[ad_1]

As far as presidential campaigns go, former Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick is admittedly a bit late to the party, and that may be why only two people showed up to a recent event at Morehouse College.

According to CNN, on Wednesday, one of Patrick’s planned campaign events was set to take place at the Atlanta HBCU, but when only two people actually showed up, it prompted his team to cancel the engagement altogether.

READ MORE: Ex-Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick announces Democratic presidential bid

Patrick just announced his candidacy last week, which while later than most, is still in time to qualify for the New Hampshire primary taking place in early February.

“When I was thinking about it many months ago, one of the questions was: How do you break through in a field this large and this talented without being a celebrity or sensationalist? And I’m none of those things,” Patrick said on CBS “This Morning.”

 

To his credit, Patrick has close ties to Wall Street donors. And as only the nation’s second elected Black governor since Reconstruction, Patrick also could run as a historic boundary breaker trying to dent Biden’s support among African Americans — though Harris and Booker, the only two Black Democrats in the Senate, have been unable to do that thus far.

But some are speculating that this is one case where “better late than never” doesn’t apply. Highlighting that point is a recent HuffPost poll of Democratic and left-leaning voters, that found that 80% of them were already “enthusiastic” or “satisfied” with the candidate choices they had before Patrick joined the race.

READ MORE: Democratic Debate: 5 most important moments for Black voters to consider



[ad_2]

Source link