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Sanders and Biden Cancel Events as Coronavirus Fears Upend Primary

The presidential race entered extraordinary new ground as the leading Democrats called off primary-night events in Cleveland, and President Trump’s signature rallies also faced an uncertain future.

Madeline Kranz, Kristin Kranz and Sid Kranz left the Huntington Convention Center in Cleveland after Bernie Sanders canceled his Tuesday night rally. Credit...Maddie McGarvey for The New York Times

The nation’s presidential race entered an unpredictable new phase on Tuesday after the two leading Democratic candidates canceled big primary-night campaign events because of worries about the coronavirus, and Vice President Mike Pence said that the future of President Trump’s signature rallies would be decided on a “a day-to-day basis.”

The disruption to traditional campaigning was the first powerful sign that the virus is changing American politics, coming at the height of a primary season as Senator Bernie Sanders and former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. battle for the Democratic nomination. Mr. Sanders especially relies on huge rallies to energize his base of younger voters — the kind of barnstorming he needs to halt Mr. Biden’s growing momentum in the race.

Mr. Sanders, quickly followed by Mr. Biden, called off events scheduled for Ohio just hours before they were set to begin and as the candidates awaited the results of voting in six other states. Gov. Mike DeWine of Ohio, a Republican, had asked earlier Tuesday for all major indoor events to be canceled. The Sanders and Biden campaigns indicated they would evaluate future events; the Biden campaign added one for Tuesday night in Philadelphia.

As the anxiety built, the Democratic National Committee announced Tuesday night that there would be no live audience and virtually no traveling members of the news media at the party’s presidential debate on Sunday in Phoenix.

The new uncertainty about political rallies and face-to-face contact with voters has the potential to remake the entire presidential campaign. Not only will Democrats need mass rallies to help unite the party, after a bruising primary race, behind a nominee and a policy agenda. It is Mr. Trump, more than any American leader in modern politics, who has used mega-rallies to motivate his supporters, dominate cable news airwaves with coverage and feed his own ego and morale.

In recent days, Mr. Trump has complained to advisers about the toll the coronavirus is taking on his efforts to campaign publicly, and has continued to insist in private, as he has done in public, that worries about the virus are being overblown, according to two people familiar with his comments. Following his lead, the campaign has told reporters that all of its activity was “proceeding as normal.”

But several people close to Mr. Trump have suggested to his campaign and White House officials that he not go ahead with rallies, a person close to Mr. Trump said. It was unclear how forceful any of them had been in pushing him away from them.

Since his 2016 campaign, Mr. Trump has left the glad-handing at diners and the round-table discussions to surrogates, focusing solely on rallies to communicate his message and connect with supporters. Any slowdown or suspension of rallies would deprive him of a major political weapon at a time when concerns about the virus — as well as the damage to a national economy that is Mr. Trump’s calling card in the 2020 race — could further alienate some disaffected Republicans and independents from the Trump camp.

For the first time in months, Mr. Trump has no rally scheduled for the coming weeks. His last campaign rally took place on March 2 in Charlotte, N.C., on the eve of Super Tuesday. But on Tuesday evening, his campaign announced a “Catholics for Trump” event at a convention center in Milwaukee on March 19. It is not technically a rally, but two campaign officials described it as a test run to see how people reacted to the president holding a large-scale event.

Asked at a briefing on Tuesday evening whether the Trump campaign would continue to hold rallies, Mr. Pence said, “That’ll be a decision that’s made literally on a day-to-day basis.”

The cancellations by Mr. Biden and Mr. Sanders came on a critical day of voting, as Mr. Biden cemented his front-runner status with victories in the battleground state of Michigan as well as in Missouri and Mississippi, further denting Mr. Sanders’s hopes at a comeback in the race.

The one-two punch of the cancellations was not as unexpected as it was jarring. As the public has grown increasingly wary of the coronavirus outbreak, it has largely been business as usual for Mr. Sanders and Mr. Biden, who have continued shaking the hands of supporters.

But on Tuesday afternoon, that quickly changed.

