With the Democratic presidential primary now a two-man race between Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and former Vice President Joe Biden, Campus Reform revisits when Biden first entered the presidential race, and students Campus Reform's Cabot Phillips spoke with were appalled by Biden's "creepy" behavior toward women.

In April 2019, Phillips traveled to the University of Iowa and showed students footage of Biden touching women and girls on their shoulders and stroking their hair, among other things.

[RELATED: VIDEO: Students appalled by footage of 'creepy' Joe Biden touching women]

Watch how students reacted:

In Iowa, Biden placed a distant fourth place in the Democratic presidential caucuses. He didn't do much better in New Hampshire. In Nevada, he showed some improvement, but most recently, in South Carolina and in Super Tuesday states, Biden topped each of his other Democratic opponents, making the race for the Democratic nomination essentially between him and Sanders.

[RELATED: Joe Biden dominates Super Tuesday, but voters struggle to name his accomplishments]

Younger voters in the Democratic primary tend to favor Sanders while Biden is more popular among older Americans. Some attribute that to Sanders' self-described "Democratic socialist" policies and young Americans' growing affinity for those types of policies. But could Biden's behavior toward women and girls also pose a challenge to the former vice president as he attempts to win over younger voters?

Campus Reform reached out to more than a dozen College Democrats student groups across the country but did not hear back in time for publication.

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