Jill Biden is out campaigning again — but not for her husband anymore.
She's pumping up Harris
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[October 16, 2024]
By DARLENE SUPERVILLE
CLAWSON, Mich. (AP) — Jill Biden wasted no time after she stepped up to
the microphone at a suburban Detroit restaurant.
“Now some have come to (the) Detroit area recently and thrown around
some insults, but from what I’ve seen this is a vibrant, thriving city,”
she said. It was a swipe at Republican Donald Trump, who aimed a recent
dart at the most populous city in a critical Midwestern battleground
state.
The first lady was back on the campaign trail for the first time in
months, but no longer pushing Democrats to support her husband,
President Joe Biden. Instead, she is now putting her energy into
boosting Vice President Kamala Harris, who Biden endorsed for president
after he dropped his reelection bid. On Tuesday, the first lady wrapped
up a five-day swing through five battleground states.
While the race itself has changed, what remains unchanged for Jill Biden
is her effort to highlight contrasts with Trump, the Republican
presidential nominee, in the hope that Democrats can keep the former
president out of the White House and help preserve her husband’s legacy.
It’s one reason why she reminded the 150 or so supporters at a Harris
campaign event at the restaurant in Clawson, Michigan, about 20 miles
north of Detroit, that the former president had insulted Detroit days
earlier by calling it “a mess” while he was there delivering a speech.
The first lady uses her campaign speeches to validate Harris
Before getting in a few digs at Trump, the first lady spends most of her
speech pumping up Harris, even sharing that they have “bonded” over many
things during the past four years.
“One was how we lost our mothers both to cancer, both long before we
were done needing them,” Biden says.
In her campaign speech, which has been retooled to focus on the vice
president, she says Harris’ background has helped make her “a tough,
compassionate, decisive leader.” She cites Harris' experience in high
school helping a friend who was being molested by her stepfather, and
her career as a district attorney and California’s attorney general.
She promotes Harris’ plans to bring down grocery and housing costs by
going after “greedy” corporations, as well as her proposal to give
$25,000 in down-payment assistance to people trying to buy their first
homes.
Then Biden shifts to “what’s at stake for women in this election,”
recalling how “stunned” and “devastated” she was in 2022 when the three
justices Trump nominated for the U.S. Supreme Court helped undo a
woman’s constitutional right to an abortion.
Harris has been the administration's point person on the abortion and
reproductive rights issue for the past two years.
“No one has to abandon their faith or deeply held beliefs to agree that
the government shouldn’t be telling women what to do,” Biden says,
echoing the vice president. “As president, Kamala Harris will proudly
sign a national law to restore reproductive freedom to every woman in
every state in our country.”
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First lady Jill Biden greets supporters after speaking during a
campaign stop Monday, Oct. 14, 2024, in Madison, Wis. (AP Photo/Morry
Gash)
“As president, Kamala Harris is going to fight for you,” Jill Biden
says.
Biden turns a lull in her teaching schedule into a swing-state
blitz
A break in the fall schedule at Northern Virginia Community College,
where the first lady teaches English and writing twice a week,
allowed her to get back on the trail for the first time since the
president announced in July that he was leaving the race and
endorsing Harris.
She delivered speeches and met with small groups of campaign
volunteers — bringing cookies to some of them — as she barnstormed
through the battlegrounds of Arizona, Nevada, Michigan and Wisconsin
on a five-day blitz that ended Tuesday in Pennsylvania.
She joined volunteers making calls at a phone bank in West Chester,
a Philadelphia suburb, and spoke at an event at Montgomery County
Community College in Blue Bell, another suburb.
The first lady is expected to head out again for Harris and her
running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, in the closing weeks of what
remains a neck-and-neck contest.
The first lady takes on Trump
“I even hate to say it,” Biden said after the audience packed inside
a small Democratic campaign office in Madison, Wisconsin, groaned at
her mention of the former president's name.
“Donald Trump wakes up every morning thinking about one person and
one person only. Who?” she asked. “Himself!” the audience shouted.
The first lady said a second Trump presidency “would lead to more
chaos, more greed, more division. He wants to lower taxes for rich
guys like him while costs go up for everyone else.”
“And this is important, the next president will likely choose new
Supreme Court justices. And our children and our grandchildren will
have to live with the consequences," she added.
The first lady encourages supporters to vote early.
“As you know, this election is going to be so close, every vote
counts,” she told the phone bank volunteers in Pennsylvania before
she sat down to make some calls herself.
After speaking at Montgomery County Community College, she met the
president in Philadelphia, where, he too, was fulfilling his new
mission of boosting Harris.
“Kamala Harris has been a great vice president. She'll be a great
president as well,” Biden said at a Democratic Party dinner.
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