“Out of concern for public health and safety, we are canceling tonight’s rally in Cleveland,” said Mike Casca, a Sanders campaign spokesman. “We are heeding the public warnings from Ohio state officials, who have communicated concern about holding large, indoor events during the coronavirus outbreak. Senator Sanders would like to express his regret to the thousands of Ohioans who had planned to attend the event tonight.”

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People cleaned up the venue after Joseph R. Biden Jr. canceled his rally at the Cuyahoga Community College Recreation Center in Cleveland. Credit...Maddie McGarvey for The New York Times

Mr. Casca added, “All future Bernie 2020 events will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.”

Almost immediately, the Biden campaign said it, too, was canceling its evening event in Cleveland.

“In accordance with guidance from public officials and out of an abundance of caution, our rally in Cleveland, Ohio tonight is canceled,” Mr. Biden’s deputy campaign manager, Kate Bedingfield, said on Twitter. “We will continue to consult with public health officials and public health guidance and make announcements about future events in the coming days.”

Mr. Biden’s campaign later announced that he would deliver primary night remarks from Philadelphia, where his campaign is based.

Some of Mr. Biden’s allies believe this moment offers the chance to highlight his experience as a former vice president, and to cast him as a steady hand — in contrast to Mr. Trump, the thinking goes — at a deeply uncertain and high-stakes time.

Mr. Biden was slated to begin another intense stretch of campaigning starting on Thursday, with planned visits in delegate-heavy Florida, Illinois and Arizona before the March 17 contests in those states. The campaign said it was canceling a planned rally on Thursday in Tampa, Fla., but the full fate of Mr. Biden’s swing was unclear on Tuesday.

There were some indications earlier on Tuesday that the coronavirus could begin to affect scheduled political events. In the afternoon, Mr. DeWine wrote on Twitter that he was asking for major indoor events in his state to be canceled.

Mr. Sanders had also told reporters outside a polling place in Dearborn Heights, Mich., that he would abide by guidance from local public health officials when planning his campaign events.

“What we are doing wherever we go, whenever we do rallies, we consult with public health officials because the last thing we want to do is put anybody in danger,” Mr. Sanders said. “We will not do anything that public health officials do not think is right.”

Mr. Sanders also held a round-table discussion on Monday at a hotel at the Detroit airport where he and public health experts talked about the coronavirus.

Until Tuesday, though, Mr. Sanders had continued to hold enormous rallies, a signature part of his campaign but one that was at odds with the quarantines and public directives from officials across the country to avoid large public events. Should Mr. Sanders be unable to stage rallies, it would drastically change how he campaigns at a critical juncture: After a lackluster Super Tuesday and losing in Michigan, he is now chasing Mr. Biden with increasing desperation in the delegate race.

It was Mr. Sanders himself who called off his Cleveland rally, his campaign said.

Any announcement from the Trump campaign about a formal rally would come less than 24 hours after a public health official on Mr. Trump’s coronavirus task force had hinted that there could be dangers to holding one. The rally the campaign had indicated it would announce on Tuesday was to take place in Florida at the end of the month, according to a person familiar with the planning. That rally is more than two weeks away, which could give officials a better chance to monitor the progression of the virus across the country, while also allowing them to claim they are maintaining normal operations.

“If you want to talk about large gatherings in a place where you have community spread, I think that’s a judgment call,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading expert on infectious diseases, said at a briefing on Monday when asked specifically about whether presidential candidates should continue holding rallies. “And if someone decides they want to cancel it, I wouldn’t publicly criticize it.”

Earlier on Tuesday, Mr. Trump continued to play down the threat of the virus. “Be calm,” he told people. “It’s really working out.”

Reid J. Epstein and Katie Glueck contributed reporting.

Sydney Ember is a political reporter based in New York. She was previously a business reporter covering print and digital media. More about Sydney Ember

Annie Karni is a White House correspondent. She previously covered the White House and Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign for Politico, and covered local news and politics in New York City for the New York Post and the New York Daily News. More about Annie Karni

Maggie Haberman is a White House correspondent. She joined The Times in 2015 as a campaign correspondent and was part of a team that won a Pulitzer Prize in 2018 for reporting on President Trump’s advisers and their connections to Russia. More about Maggie Haberman

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: How Concerns Of Coronavirus May Alter Race. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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