Biden targets 'extremist' Trump allies as democratic threat in fraught
political moment
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[September 02, 2022]
By Steve Holland, Trevor Hunnicutt and Jarrett Renshaw
PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe
Biden charged Republican allies of Donald Trump with undermining the
country's democracy and urged voters on Thursday to reject extremism
ahead of November's midterm elections.
Biden accused lawmakers and others devoted to the Make America Great
Again (MAGA) agenda led by former U.S. President Trump as willing to
overturn democratic elections, ignore the Constitution and "determined
to take this country backwards" to a time without rights to abortion,
privacy, contraception or same-sex marriage.
"Donald Trump and MAGA Republicans represent an extremism that threatens
the very foundations of our republic," Biden said. "As I stand here
tonight, equality and democracy are under assault. We do ourselves no
favor to pretend otherwise."
The prime-time speech in Philadelphia, the birthplace of American
democracy, marked a sharp turn for Biden as midterm congressional
elections approach.
Aides say the president is increasingly concerned about anti-democratic
trends in the Republican Party, and sees a need to jump into this year's
election fight and recast the stakes of his own 2024 re-election bid.
After spending much of 2022 trying to combat high inflation at home and
Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and enduring two bouts of COVID-19 over
the summer, Biden has in recent days repeatedly lashed out at
Trump-aligned Republicans.
His remarks on Thursday denouncing political violence and urging
bipartisan compromise came after speeches in recent days where he
condemned MAGA philosophy as "semi-fascism" and assailed Republican
threats against the FBI after a search of Trump's Florida home as
"sickening."
House of Representatives Republican leader Kevin McCarthy on Thursday
accused Biden of ignoring crime and inflation to criticize his fellow
citizens.
"Instead of trying to bring our country together to solve these
challenges, President Biden has chosen to divide, demean and disparage
his fellow Americans," McCarthy said in Biden's hometown of Scranton,
Pennsylvania. "Why? Simply because they disagree with his policies."
A Democratic fundraiser said donors are closely watching Biden's
performance over the next few months to gauge whether to back him in a
2024 presidential run.
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U.S. President Joe Biden delivers
remarks on gun crime and his "Safer America Plan" during an event in
Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania, U.S., August 30, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque
Some have already decided that Biden, 79, should step aside to make
way for fresh leadership, while others want to see if he can lead
the party effectively.
"If we can pull it off and retain the Senate, then there will be
enough voices saying he has earned it and pave the way for
re-election," said a senior Democratic official. "If we don't, the
overwhelming sentiment will be 'Pass the torch.'"
FREE ELECTIONS IN DANGER?
Biden spoke in Philadelphia from behind bullet-proof glass and
within earshot of chanting Trump-supporting protesters. He made his
remarks at a venue meant to signal the historical significance of
his appeal, near Independence Hall, where the U.S. Declaration of
Independence and Constitution were adopted.
Some historians and legal scholars have cast the stakes in starker
terms than Biden's political future, saying free elections and
commitment to the rule of law hang in the balance.
They say losing Congress would not only make Biden a lame-duck
president, but also turn over control of certifying the results of
the next presidential election to Trump sympathizers, some of whom
never accepted Biden's 2020 victory and who have pledged to overhaul
voting systems.
Biden alluded to the concerns, saying "I will not stand by and watch
elections in this country be stolen by people who simply refuse to
accept that they lost."
The speech echoed Biden's signature 2020 campaign pledge to restore
the "soul of the nation" and, by implication, purge the values
associated with Trump. In the nearly two years since Biden was
elected, Republican voters have mostly backed candidates aligned
with the former president; more than half say they believe Trump
rightfully won the election.
Confronted by threats after Trump's loss, one in five election
workers polled this year said they may quit before the next
presidential election.
(Reporting by Steve Holland in Philadelphia, and Trevor Hunnicutt
and Jarrett Renshaw in WashingtonAdditional reporting by Jeff Mason
and Tyler Clifford in WashingtonEditing by Heather Timmons, Jonathan
Oatis and Matthew Lewis)
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