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Biden launches wide battleground push with ads, surrogates

 

Joe Biden’s presidential campaign is ramping up its advertising and deploying some of its high-profile surrogates as it tries to solidify a broad battleground map that his advisers see as giving him multiple paths to an Electoral College majority.

Biden’s Democratic campaign announced Tuesday a $15 million weeklong advertising campaign including television, digital, radio and print in six states: Arizona, Florida, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. President Donald Trump won all six states four years ago. The television purchases, which involve ads in English and Spanish, also extend to national cable television, including Major League Baseball’s Opening Day broadcasts.

Separately, the campaign is using top surrogates in the coming days for virtual events targeting Las Vegas; Milwaukee; northern Virginia; Detroit and western Michigan; Raleigh, North Carolina; Des Moines, Iowa; and Omaha, Nebraska. The headliners include two women mentioned as potential Biden running mates, Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth and California Sen. Kamala Harris, along with former presidential candidates Julián Castro and Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar.

While the Biden moves underscore his wide-ranging approach, they also highlight lingering questions about spreading the campaign too thin. Four years ago, Democrat Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign made a show of expanding its efforts into Sun Belt states like Arizona and Georgia – GOP strongholds that have become more competitive – while the candidate herself spent no time in Wisconsin and little time in Michigan or Pennsylvania, states her campaign viewed as reliably Democratic. President Donald Trump ended up sweeping all those states.

Biden’s top aides have promised “an expanded map” that includes both traditional battlegrounds like the Great Lakes states that delivered Trump’s 2016 victory and more GOP-leaning states that are now in play because of demographic shifts and the president’s struggles responding to the coronavirus pandemic.

“We’re not trying to get to 400 electoral votes,” Biden’s deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfield told The Associated Press in a recent interview. “But we’re trying to have as many paths as possible to the 270 that it takes to win.”

Biden’s advertising and surrogate footprint reflects a broad geographic and demographic coalition that he is seeking.

As an example, Trump won Michigan in 2016 by fewer than 11,000 votes. Clinton lost ground in whiter, working-class areas beyond the urban areas and in Detroit, as compared to President Barack Obama’s 2012 marks. Although addressing either shortfall could flip Michigan back to Democrats, Biden’s campaign insists it is not prioritizing one slice of the electorate over the other.

 

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