Biden says Trump can't stop violence he has 'fomented' for years

Joe Biden on Monday criticized President Donald Trump for having “long ago forfeited any moral leadership in this country” and argued the president “can’t stop the violence” that has arisen in cities across the U.S. “because for years he has fomented it.”

In a speech in Pittsburgh — his first in months outside the area near his Wilmington, Delaware home — Biden responded to Trump’s accusations that he would be soft on crime and said the president has been “incapable of telling us the truth, incapable of facing the facts. Incapable of healing.”

“He may believe mouthing the words law and order makes him strong, but his failure to call on his own supporters to stop acting as an armed militia in this country shows you how weak he is,” the Democratic presidential nominee said. “Does anyone believe there will be less violence in America if Donald Trump is reelected?”

Biden accused Trump of “sowing chaos” and “stoking violence,” before strongly condemning a spate of recent violence in multiple U.S. cities.

“Rioting is not protesting. Looting is not protesting. Setting fires is not protesting,” Biden said,

“It’s lawlessness,” he added. “Violence will not bring change, it will only bring destruction.”

“It’s wrong in every way,” he said.

Biden also explicitly addressed some of the criticisms that Trump and other Republicans leveled against him at the Republican National Convention last week.

“You know me. You know my heart, and you know my story, my family’s story. Ask yourself: Do I look to you like a radical socialist with a soft spot for rioters? Really?” Biden said.

Biden’s Monday speech was his first since before the pandemic hit the U.S. that did not take place in the general vicinity of his Delaware home, or in the Philadelphia-area, which is a short drive from his home. Until this week, Biden, citing the public health threats of the COVID-19 pandemic, had refrained from any campaign travel at all, switching to a virtual campaign in mid-March.

The speech, in front of a small audience of socially-distanced reporters, also came after weeks of criticism from Trump and other Republicans — and amid some grumblings from fellow Democrats — that he hadn’t traveled far from home during the campaign.

The decision to remain in Pennsylvania, however, makes sense. The state is among the most critical battlegrounds in the 2020 race.

Biden later pivoted to attacking Trump on the issue of safety, using the topic to lambast the president over his response to the pandemic and pointing out the the images of violence that were unfolding on television and computer screens across the U.S. were happening on Trump’s watch — not on his own.

“The simple truth is Donald Trump failed to protect America, so now he’s trying to scare America,” Biden said.

“Since they have no agenda or vision for a second term Trump and Pence are running on this. ‘You won’t be safe in Joe Biden’s America.’ And what’s their proof? The violence you’re seeing in Donald Trump’s America. These are not images from some imagined ‘Joe Biden’s America’ in the future. These are images from Donald Trump’s America today,” Biden said.

“Mr. Trump, you want to talk about fear? Do you know what people are afraid of in America? Afraid they’re going to get COVID. They’re afraid they’re going to get sick and die—and that is in no small part because of you,” he added.

He went on to address a smattering of “crises” that he he said “under Donald Trump, keep multiplying.”

“COVID. Economic devastation. Unwarranted police violence. Emboldened white nationalists. A reckoning on race. Declining faith in a bright American future,” Biden said. “The common thread? An incumbent president who makes things worse, not better. An incumbent president who sows chaos rather than providing order.”

Biden’s address came after three people died in recent days around protests in Kenosha, Wisconsin and Portland, Oregon. The Kenosha protests were triggered by the police shooting of Jacob Blake, a Black man, seven times in the back while protests in Portland have been ongoing since late spring after the police killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor.

Kyle Rittenhouse, 17, is accused of having opened fire Tuesday during a Black Lives Matter protest in Kenosha, killing two people. Rittenhouse attended the protests armed with a long gun as militiamen descended upon the town in the name of protecting businesses from damage. Rittenhouse was arrested and charged with two counts of homicide, among other charges, in connection with the shooting at the protest.

In Portland, a man was shot and killed in Portland amid clashes between Black Lives Matter protesters and a pro-Trump caravan on Saturday.

Portland police are investigating the shooting and it was not immediately clear whether that death was in direct connection to the protests. Video showed protesters hurling projectiles like water bottles at the Trump caravan while Trump supporters sprayed protesters with paintballs and what appeared to be pepper spray as lifted four-wheel-drive trucks were filmed driving through downtown Portland intersections filled with protesters.

Trump, as well as his campaign, immediately hit back. Moments after Biden’s speech ended, the president accused him of “blaming the Police far more than he’s blaming the Rioters, Anarchists, Agitators, and Looters.”

Trump’s re-election campaign, meanwhile, slammed Biden has having “failed to condemn the left-wing mobs burning, looting, and terrorizing American cities.”

“These left-wing rioters are Joe Biden supporters trashing cities run by Democrats who support his candidacy,” Trump 2020 communications director Tim Murtaugh said in a statement.

Earlier, Trump tweeted about Biden’s planned address Monday, claiming he “is coming out of the basement earlier than his hoped for ten days because his people told him he has no choice, his poll numbers are PLUNGING!”

“Going to Pittsburgh, where I have helped industry to a record last year, & then back to his basement for an extended period,” Trump added.

Biden issued a lengthy statement Sunday following the clashes in Portland, saying, “As a country, we must condemn the incitement of hate and resentment that led to this deadly clash.”

“What does President Trump think will happen when he continues to insist on fanning the flames of hate and division in our society and using the politics of fear to whip up his supporters?” Biden added, as Trump earlier Sunday posted a video of the pro-Trump truck parade and said they were “GREAT PATRIOTS!”

Biden’s speech follows Trump and his surrogates at the Republican National Convention promoting the idea that Americans won’t be safe under a Biden presidency. In turn, Biden and his supporters countered that Americans aren’t safe under Trump right now.

source: nbcnews.com