COLUMBIA, S.C. — Vice President Kamala Harris flew to South Carolina on Friday to file paperwork putting President Joe Biden on the 2024 presidential ballot of the state that will lead off the Democratic presidential primary — thanks to a White House-led schedule overhaul meant to better empower Black voters.
Harris was joined in the state capital by Rep. Jim Clyburn, one of the leading Black voices in Congress. Then-candidate Biden's 2020 presidential campaign was floundering after big losses in Iowa and New Hampshire, but rebounded with a decisive South Carolina win that was solidified by Clyburn's late endorsement.
That 2020 boost gave Biden enough momentum to romp through Super Tuesday, clinch his party's primary and later the White House. Since announcing his reelection bid in April, Biden has made far more frequent official visits to Pennsylvania — a key battleground in the general election — than states that will decide Democrats' 2024 primary.
Harris' South Carolina visit follows the vice president spending recent months traveling the country, including a college tour that has taken her to leading Historically Black Colleges and Universities. She's looking to build excitement among voters of color at a time when polls show that even a majority of Democrats, believe Biden is too old to handle the rigors of a second term.
"We are fighting for fundamental freedoms, including the freedom of people to have access to the ballot and vote," said Vice President Kamala Harris while speaking to supporters.
"If people learn how to connect with those four district cultures that exist here in South Carolina, if you in the PeeDee it's Agriculture, in the Piedmont it's manufacturing, in the low country it's military and the Midlands it's basically Education if you learn how to traverse those things you'll do well, and we're gonna do it again this year," says Rep. James Clyburn.
“South Carolina Democrats represent the backbone of the Democratic Party and propelled Joe Biden to the Democratic nomination and eventually the White House," Biden reelection campaign spokesman Michael Tyler said in a statement. “The President is honored to have Vice President Harris and his campaign co-chair Congressman Clyburn officially make him a candidate, once again, in what is now proudly the first-in-the-nation primary.”
Iowa's 2020 caucus was marred by technical glitches, and Biden asked last year that the Democratic National Party replace it in the leadoff spot with South Carolina. He said Black and other minority voters need to play a larger, earlier role in determining the Democratic presidential nominee.
The DNC approved a new 2024 calendar where South Carolina's primary will on Feb. 3 will be followed three days later by Nevada. The schedule also moves Michigan into the group of early states voting before Super Tuesday on March 3, when most of the rest of the country holds primaries. DNC chair Jaime Harrison joined Clyburn at the airport for Harris' arrival in Columbia.
“The Biden-Harris coalition will be out in full force in South Carolina and will be how we defeat MAGA extremism once again in 2024,” Taylor said, referring to former President Donald Trump, who has built a commanding early lead in next year's Republican presidential primary, and his ”Make American Great Again" slogan.
Republicans are leading off their 2024 primary with the Iowa caucus on Jan. 15, and the state's Democrats will caucus then, too, but not release the presidential results immediately to comply with party rules. New Hampshire, however, has rejected the new calendar and is planning to hold its primary in January, arguing that it has held the nation's first primary for more than a century, a rule that Iowa was able to circumvent only because it had a caucus.
Biden won't appear on the New Hampshire ballot and isn't planning to campaign there, though some of the state's top Democrats are organizing a write-in campaign backing his reelection bid. Minnesota Rep. Dean Phillips, the only elected Democrat to challenge Biden in 2024, has already filed to appear on both the New Hampshire and South Carolina ballots.
"It was more important in 2020 just because Biden hadn't really done as well in Iowa and New Hampshire, he had come out a little weakened, but he came to South Carolina, Clyburn and his organization really got behind him, it's still important but given the different conditions this time it doesn’t carry as much weight, but certainly it’s something Biden needs as his campaign moves forward,” says Robert Oldendick, Political Science Professor at University of South Carolina.
He says Biden didn't come to South Carolina for multiple reasons, "One given everything going on in the world, in terms of Israel, Ukraine, and the battle of the budget, potential government shutdown, that while certainly, Biden is running for re-election there's a lot of things he needs to take care of in his role as Chief executive at this point. Harris being a kinda surrogate and also being on the ballot, given the extreme importance of the African American population in the Democratic primary, Harris the important alternative,”.