Biden seeks to 'bring together' strife-torn city in visit to Wisconsin
battleground
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[September 03, 2020]
By James Oliphant
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Democratic
presidential nominee Joe Biden will make his first campaign venture into
a strife-torn American city on Thursday when he travels to Kenosha,
Wisconsin, which has become the latest battleground over police
brutality and racial injustice.
President Donald Trump, his opponent in the Nov. 3 election, has
increasingly made civil unrest a central theme of his re-election
campaign. Biden's camp says his visit to Kenosha, however, will aim to
"bring together Americans to heal" by convening a community meeting in
the city where tensions remain high following the shooting of Jacob
Blake, a Black man, by police last week.
The visit marks a distinct change in tactics for the former vice
president. Biden has largely avoided traveling far from his Delaware
home, arguing the coronavirus pandemic required caution.
Trump visited Kenosha to back law enforcement earlier in the week
against the wishes of local leaders who worried he would inflame the
situation. He did not meet with Blake, who was paralyzed from the waist
down after a white police officer fired at his back seven times on Aug.
23, or with Blake’s family.
Instead, Trump suggested that Democrats like Biden condoned the violent
protests, which has at times disrupted peaceful demonstrations, even as
Biden has condemned violence several times.
The president also defended the actions of a 17-year-old Trump supporter
who has been charged with killing two people and wounding another with a
semi-automatic rifle during a clash in Kenosha with anti-racism
advocates.
Biden, in turn, has accused Trump of stoking conflict to frighten voters
and aid his re-election.
“Donald Trump looks at this violence and sees a political lifeline,”
Biden said in a speech in Pittsburgh on Monday.
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U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden reacts to a
reporter while speaking about reopening schools amid the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.,
September 2, 2020. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
The protests that have flared nationwide since Minneapolis police
killed George Floyd in May have placed Biden at times in a difficult
political position. He, along with his running mate, Kamala Harris,
have praised the energy of the Black Lives Matter movement, but have
not embraced its goals of de-funding or even eliminating local
police departments.
That has not prevented the Trump campaign from suggesting Biden is
in lockstep with the movement.
“These are left-wing radicals aligned with his party’s extreme
anti-police wing, and they are in control of the Democratic Party,
and therefore in control of Joe Biden,” Trump spokesman Tim Murtaugh
said on Wednesday.
Wisconsin is a critical battleground in the fight for the White
House. Trump edged out Democrat Hillary Clinton there four years
ago, and while opinion polls show Biden with a lead in the state,
Trump's campaign has made retaining it a top priority.
Trump, meanwhile, will visit another swing state crucial to his
re-election when he makes a campaign stop in Latrobe, Pennsylvania,
on Thursday.
Trump won Pennsylvania by just 45,000 votes in 2016. Recent polls
show him trailing Biden in that state as well, although there are
indications the race there is tightening.
(Reporting by James Oliphant; Additional reporting by Alexandra
Alper and Michael Martina; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Aurora
Ellis)
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