folks who vote very regularly in almost every election and also I should point
out that Black churches are a really important part of Democrats get out the vote efforts.
Right.
That's been a place where they've always been able to talk directly to Black voters
so it's very striking now to hear that the same folks who are pretty used to hearing from Democrats, talking about politics, may have even had Biden come visit their church, are saying that they are paying attention to his foreign policy and saying that they really, really don't agree with it.
and saying that they really, really don't agree with it.
So assuming the Biden campaign has found similar reasons as you have for the growing Black disillusionment with him
in this re-election campaign,
it feels like the challenge for them
is just the breadth of explanations
voters are giving for why they're souring on him.
It's not just one thing. It's
a dozen things. It's economic explanations. It's a personal disconnection. It's things like his
support for Israel in the war against Gaza. And that would seem to all add up to a very challenging
problem to fix. Yes, and it's a problem that can't be fixed with a single message.
It's really one that they're going to have to tackle across multiple fronts. And so I think
that's why you see so much money and time and effort being poured into a state like South Carolina.
This is the campaign's first chance to really tackle this issue and
figure out what exactly they'll need to do to fix this problem that they have with Black voter
enthusiasm and replicate that in places across the country. We'll be right back.
So Maya, as the Biden campaign tries to solve its Black voter problem in South Carolina, what has its efforts there
actually look like on the ground? How is it trying to shore up and win back some of these Black
voters? Well, Democrats have spared no expense in their efforts here in South Carolina.
We've seen about a six-figure investment in staffing, and that's senior
advisors to the campaign and also an army of field staffers who have been in the more rural
and heavily Black areas of the state. President Biden himself has been to South Carolina twice in the last month.
Good afternoon. Good afternoon, South Carolina.
Vice President Harris has been here three times.
And we've also seen several pretty high profile Democrats come and visit the state and encourage folks to turn out. People like House Majority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, California Governor Gavin Newsom.
And all of them are going to these really far-flung parts of the state, meeting with voters, talking with them.
And it is you who convinced your neighbors and family members and friends and co-workers.
Reminding them of the role that they played in the 2020 election.
In so doing, South Carolina set the path for Joe Biden to become president of the United States
and me to be the first Black woman vice president of the United States.
It is you who did that.
And what is the overarching message that Biden, Harris, and all these representatives from the campaign
are really experimenting with as they speak to these groups of Black voters?
I heard a slogan multiple times
when I was at Democrats' First in the Nation dinner
last Saturday.
It was this message of promises made, promises kept.
And they're driving home this message, Democrats,
that they actually have made good
on many of the campaign promises that they made in 2020.
It's just that they've done a pretty poor job of articulating them in the past.
So the campaign is speaking pretty directly to what you have found, Maya, in your reporting,
that there's a perceived gap between what Biden said he would do for Black America and what he
has actually been able to do. I'm really curious, what are the examples that the campaign
points to where they can say, here's a promise we made that we actually kept?
Well, where you see an argument from a Black voter in polling or even in our own reporting
about falling short of the Biden administration, you can expect to see here in South Carolina,
Biden himself countering that message and saying,
this is where we've actually helped you.
And this is where this administration has delivered on the promises it's made.
I promised to help ease accumulated student debt
for millions of folks carrying during the crisis of the pandemic.
Supreme Court blocked me, but didn't stop me.
On the point of student loan forgiveness, this idea that Biden dropped the ball on
relieving student loans. Another 25,000 people a month, beginning next month,
are going to start to get their student loans forgiven because they're getting notified with
a letter from me, you're about to get that relief.
They've come out on these large stages
and actually talked about instances
where people have had their student loans relieved
through different policies that the Biden campaign has passed.
Record unemployment,
including the lowest levels of Black unemployment
ever recorded in American history.
They've also parroted out the fact that Black unemployment is the lowest it's ever been.
I promise you, we make record investments in HBCUs, including South Carolina's eight HBCUs.
HBCU students are just as talented as any student in America.
But their colleges and universities don't have the funding and endowments
for the cutting-edge laboratories and research centers.
They've gone to a number of historically Black colleges and universities
here in South Carolina and actually laid out how much money
each university has received from the Biden administration.
Well, I've invested so far $7 billion in HBCUs and accounting to help support our brilliant HBCU students.
And again, a promise made and a promise kept.
Again, a promise made and a promise kept.
Making the point that this president has invested more in historically Black colleges than actually any other president in history.
Interesting. Other policies that I've heard quite a bit, a little bit more in the weeds, but I think it does matter to these rural voters.
40,000 projects across American county.
Rebuilding our roads and our bridges, affordable high-speed internet everywhere in America, ripping out every poisonous lead pipe in America
so every child can turn on a faucet, drink clean water without worrying about brain damage.
Things like rural broadband and internet access in far-flung parts of the state,
infrastructure, clean water and pipes
in some of these places that historically
have not had access to those things.
And all the progress we've made
comes down to a simple proposition.
Promises made and promises kept.
Right. It's an interesting approach.
I mean, on their own,
some of these things that the campaign is talking about
seem relatively small.
But the idea is to have those accumulate
into a message that your life is better
under President Biden, so stick with him.
