Biden Midwest factory tour offers contrast to Trump hush money case
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[April 04, 2023]
By Steve Holland
FRIDLEY, Minnesota (Reuters) - While the drama over Donald Trump's
arraignment unfolded in New York, President Joe Biden pressed ahead with
his official duties, visiting the Midwestern state of Minnesota on
Monday to talk about economic issues.
Biden went to Fridley, Minnesota, to discuss infrastructure and
manufacturing jobs, tour a factory and tout a new $1 billion investment
pledge from engine maker Cummins Inc.
Over 1,000 miles away, New York City was bracing for the arraignment of
his predecessor over hush money paid to a porn star before the 2016
election.
Journalists lined the block outside Trump's Manhattan home, Trump Tower,
police erected barricades outside the courtroom where he is to be
arraigned, and the local Young Republican Club prepped for a Tuesday
rally.
At the Cummins plant, Biden told the crowd that since he took power,
more than 12 million jobs have been created. "That's more jobs in two
years than any president has created in four years."
He also renewed his appeal to raise taxes on billionaires. "It's just
paying your fair share. And it's cutting subsidies -why are we paying
subsidies to the oil companies?"
Biden's only reference to Trump was when he took credit for reducing the
deficit by $1 trillion. "The last guy who had this job, he increased it
by $2 trillion," the president said.
The sharp contrast between what the two potential 2024 presidential
rivals - Democrat Biden and Republican Trump - are doing on any given
day may become a jarring, in-your-face, split-screen reality for the
American political scene for months to come.
While Biden is yet to officially declare he is running for a second
four-year term in 2024, his candidacy is all but assured and faces no
apparent serious challenge.
Trump announced last November that he is running again, and the hush
money case is expected to take at least a year to come to trial. His
indictment has proven to be a fillip to his reelection campaign, pulling
former fans who were leaning toward Florida Governor Ron DeSantis back
into his orbit.
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U.S. President Joe Biden speaks with an
employee as he tours the Cummins Power Generation Facility in
Fridley, Minnesota, U.S., April 3, 2023. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
That means the next presidential race, expected to run over $1
billion in advertising and campaigning, could pit two very different
visions of older, white, male America: Biden, 80, against Trump, 76.
Biden defeated Trump in 2020 after pledging to restore order
following his rival's chaotic four-year term.
Biden, his aides and Democratic strategists plan to say as little as
possible about Trump for the time being, and instead will tout the
over $1 trillion in new, Democrat-backed federal investment bills
passed during his first two years in office. Their core message to
voters is to give Biden four more years to "finish the job."
When Trump visits a lower Manhattan courthouse tomorrow to be
fingerprinted and photographed and appear in front of a judge, Biden
will meet with his council of science and technology advisers.
Trump is raising money on the back of his indictment, and his
campaign credited it with bringing in $4 million in just 24 hours.
At one point, he distributed a photo of himself with a baseball bat
next to one of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, who brought
the case.
While New York police say they have seen no credible threats so far,
the deadly Jan. 6 insurrection is a fresh memory. On Monday, New
York Mayor Eric Adams warned Trump supporters that the city was "not
a playground ... for your misplaced anger."
(Reporting by Steve Holland; Additional reporting by Trevor
Hunnicutt; Writing by Heather Timmons; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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