DURHAM, N.C. — Former President Bill Clinton campaigned for the first time alongside the Democratic ticket Thursday, appearing with Gov. Tim Walz and reprising his role as “explainer in chief� to make the case to North Carolinians to elect Kamala Harris on the first day of early voting here.
“I donâ€
Clinton appeared with Walz as part of a multi-state tour by the former president targeted at mobilizing rural and Black voters. Democrats are spending the final weeks of the race looking to blunt the GOPâ€
“When I volunteered to help Kamala Harris and Tim Walz, I told them, I said, ‘Send somebody else to the big places, somebody that needs the TV coverage,’ ‘ Clinton said Sunday at a Harris campaign office in Albany, Ga. “I said, ‘Send me to the country. I know where I belong.’ â€�
Walz introduced Clinton Thursday as “a son of the South,â€� noting Clintonâ€
“I could have sat here for another hour listen to him talk because he reminds me of home,� Clinton said of the Minnesota governor.
Wesley Harris (D), a North Carolina state representative running for state treasurer, said Clinton was the “perfect messenger to be able to go into these parts.� While Biden-Harris policies have improved the economy on the “macro level,� Harris said, some rural voters still feel left behind.
“They just want someone to understand what theyâ€
Clinton dedicated much of his remarks to acknowledging concerns voters have about the economy, and explaining the conditions that led to the current rate of inflation. Democrats have long valued Clinton for his ability to speak about economic issues with simplicity and compassion. Former president Barack Obama memorably deemed Clinton the “explainer in chief.’
“Itâ€
He touted his credentials (“I know a little something about this. I did have that job for eight yearsâ€�) and acknowledged inflation is a problem for Democrats (“Why arenâ€
He ticked through covidâ€
Attendees expressed optimism that Clinton will be able to reach rural voters in their state in part due to his economic messaging.
“He was a wonderful president, and I think heâ€
“He connects well to rural communities,’ added her son, Xan Wolstenholme-Britt, 24, a student at Duke Law School. ‘He speaks normally and people, people connect with him that way, so I think heâ€
Walz has also leaned into his rural background since joining the ticket. Speaking at a soybean farm in Volant, Penn., on Tuesday, he rolled out his and Harrisâ€
“I promise you this, Vice President Harris and I, when we win this election, we will have rural Americans back just like theyâ€
Clinton spoke at the Democratic National Convention in August but has otherwise kept a low profile in the campaign until recently. Democrats have contemplated how much to embrace him as a campaign surrogate following the #MeToo movement that started in 2017, casting a harsher light on the sexual misconduct allegations that he faced at the height of his political career.
He was largely welcomed warmly by the crowd Thursday, but some younger attendees expressed skepticism about his return to the trail.
“Iâ€
“I think that they need the younger vote to win this election. I think young people care about things like Monica Lewinsky, about the #MeToo movement, I think people — young people — donâ€
Clinton campaigned for Harris on Sunday and Monday in Georgia, a battleground state with particular importance to the former president. He was the last Democratic presidential candidate to carry the state — in 1992 — before Biden flipped it four years ago.
In Georgia, Clinton focused on retail campaigning over large-scale events. He visited churches, McDonaldâ€
Among the smaller cities that Clinton visited was Albany in southwestern Georgia, a predominantly Black community in a heavily Democratic county. It was also a key site in the civil rights movement, giving birth to the Albany Movement against desegregation across the region in 1961.
Rep. Sanford Bishop, a Democrat who represents southwest Georgia, said Clintonâ€
“[Clinton] struck gold with people who were listening and who have those nostalgic favorable feelings for Clinton and for the Clinton legacy,� Bishop said.
Clinton will also visit more politically divided territory. He is set to attend a get-out-the-vote event Sunday with Democrats in Nash County, N.C., which Biden won by just 120 votes four years ago.
Early voting began in North Carolina on Thursday and by mid-afternoon, with 81 of the 100 counties reporting, 209,644 ballots had been cast, according to data released by the state board of elections. With hours left to vote, the state blew past previous year totals for the first day of early voting other than the 2020 presidential election when 348, 599 voted on the first day.
The state is expected to release the dayâ€
Colby Itkowitz contributed to this report.