Trump rallies supporters in Nevada, seeks to overcome Biden lead in the
state
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[September 14, 2020]
By Jeff Mason
MINDEN, Nev. (Reuters) - Republican
President Donald Trump rallied his backers in Nevada on Saturday in a
bid to drum up support in a state where polls show his Democratic rival
Joe Biden is ahead.
Going through a list of grievances about Democrats, the media, and
mail-in voting, Trump spoke to a crowd of thousands at an airport
outside of Reno where people stood close to one another and, in many
cases, did not wear masks despite the coronavirus pandemic.
The president mused about staying in office 12 years, despite
constitutional limits that prohibit U.S. presidents from serving more
than two, four-year terms.
"We are going to win four more years in the White House and then after
that we’ll negotiate, right, because we’re probably, based on the way we
were treated, we’re probably entitled to another four after that," he
said.
Trump again accused Democrats of trying to "rig" the Nov. 3 election and
he knocked Biden over an ad that criticized Trump for allegedly making
derogatory comments about U.S. war dead. Trump has denied making the
remarks.
"Now I can be really vicious," in return, the president said, expressing
his disgust over the ad and calling Biden "pathetic."
Trump is trailing the former vice president in national polls and in
Nevada, which the former real estate developer and reality television
star lost narrowly to Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton in
2016.
Biden has hammered Trump for failing to lay out a national strategy to
combat the pandemic, which has killed more than 193,000 people in the
United States.
The president, who credits his decision to restrict travel from China at
the beginning of the year with saving lives, publicly played down the
virus in the early months of 2020 and has pushed for a rapid re-opening
of the economy after a lockdown in the spring.
"Nevadans don't need more bluster from the president, and don't need his
reckless rallies that ignore the realities of COVID-19 and endanger
public health," Biden said in a statement on Saturday.
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President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally in
Reno, Nevada, U.S., September 12, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan
Ernst
"Nevada families need solutions — from containing the pandemic to
building the economy back better to making quality health care more
accessible to millions of Americans."
The president has increased his number of campaign rallies in recent
weeks, holding them in airplane hangars or outdoors because of the
risk of coronavirus spread. Thousands of supporters have been
showing up, many of them without maintaining social distance or
wearing face coverings.
Trump has campaign events scheduled in Nevada and Arizona during a
three-day Western swing that will also include a stop in California
on Monday for a briefing about the devastating fires that are
ravaging the West Coast.
The president is ramping up fundraising, too, amid concerns that his
campaign is dealing with a cash shortage, leading it to pull back
television advertising in crucial states.
A Republican official said some $18 million would be raised over the
weekend through events in Washington and Nevada.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason; additional reporting by Steve Holland and
Joel Schectman; Editing by Scott Malone and Kim Coghill)
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