Biden tries to win back Latino voters in Nevada and Arizona

Joe Biden left, on Tuesday (19), for Nevada and Arizona, two decisive states for mobilizing the Latino vote before the November elections, which he will contest against Donald Trump.

With this, the American president wants to contain the erosion of his popularity among this electorate, which usually votes for Democrats, because he knows that in the last elections a part preferred his Republican rival.

Thanks to abundant campaign funds, the 81-year-old Democrat’s team recruits and mobilizes as much as possible in these two swing states.

As those who lean one way or the other during presidential elections are called based on the candidates, the victory may depend only on a few tens of thousands of votes.

“With abortion rights at issue in Arizona and Nevada, with new high-paying jobs in green energy and electronics, with the support of unions,” Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris are in a good position to continue winning over voters in the southwest of the country, campaign manager Julie Rodríguez said in a statement.

In addition, Biden will also have to score some points on immigration, an important issue in Arizona, a state that borders Mexico.

Your strategy is complex. Joe Biden must counterattack Trump’s incessant accusations, which denounce him for ineffectiveness in the face of the flow of migrants on the border with Mexico.