In the contest to become the Democratic candidate for president, Joseph R. Biden Jr. is being asked to confront his record on race, including past positions that some in his party now see as outdated and unjust. We look at the policies Mr. Biden embraced and how they were viewed at the time. Guest: Astead W. Herndon, who covers national politics for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.
Background reading:
Mr. Biden’s efforts to play down his role in overhauling crime legislation with segregationist senators in the 1980s and ’90s is at odds with his actions and rhetoric back then.Though a liberal on most civil rights issues, Mr. Biden was a leading opponent of busing as a tool to integrate schools.A Plan to Remake the Middle East
How Changing Ocean Temperatures Could Upend Life on Earth
R.F.K. Jr.’s Battle to Get on the Ballot
Sunday Special: 'Modern Love'
'The Interview': Marlon Wayans Lost Nearly 60 Loved Ones. Comedy Saved Him.
The Protesters and the President
Biden Loosens Up on Weed
The New Abortion Fight Before the Supreme Court
The Secret Push That Could Ban TikTok
Trump 2.0: What a Second Trump Presidency Would Bring
Introducing ‘The Interview’: Yair Lapid Says the World Misunderstands Israel
Introducing ‘The Interview’: Anne Hathaway Is Done Trying to Please
Harvey Weinstein Conviction Thrown Out
The Crackdown on Student Protesters
Is $60 Billion Enough to Save Ukraine?
A Salacious Conspiracy or Just 34 Pieces of Paper?
The Evolving Danger of the New Bird Flu
Sunday Special: 'Modern Love'
The Supreme Court Takes Up Homelessness
The Opening Days of Trump’s First Criminal Trial
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Up First
Today, Explained
Post Reports
What Next | Daily News and Analysis
The Rachel Maddow Show