The Economist has endorsed Joe Biden in the
2020 presidential election.
This is the ninth time the London-based Economist has endorsed a U.S. presidential candidate. The first time was in 1980, with a recommendation to vote
for Ronald Reagan.
It endorsed Hillary Clinton in 2016.
The endorsement is online today
and will also appear in the October 31 print magazine of The Economist.
The Economist's editorial board argues that Biden “is a good man who would restore
steadiness and civility to the White House. He would thus begin the long, difficult task of putting a fractured country back together again.”
advertisement
advertisement
On Trump, The Economist
noted: “He has never sought to represent the majority of Americans who did not vote for him." It adds: “The most head-spinning feature of the Trump presidency is his contempt for the
truth. All politicians prevaricate, but his administration has given America 'alternative facts.'
"Nothing Mr Trump says can be believed — including his claims that Mr.
Biden is corrupt.”
North America accounts for 55% of The Economist’s 1.6 million print and digital circulation.
The Economist
launched a dedicated U.S. 2020 elections hub,
and in June it unveiled its first-ever presidential election forecast model.
Newspapers have continued to publish endorsements for the upcoming election, which takes place on
November 3.
USA Today, which has never before endorsed a presidential candidate, announced last week that it was backing Biden.
As of Monday, Biden has at
least 119 endorsements from daily and weekly newspaper editorial boards, according to The Hill’s tally.
President Trump has six.
In September, the editorial board of the
Chicago Tribune endorsed Biden, after supporting Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson in 2016. So did the conservative Union Leader, a newspaper in Manchester, New Hampshire. The first
time it endorsed a Democrat.
Trump’s endorsements come from the Las Vegas Review-Journal, The Boston Herald and the New York Post, among others.
After a controversial
endorsement of President Trump by the publisher of Spokane, Washington's The Spokesman-Review (“Donald Trump is a bully and a bigot… We recommend voting for him anyway because
the policies that Joe Biden and his progressive supporters would impose on the nation would be worse,” wrote William Stacey Cowles), the newspaper said it will no longer run endorsements and
unsigned editorials.
McClatchy only let its papers make a presidential endorsement if they conducted interviews with both Trump and Biden.
Fifteen papers that did
not endorse a candidate in 2016 have come out for Biden this year, according to The Hill.