Joe Biden was hoping to deal a debilitating blow to leftist rival Bernie Sanders on Tuesday as six states including crucial Michigan began voting in the Democratic presidential primaries.
A week after his startling turnaround in the Super Tuesday contests, the centrist former vice president is hoping another big night could make him invincible as the Democrats pick a challenger to face President Donald Trump in November.
Sanders has acknowledged that Michigan is critical and like Biden has spent days barnstorming the state, one of three where Trump in 2016 pulled off narrow upsets that won him the White House.
Biden and Sanders are both septuagenarian veterans of the Senate but are running starkly different campaigns. Biden, who enjoys a sizable poll lead, advocates a traditional Democratic platform of liberal legislative reforms while Sanders is urging a roots-up socialist revolution.
Biden opened primary day meeting workers at an under-construction automobile plant in Detroit, where he received cheers but also was confronted by one worker.
In an exchange avidly shared online by Trump supporters, the worker, wearing a construction helmet and reflective vest, accused Biden of seeking to weaken the constitutional right to own firearms.
"You're full of shit," Biden shot back. "I support the Second Amendment." When the worker pressed the issue, Biden, visibly agitated and with a raised voice, said "I'm not taking your gun away," adding, "Gimme a break, man."
Artist and designer Cecilia Covington, 61, was the first person to vote in Precinct 123 in downtown Detroit, braving the darkness and a cold drizzle as she arrived at Chrysler Elementary School well before the polling station opened at 7:00 am (1100 GMT).
"When he wasn't doing well in the polls I was really concerned," she admitted. "But when he won the South Carolina primary I put my confidence back in him."
"We've got to get '45' out of office," she said, referring to the current president.
The primaries come with the United States, like much of the world, roiled by the coronavirus epidemic that has infected 800 people across the country and killed 28.
Washington state, which has borne the brunt of the crisis, votes entirely by mail.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has offered guidance on cleaning voting machines and other technology for the remaining states taking part. Among them, only Missouri had confirmed a case by Tuesday according to Johns Hopkins University.
Idaho, Mississippi, and North Dakota were also voting. But the day's top prize is Michigan, with its large delegate haul, status as a swing state and demographics that mirror the United States, with rural, urban and suburban bases and a sizable minority community.
Biden - the faithful deputy for eight years to Barack Obama, the first black president - has been surging with strong backing from African Americans.
Ahead of the Michigan vote, he picked up endorsements from the Senate's two black Democrats, Kamala Harris and Cory Booker, the latest failed presidential candidates to rally behind Biden.
Sanders has won the backing of civil rights leader Jesse Jackson and has highlighted Biden's support for free-trade deals to win over Michigan's blue-collar voters, many of whom ditched the Democrats for Trump four years ago.
"We are in a crisis in America, not only in the need to defeat Donald Trump, the most dangerous president in modern American history, but to take on the greed and corruption of corporate elite," Sanders said in an ABC interview.
"That is what our campaign is about. It's very different than Joe's."
Biden has also courted blue-collar workers, highlighting his own hard-knock childhood in Pennsylvania and Delaware.
"Wall Street didn't build America, you built America," Biden told a rally in Detroit. "Unions built the middle class."
Biden won 10 out of 14 states that voted on Super Tuesday and holds a narrow lead in delegates to pick the nominee, although Sanders carried the most populous state of California. Trump has sought to portray Sanders as the victim of a conniving Democratic establishment, a narrative that some experts believe could depress turnout and benefit Republicans.
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