19 Aug 2020

US Election 2020: Biden is crowned as Democratic nominee

7:53 pm on 19 August 2020

Joe Biden has been officially anointed the Democratic presidential candidate at the party's convention, helped over the line with some glowing testimonials from elder statesmen.

Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden speaks about reopening the country during a speech in Darby, Pennsylvania, on June 17, 2020.

This is Joe Biden's third White House bid, having formerly run in 1988 and 2008. Photo: AFP

Two Democratic former presidents, Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter, and former Secretary of State Colin Powell, a Republican, endorsed Biden.

Clinton said President Donald Trump had brought "chaos" to the Oval Office.

Trump trails Biden in opinion polls ahead of November's election.

The [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/world/419813/us-election-virus-concerns-prompt-democrats-to-go-virtual-for-nominating-convention

convention is largely virtual], amid the coronavirus pandemic, and it is unclear whether a format of pre-recorded speeches and no live audience will generate the same levels of enthusiasm as the traditional party gatherings. Next week's Republican convention will also be mostly online.

Biden, the former vice-president under President Barack Obama, became his party's nominee on Tuesday night in a pre-recorded roll call vote from delegates in all 50 states.

This is Biden's third White House bid, having formerly run in 1988 and 2008. The 77-year-old's campaign appeared to be in danger of collapse back in February this year.

On the second night of the party convention on Tuesday, with the theme "leadership matters," Bill Clinton delivered the key address.

"Donald Trump says we're leading the world," Clinton said in his five-minute message pre-recorded from his home in Chappaqua, New York. "Well, we are the only major industrial economy to have its unemployment rate triple.

"At a time like this, the Oval Office should be a command centre. Instead, it's a storm centre. There's only chaos."

Following addresses from former First Lady Michelle Obama and Senator Bernie Sanders on Monday, Tuesday's speeches aimed to persuade voters the Democratic party is the best suited to repair problems at home and abroad.

Colin Powell said Biden shared "the values I learned growing up in the south Bronx and serving in uniform".

The decorated four-star general said he supported him for president because "we need to restore those values to the White House".

In June, Powell - who served under President George W Bush and has appeared at multiple Republican conventions in previous years - called President Trump a liar and endorsed Biden.

He joins several Republicans who have endorsed Biden, including former Ohio Governor John Kasich during the first night of the convention.

Cindy McCain, the widow of Republican Senator John McCain, also spoke about the friendship between her late husband and Biden, though she stopped short of a formal endorsement.

Former Secretary of State John Kerry addressed the convention virtually to assail Trump's leadership.

"When this president goes overseas, it isn't a goodwill mission, it's a blooper reel," he said.

"He breaks up with our allies and writes love letters to dictators. America deserves a president who is looked up to, not laughed at."

The freshly minted Democratic nominee's wife, Jill Biden, potentially the next US first lady, delivered the night's headline address, standing in an empty classroom at the Delaware high school where she taught English in the 1990s.

Urging everyone to vote for her husband, who joined her, she said: "The burdens we carry are heavy, and we need someone with strong shoulders.

"I know that if we entrust this nation to Joe, he will do for your family what he did for ours: bring us together and make us whole."

Meanwhile, younger Democrats often billed as rising stars within the party, such as former Georgia lawmaker Stacey Abrams, were given just a few moments in the spotlight on Tuesday.

New York congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez used her 90 seconds to highlight the policies of the so-called progressive wing of the party, without mentioning Biden.

She also used the procedural roll call to second the nomination of fellow left-winger Vermont Senator Sanders for president, although she later tweeted her "deepest congratulations" to Biden, adding "let's go win in November".

Trump is continuing to paint Biden as a puppet of left-wing radicals. Earlier on Tuesday, the president was in Arizona, his latest stop on a week-long campaign tour of key battleground states.

Most polls show Biden in the lead thus far, though Trump has tightened the margin in recent weeks and the election is still months away.

The Democratic convention, originally planned for Milwaukee, Wisconsin, will continue on Wednesday and Thursday, with speeches from vice-presidential pick Senator Kamala Harris, the party's 2016 nominee Hillary Clinton and former President Obama.

The four nights will end with an acceptance speech from Biden.

At next week's Republican convention, Trump will give his acceptance speech from the White House, brushing aside accusations that in doing so he is politicising the presidential seat of power.

- BBC

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