Joe Biden said Thursday that President Donald Trump sees unrest in Wisconsin as “a political benefit” and Biden said he would be willing to travel to the state if it would not be a distraction for law enforcement.
The Democratic presidential nominee, during an appearance on MSNBC, denounced violence but said Trump was “pouring gasoline on the racial flames” and making things worse.
Biden made his critique as protests continued in Kenosha, Wisconsin, after Jacob Blake, a Black man, was shot seven times by police and a 17-year-old gunman apparently killed two people in clashes between vigilante militias and protesters.
“I think he views it as a political benefit,” Biden said about Trump and the unrest.
Biden also said that, if he were president, he would travel to Wisconsin personally and that he had considered going anyway, but that he does not “want to be part of the problem.”
(AP)
4 Responses
Opinion by Mark Salter
August 27, 2020 at 7:00 a.m. EDT
Mark Salter served as a staff aide and speechwriter for Sen. John McCain.
This week, I joined more than 100 aides of the late Sen. John McCain, including former chiefs of staff, senior legislative and campaign workers and some of the senator’s longest-serving staff to endorse John’s friend and colleague, former vice president Joe Biden, for president. We did not do so lightly, but we have no reservations about our decision. We are convinced that Biden’s election is in the national interest.
Many of us have been Republicans all our adult lives. Some of us no longer identify as such, but most of us still do. We might have concerns about the recent direction of the Republican Party, and we have varying opinions about how to restore the primacy of the values that attracted us to the party in the first place. But we still believe in those values, and we want them restored to the party of Lincoln and McCain. We do not believe that will happen while Donald Trump is president. And whatever differences of opinion we have, we are united by one urgent purpose: to prevent his reelection.
Working for John was an extraordinary privilege. Each of us cherishes the memory of our association with the inspirational leader who urged us to put country before party and to serve causes greater than our self-interest. The absence of his example and his voice from our public affairs is a tremendous loss for the entire nation, especially in this unusually perilous time in our history.
We try hard to listen for his voice in all important political debates. We can’t claim John’s endorsement of our decision. But he trusted us to recognize a choice between party and country, and to do what we know is right. We believe electing Biden is not just the right course for the nation but imperative if we are to have any hope of overcoming the grave problems that currently trouble us.
President Trump’s inept leadership of the federal government’s response to the covid-19 pandemic has cost many more lives than it should have. His divisive rhetoric and enmity toward those he perceives as adversaries have exacerbated political and social divisions at a time when Americans should be uniting to confront the serious challenges that threaten all of us. His disinterest in American values, his tolerance for despots and his hostility to allies leave us uniquely vulnerable while our adversaries take every advantage of absent American leadership. Last, it has become increasingly clear that Trump’s personal qualities — his lack of self-control, his chronic dishonesty, his inattention to his duties and his self-obsession — render him temperamentally unfit for the White House.
Many of us have reservations about some of the views expressed by Biden, by his running mate, Sen. Kamala D. Harris, and by the Democratic Party’s platform. Should the Democratic ticket win the election, we expect to oppose some of the policies their administration pursues.
Kamala D. Harris: Voting is the best way to honor generations of women who paved the way for me
We are, however, encouraged by Biden’s long history of seeking bipartisan solutions to serious national problems. We are confident he will fulfill his promise to be a president for all Americans and act in what he believes are the best interests of us all. We believe he will seek to temper the political polarization that impairs our government, not aggravate it, and try to repair the divisions besetting our society, be they racial, economic or political, not intentionally worsen them. We trust that as president, Biden will take seriously the federal government’s primary role in addressing the worst public health crisis in a century, and not shift his responsibilities or the blame for his failures to others. And while some of us might find fault with the foreign and defense policies a Biden administration would implement, we are confident that a President Biden would endeavor to act in accord with U.S. interests and ideals, and confront rather than acquiesce to threats to them — a confidence we do not have in the incumbent president.
For those and other reasons, we believe we are acting in accord with John McCain’s charge to put “country first” when we urge Americans to elect former vice president Biden and Sen. Harris the next president and vice president of the United States.
This senile plagiarist and corrupt rapist is hiding in his basement and does not even realize that the “peacefu”l rioters are his Marxist Democrat Brownshirt troops.
McCain is history. Voting for a dimwit will not bring him back. As of now Biden offers no substantial promises for tomorrow , being hardly aware of his surroundings today. The leftists will only use him as a puppet dancing to their vile and immoral tunes.
McCain was a good-for-nothing weasel who threw the election. He was an enemy of our liberties, as well as personally corrupt. His staff were worse than him. I have no interest in what anyone connected with him has to say.