Democrat Biden
courts Southerners Delaware senator is
potential candidate for president By LEE BANDY Staff Writer
In an address before a state Democratic fund-raising gala Friday
night, U.S. Sen. Joe Biden urged the party faithful to reject the
notion that Southerners are fundamentally at odds with the
Democratic Party.
“If we can’t compete in the South, then we have to acknowledge
this is a divided nation. I refuse to acknowledge that,” he said,
meeting with reporters before the dinner.
Biden, from Delaware, is a potential presidential candidate for
2008.
“I may run,” he told the editorial board of The State newspaper
earlier in the day.
But he also said, “I’m not sure I’m the horse that can carry the
sleigh. ... I may be too centrist for my party.”
Biden was the keynote speaker at the party’s annual Jefferson
Jackson Dinner, held at the Columbia Metropolitan Convention Center.
Some 750 party activists paid between $75 and $10,000 to attend.
State Democratic chairman Joe Erwin said the party raised about
$150,000.
The party faithful were buoyed by a new poll showing Republican
Gov. Mark Sanford’s favorability ratings dropping.
Only 46 percent approved of the job he is doing; 51 percent said
he is doing a fair to poor job.
The survey was conducted by Crantford and Associates, a
Democratic polling firm based in Columbia.
“The governor is vulnerable. He doesn’t have a good record to run
on,” Erwin said.
Only 39 percent said they would vote to re-elect Sanford.
The poll sampled 411 voters. It has a margin of error of 5
percentage points.
“Sounds like they polled Democratic voters,” said Sanford
spokesman Will Folks.
State Sen. Tom Moore, D-Aiken, is expected to announce today that
he is a candidate for governor.
Florence Mayor Frank Willis also says he is considering it.
In an appeal to Southerners, Biden said the party would be making
a huge mistake if it wrote off Dixie.
“This nation cannot stay divided for any extended period of time
and reach the kind of potential it needs in the 21st century.
“It cannot be red and blue. This nation has to have a purple
heart,” the senator said.
Biden, ranking Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, was asked what kind of reception the Republican Speaker
of the House, David Wilkins of Greenville, would receive if
nominated to be ambassador to Canada.
“I would expect he would receive a pretty good reception.” Biden
replied. “He is known as an honorable man. He’s known as a man of
integrity.
“My view is the president of the United States is entitled to his
nominees unless they would reflect badly on the country or are
totally lacking in confidence.
“And based on what I know — and I know not a great deal — of the
speaker, he does not fall into either one of those categories.”
Reach Bandy at (803) 771-8648 or lbandy@thestate.com. |