At campaign rally, Biden decries
Democratic 'anger' and pledges unity
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[May 20, 2019]
By James Oliphant
PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) - Seeking to build
on early momentum in his 2020 presidential bid, former U.S. Vice
President Joe Biden on Saturday condemned "anger" within his own
Democratic Party and pledged to work to unify the country in the wake of
Donald Trump's presidency.
At a rally in downtown Philadelphia, Biden, as he has done throughout
the beginning stages of his campaign, made Trump his central target,
blasting him as "the divider-in-chief."
But he also chided other Democratic presidential candidates in the
field, suggesting that anger toward Trump within his party was not
enough to win next year's presidential election.
His message, Biden said, was expressly aimed at Democratic, Republican
and independent voters alike.
"Some of the really smart folks say Democrats don't want to hear about
unity," he said. "They say Democrats are so angry, and that the angrier
your campaign will be, the better chance you have to win the Democratic
nomination. Well, I don't believe it."
About 6,000 people attended the rally, which had, by design, the feel of
a general-election event. With his poll numbers currently swamping the
rest of the Democratic field, Biden has often acted as if his current
opponent is Trump and not the other 23 Democrats vying for the party's
nomination.
"If the American people want a president to add to our division, to lead
with a clenched fist, closed hand, a hard heart, to demonize the
opponents and spew hatred - they don't need me, they've got President
Donald Trump," Biden told the crowd, which was bookended by large video
monitors.
Democratic nominating contests begin next February, giving the dynamics
of the race plenty of time to shift. But Biden, 76, has opened up a more
than 20-point lead over his nearest rival, U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders,
in several public opinion polls.
Biden, a U.S. senator for 30 years and a two-term vice president under
Barack Obama, has argued he is best positioned to take on Trump next
year.
Attendees at the event said they agreed.
"He's going to be the one who takes Trump out of office," said Daril
Murard, 27, of Langhorne, Pennsylvania. "That's why I'm here."
Tim Reihm, 48, drove to the event from his hometown of York,
Pennsylvania.
"I think there's been a tendency in the party to drift a little too far
left and I think that's going to disenfranchise a large section of the
country," Reihm said. "Joe represents a sort of a more middle ground
where we can bring people together instead of becoming more and more
fractious."
Biden also answered critics who have mocked his pledge to work with
Republicans as unrealistic should he win the White House.
"I'm going to say something outrageous," he said. "I know how to make
government work."
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Democratic 2020 U.S. presidential candidate and former Vice
President Joe Biden pauses while speaking at a campaign stop in
Manchester, New Hampshire, U.S., May 13, 2019. REUTERS/Brian
Snyder/File Photo
Biden's remarks drew a swift response from the Progressive Change
Campaign Committee, a liberal advocacy group that backs another
candidate, U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren.
A fundraising memo sent to members after the rally accused Biden of
trying to splinter the party.
"Joe Biden is dividing Americans when, after the historic 2018
election, he tells voters they are wrong to be angry - and wrong if
they don't want 'unity' with corrupt Republican politicians," the
memo said.
"We don't need a Democratic nominee who rejects the fact that people
are righteously angry in the Trump era," it said.
Biden has established his campaign headquarters in Philadelphia,
illustrating the importance of Pennsylvania to Democratic hopes next
year. Trump narrowly won the state over Hillary Clinton in 2016.
Trump will hold an event of his own on Monday in northeast
Pennsylvania.
Prior to Biden's speech, the Republican National Committee in a
release pointed to statistics showing how Pennsylvania's economy has
improved during Trump's presidency.
Biden will not have the luxury of shrugging off the rest of the
Democratic field much longer.
In recent weeks, he has been criticized by Senator Kamala Harris for
his past support for the 1994 crime bill that critics say led to
mass incarceration of African-Americans, by Sanders for his support
of the North American Free Trade Agreement, and by Warren for his
ties to the credit-card industry.
With Biden the clear front-runner, those attacks are likely to
intensify. But Biden on Saturday said he would keep his focus on
Trump and not his rivals for the nomination.
"You will not hear me speak ill of another Democrat," Biden said.
Following the Philadelphia event, Biden is expected to spend the
next several weeks focusing on policy announcements and raising
money.
(Reporting by James Oliphant; Editing by James Dalgleish, Tom Brown
and Daniel Wallis)
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