Biden rejects Trump claim that COVID-19 vaccine is imminent
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[September 18, 2020]
By Joseph Ax
(Reuters) - U.S. Democratic presidential
candidate Joe Biden on Thursday bluntly contradicted President Donald
Trump's suggestion that a coronavirus vaccine may be only weeks away,
warning Americans they cannot trust the president's word.
"The idea that there's going to be a vaccine and everything's gonna be
fine tomorrow - it's just not rational," Biden said during a CNN town
hall in Moosic, Pennsylvania.
Trump again said on Wednesday that a vaccine for COVID-19, the disease
caused by the virus, could be ready for distribution ahead of the Nov. 3
election.
Most health experts, including Robert Redfield, the director of the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, have said a vaccine will
likely not be widely available until mid-2021.
Trump has accused Biden of spreading "anti-vaccine rhetoric," while
Biden has emphasized that he will listen to scientists, not the
president, regarding a vaccine's safety.
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The broadcast was the first town hall-style event for Biden since he
accepted the Democratic nomination last month, giving viewers a rare
chance to see him answer live questions from people whose votes he hopes
to win in November.
The cable network described the event as a "drive-in town hall":
participants remained at their parked cars outdoors to ensure they
stayed safely distanced from one another.
Biden spent much of the evening attacking Trump for his handling of the
pandemic, including the president's own admission to the journalist Bob
Woodward that he deliberately downplayed the disease's deadliness.
"He knew it and did nothing," Biden said. "It's close to criminal."
Trump has subsequently said he was trying to avoid panic.
Biden said he did not have the power to enforce a national mask mandate,
walking back remarks he made on Wednesday in which he suggested the
president could legally require masks amid a national emergency. But he
vowed to encourage every governor to do so while criticizing Trump for
questioning the efficacy of masks.
Biden also took advantage of the event's setting near his birthplace of
Scranton, comparing his working-class upbringing with what he derided as
Trump's "Park Avenue" background.
"Guys like me who were the first of my family to go to college... We are
as good as anybody," he said. "And guys like Trump, who inherited
everything and squandered what they inherited, are the people that I've
always had a problem with - not the people who are busting their neck."
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Democratic U.S. presidential nominee and former Vice President Joe
Biden arrives for a televised town hall in Scranton, Pennsylvania,
U.S., September 17, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
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He said he would accept the results of the election, a stance that
Trump has declined to adopt amid his unfounded claims that the
widespread use of mail-in ballots due to the pandemic will cause
massive fraud.
Electoral experts have said voter fraud is exceedingly rare in the
United States, where voting by mail is a longstanding practice in
many states.
For much of the summer, Biden held mostly virtual events from his
home in Delaware, drawing criticism from Trump that he was "hiding."
But Biden maintained an advantage in national opinion polls
throughout, as the pandemic battered Trump's standing among voters.
In recent weeks, Biden has begun to hold campaign events again in
other states, but they have been largely devoid of attendees aside
from reporters and invited guests in a nod to the coronavirus.
Trump, who has returned to holding large-scale rallies, participated
in an ABC town hall with undecided voters earlier this week, where
he defended his administration's response to the outbreak.
At an outdoor rally in Mosinee, Wisconsin, on Thursday night, Trump
told supporters that Biden "would absolutely eradicate your state's
economy" and mocked the CNN event for keeping attendees apart in
cars.
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COVID-19 has killed more than 195,000 people in the United States,
the most of any country.
Biden and Trump will both travel to Minnesota on Friday, the first
day of early voting there.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Additional reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt;
Editing by William Mallard and Christopher Cushing)
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