But what that seems to leave out are the less tangible objections
that Black voters might have to President Biden
that you found in your reporting, his age and the war in Gaza,
issues that are more complicated and harder for the campaign to counteract than something like
internet access or clean water. Right. And these are things that the campaign is going to have to
work on over the next 10 months. But I think what they're really driving home here in South Carolina
is a counter to this message that they have not
tangibly changed the lives of people and actually affected change in these different communities.
And I think that their hope is that once more people understand the way that these policies
have positively impacted their lives, it could counter some of the ill feeling that voters might have towards Biden.
So how is the campaign attempting to measure the success of what they're up to in South Carolina?
Like you said, they know they're going to win.
So when the data rolls in at the end of Saturday and they look at it, how are they going to
know what is effective in galvanizing Black voters? And just as importantly, how are they going to know what is effective in galvanizing Blackfooters? And just
as importantly, how are they going to understand what's not effective in galvanizing Blackfooters?
You know, Democrats have been pretty tight-lipped here in South Carolina in terms of identifying
what success would look like for them. But in conversations with people who will really be
watching turnout numbers tomorrow, I think if we see large turnout, especially in these heavily black areas of the state, Biden's allies here in South Carolina can count that as a win.
Mm-hmm.
So that's the measure, turnout, how many people actually show up at the polls, which is a little bit complicated because, as we've said, this is not a competitive primary.
It's on a weekend.
And the way you get people out to the polls is usually by giving them a competition in which they have very strong feelings.
That's right. And that really is Democrats' challenge here.
Even as they've laid out this message and aim to get more voters excited about supporting President Biden's re-election,
it's really difficult to actually get people to vote for that in a largely uncontested race.
And of course, former President Trump, who is likely to be the Republican nominee,
will not be on this ballot in the primary. But if we do find pretty large turnout after Saturday, I think it points to
the success of this entire operation. But even though this is not a competitive primary,
Democrats still turned out to show their support for this president's re-election.
It strikes me that if this strategy doesn't end up working, if it doesn't work in South Carolina,
and if it doesn't end up working in any of the states where Democrats need to turn out Black
voters, that this might not just be a problem for President Biden. And of course, it would be a
problem for Biden. It might cost him the election. But if, as Democrats fear, Black voters are open
to Trump and are willing to vote for a Republican in ways they haven't in decades,
then this becomes a much larger problem,
perhaps even crisis,
for the entire Democratic Party and its brand.
That's right.
It would mean a fundamental reordering
of the Democratic coalition.
And that would create much longer-term issues
for any Democrat running for president or even down ballot.
Right.
And so for all those reasons,
what happens in South Carolina matters
because it's the start of something very important
that keeps Black voters with the Democratic Party or it's the beginning of something very important that keeps Black voters with the Democratic Party, or it's the beginning of a real rupture, potentially, of that relationship.
It's a significant moment.
And so in the same way that Black voters turning out en masse for President Biden in 2020 was what drove his momentum to ultimately win the election.
Right.
Now, four years later,
the possibility of Black voters
shifting away from Democrats
after South Carolina
could be the thing
that threatens his re-election
here in 2024.
Well, Maya,
thank you very much.
We appreciate it.
Thanks for having me. We'll be right back. need to know today. On Thursday, the European Union authorized the creation of a $54 billion fund to support Ukraine in its war against Russia, a crucial lifeline because Congress
has refused to adopt new American funding for the country. The EU fund had previously been
blocked by the leader of Hungary, Viktor Orban, an ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
But in the latest round of negotiations, Orban dropped his opposition.
And President Biden has ordered broad financial and travel sanctions
against at least four Israeli settlers
accused of violent attacks on Palestinians in the West Bank,
his toughest actions against Israel to date
since it declared war on Hamas.
The Times reports that the sanctions are aimed, in part,
at assuaging Arab-American voters in the U.S.
who have expressed fury over Biden's forceful support of Israel in the war.
Today's episode was produced by Sydney Harper,
Summer Tamad, Will Reed, and Rochelle Banja.
It was edited by Rachel Quester and Brendan Klinkenberg,
contains original music by Marian Lozano and Pat McCusker,
and was engineered by Alyssa Moxley. Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Lansford of
Wonderly. The Daily is made by Rachel Quester, Lindsay Garrison, Claire Tennisgetter, Paige Cowett, Michael Simon-Johnson, Brad Fisher, Chris Wood, Jessica Chung, Stella Tan, Alexandra Lee Young, Lisa Chow, Eric Krupke, Mark George, Luke VanderVlug, M.J. Davis-Lynn, Dan Powell, Sydney Harper, Michael Benoit, Liz O'Balin, Aastha Chaturvedi, Rochelle Banja, Diana Nguyen, Thank you. Special thanks to Olivia Nat, Daniel Ramirez, and Brendan Klinkenberg.
Special thanks to Lisa Tovin, Sam Dolmick, Paula Schumann, Larissa Anderson, Julia Simon,
Sophia Milan, Mahima Chablani, Elizabeth Davis-Moore, Jeffrey Miranda, Renan Borelli,
Maddy Maciello, Isabella Anderson, and Nina Lawson.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro. See you on Monday.