Governor Wes Moore of Maryland played his family ties with South Carolina and appealed to fiery action when he was addressed to a democrats room hundreds of kilometers from his home.
Governor Tim Walz of Minnesota told the New York Times that he liked the idea of holding the first presidential election in South Carolina and stressed that Democrats should present themselves in red states like this.
The 2028 presidential campaign is in the years, and almost everything that is uncertain. But in the eyes of certain Democrats of Southern Carolina who deposited the dinner of the State Party Friday evening or went to the representative of the annual fish of the representative James E. Clyburn nearby or presented themselves to the party agreement on Saturday, the first stages of the primary race are clearly in progress.
And for them, only one question is really important: who can earn a general election?
“The Democrats of Southern Carolina do not want to waste their vote,” said former governor Jim Hodges, the last democrat to lead the state. “It is very important that the candidates have a little boastful and confidence and that they exhibit a case of persuasion on the way they can win.”
Indeed, interviews with about a dozen elected officials and party activists who were in Columbia last week show that at this early stage, some are already inclined to the type of Punditry dominated The primary campaign of 2020, consulting the potential candidates through the prism of their call to the general election.