Bernie Sanders. (photo: Antonella Crescimbeni)
14 April 20
ermont
Sen. Bernie Sanders on Monday endorsed former Vice President Joe Biden
for president, pledging to help him defeat President Donald Trump in the
general election as the two agreed to launch a series of task forces to
work jointly on policy matters.
"We need you in the White House. I will do all that I
can to see that that happens, Joe," Sanders said to Biden during a
livestream broadcast by Biden's campaign on his website and on social
media.
The endorsement of Biden by his leading Democratic
rival marks a key moment for Democrats as the party seeks to unify and
turn its focus toward a November match-u with President Donald Trump.
Sanders' quick endorsement of Biden in mid-April, just five days after he suspended his campaign,
was a stark contrast to the 2016 Democratic race, when Sanders
continued to battle Hillary Clinton into June and waited until July to
endorse her.
This time, the former vice president and the Vermont
senator sought to immediately address the distrust some of Sanders'
supporters have for Biden after a primary campaign in which the two
repeatedly clashed on issues like foreign policy and health care.
"I think that your endorsement means a great deal,"
Biden said. "It means a great deal to me. I think people are going to be
surprised that we are apart on some issues but we're awfully close on a
whole bunch of others. I'm going to need you -- not just to win the
campaign, but to govern."
The two said they had agreed to form six task forces
to work on policy matters. Those working groups will cover the economy,
education, criminal justice, immigration, climate change and health
care.
"It's no great secret out there, Joe, that you and I
have our differences, and we're not going to paper them over. That's
real," Sanders said. "But I hope that these task forces will come
together utilizing the best minds and people in your campaign and in my
campaign to work out real solutions to these very, very important
problems."
Biden told Sanders he is "looking forward to working with you, pal" and said he would "try my best not to let you all down."
It could take more time for the progressive movement
that Sanders had built over two presidential bids to follow the Vermont
senator and align behind Biden. One of Sanders' most prominent
supporters, New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,
told The New York Times that Biden's campaign had not yet reached out
to her, and that the "process of coming together should be uncomfortable
for everyone involved -- that's how you know it's working."
Biden and Sanders went back and forth Monday afternoon
from their homes in Delaware and Vermont, asking each other questions
about Trump's response to the coronavirus pandemic, economic issues, the
cost of higher education and more on a livestream broadcast on social
media and Biden's campaign website.
Sanders acknowledged that the moment was a surreal end
to a hard-fought Democratic presidential primary that was overtaken in
its final weeks by the coronavirus pandemic.
"Not in a million years would we have believed we
would be talking to each other in our respective homes, that we could
not do rallies, that we could not get out of the house," Sanders said.
Sanders asked Biden at one point if he could support a national $15-an-hour minimum wage, and Biden said yes.
"You don't get enough credit, Bernie, for being the
voice that forces us to take a hard look in the mirror and ask ourselves
if we've done enough, and we haven't," Biden said.
The two also discussed their areas of agreement on
Trump's handling of the coronavirus crisis -- with Biden highlighting
how it would hurt young people, who have been Sanders' core
constituency.
The two displayed a warm relationship that dates to Biden's days as a fellow senator.
"We've been friends. We've disagreed, but we've been friends," Biden said.
Sanders added: "I know you are the kind of guy who is
going to be inclusive. You want to bring people in -- even people who
disagree with you."
As they discussed how to end their livestream, the two joked that they could get out chess boards and play via video.
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