Biden faces rising pressure to quit, Trump to accept nomination
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[July 18, 2024]
By Joseph Ax
MILWAUKEE (Reuters) - President Joe Biden's reelection bid was mired in
fresh turmoil after news reports that top Democratic leaders had
privately pushed him to end his campaign, while Donald Trump was set to
accept the Republican presidential nomination on Thursday at his party's
national convention.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, House Minority Leader Hakeem
Jeffries and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi have all expressed deep
concerns directly to Biden in recent days that he will not only lose the
White House but also cost the party any chance of winning back the U.S.
House of Representatives in the Nov. 5 election, according to reports in
multiple news outlets.
Biden, 81, has thus far refused to entertain public calls from 20
congressional Democrats to step aside, following a halting performance
at his June 27 debate against Trump, 78.
His troubles were compounded on Wednesday when he tested positive for
COVID-19 during a campaign visit to Nevada, forcing him to return to his
Delaware home to work in isolation.
Meanwhile, Trump will cap the four-day Republican National Convention in
Milwaukee with his first public address since he survived an
assassination attempt in Pennsylvania on Saturday, in which a bullet
grazed his ear.
The convention has put Republican unity on display in contrast to the
divisions roiling Democrats. Trump's former top rivals for the
nomination, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley and Florida Governor Ron
DeSantis, offered strong endorsements of his candidacy despite their
past criticisms.
Senator J.D. Vance, Trump's running mate and another former
critic-turned-loyalist, presented himself on Wednesday as the son of a
neglected industrial Ohio town who will fight for the working class if
elected in November.
In chronicling his hardscrabble journey from a difficult childhood to
the U.S. Marines, Yale Law School, venture capitalism and the U.S.
Senate, Vance, 39, introduced himself to Americans while using his story
to argue he understands their everyday struggles.
"I grew up in Middletown, Ohio, a small town where people spoke their
minds, built with their hands and loved their God, their family, their
community and their country with their whole hearts," Vance said. "But
it was also a place that had been cast aside and forgotten by America's
ruling class in Washington."
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Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. President Donald
Trump gestures during a walk-through ahead of Day 3 of the
Republican National Convention (RNC), at the Fiserv Forum in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S., July 17, 2024. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File
Photo
As the first millennial on a major party ticket, Vance, who has
embraced Trump's mixture of conservative populism and isolationist
foreign policy, is well positioned to be the future leader of the
Make America Great Movement.
In a sign of his potential value to the ticket, he also appealed to
the working and middle classes in Michigan, Pennsylvania and
Wisconsin specifically - three Rust Belt swing states likely to
decide the Nov. 5 election.
Vance's prime-time debut, less than two years after assuming his
first public office, caps a meteoric rise. He is one of several
high-profile Republicans, such as U.S. Senators Ted Cruz and Marco
Rubio, whose transformations from critics to loyalists have
underscored Trump's takeover of the party.
For Trump's political opponents, his hold on the party portends a
darker moment in which he follows through on his promises to expand
the power of the presidency, exact revenge on his enemies and
threaten longstanding democratic institutions.
Vance would advance "an agenda that puts extremism and the ultra
wealthy over our democracy," the Biden campaign said on Wednesday.
Vance has opposed military aid for Ukraine and defended Trump's
attempts to overturn his 2020 election loss to Biden.
His speech embraced many of Trumpism's core tenets, promising to
prioritize domestic manufacturing over Chinese imports and warning
allies they would no longer get "free rides" in securing world
peace.
The evening's other speakers often engaged in vitriolic attacks
against Biden, in contrast to the tone of national unity that Trump
had promised in the wake of the shooting.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax, Nathan Layne and Gram Slattery in
Milwaukee; Additional reporting by Helen Coster, Costas Pitas and
Alexandra Ulmer; Writing by Joseph Ax; Editing by Howard Goller)
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