Biden says he was the only white surrogate to campaign for Doug Jones

Former Vice President Joe Biden on Monday, talking up his chances of beating President Trump in several Southern states next year, pointed to his role as a surrogate for the first Democratic candidate to win a Senate seat in decades.

As the kick-off speaker at the Poor People’s Moral Action Congress, in Washington, D.C., Biden contrasted his role as a campaign surrogate for Doug Jones with the mostly black group of politicians who also campaigned in Alabama for Jones. That included Rep. John Lewis, a Georgia Democrat and civil rights hero, and Rep. Terri Sewell, Alabama’s only House member who is a black or a Democrat.

“I’m the only person who went and campaigned for the senator in Alabama,” Biden said at the event, a forum focused on social justice and eliminating poverty in the United States. “I was the only person invited down there to speak, not the only one, the only one not a person of color.”

The Jones campaign did keep a distance from many Washington, D.C.-based figures, calculating that would backfire against his emphasis on local issues in a special election triggered by the resignation in early 2017 of Republican Sen. Jeff Sessions to become attorney general under President Trump.

Jones is a former staff member for Biden on the Senate Judiciary Committee, a panel the then-Delaware senator chaired for eight years during his 36-year tenure on Capitol Hill.

In his allotted 27 minutes on Monday, Biden spoke with moderators and audience members in a gymnasium at Trinity Washington University. Monday’s event was also the first time Biden shared a venue with his other Democratic rivals since announcing his presidential run in April after skipping out on two prominent Democratic “cattle call” events in Iowa and California.

[Read more: Biden vows to campaign more in the South, says he will win South Carolina and other states]

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