US Election News: Difference between revisions
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[[File:May Polling 538.jpg|thumb|Swing State Polling May 2020 538]] | [[File:May Polling 538.jpg|thumb|Swing State Polling May 2020 538]] | ||
<embed> https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2020/6/12/1952810/-NY-Times-Senator-Kamala-Harris-emerges-as-the-front-runner-in-a-short-list-of-six?utm_campaign=trending&fbclid=IwAR2XCOawbXASpniAO3llGvjOVYA1g06hNO87uG3jxFeo9K1_CJ4iuvBg8ck </embed> | |||
=====Why Black Voters Back Biden===== | =====Why Black Voters Back Biden===== |
Revision as of 10:00, 13 June 2020
Why Black Voters Back Biden
Such solid support helps explain why a 77-year-old white man is leading the most diverse presidential field in history among black voters. That backing has sustained Biden through a torrent of controversies that would sink virtually any other Democratic politician, including a series of awkward comments about race and persistent attacks from President Donald Trump on son Hunter Biden’s business ties in Ukraine.
Black voters will be crucial in determining the next Democratic nominee. Biden’s support among this group gives him an important and sometimes overlooked advantage nearly two months before voting begins. While Biden is bunched near the top of the pack in the overwhelmingly white early voting states of Iowa and New Hampshire, he’s better positioned in the more diverse states that follow.
Black voters are a dominant force in South Carolina, where two-thirds of the electorate in the 2016 Democratic presidential primary was nonwhite, according to data provided by the South Carolina Election Commission. A recent Monmouth University poll shows Biden earning support from about 4 in 10 black voters while Sens. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts trailed with 11% each.