Biden Issues a Blistering Attack on Trump
During an appearance in Arizona, President Biden
portrayed former President Donald J. Trump as a budding autocrat with no
fidelity to the tenets of American democracy.
By Peter
Baker
Reporting
from Tempe, Ariz.
Sept. 28,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/09/28/us/politics/biden-mccain-library.html
There’s
something dangerous happening in America now. There’s an extremist movement
that does not share the basic beliefs in our democracy — the MAGA movement. Not
every Republican, not even a majority of Republicans adhere to the MAGA
extremist ideology. I know because I’ve been able to work with Republicans my
whole career. But there’s no question that today’s Republican Party is driven
and intimidated by MAGA Republican extremists. Their extreme agenda, if carried
out, would fundamentally alter the institutions of American democracy as we
know it. My friends, they’re not hiding their attacks. They’re openly promoting
them. Attacking the free press as the enemy of the people. Attacking the rule
of law as an impediment. Fomenting voter suppression and election subversion.
Did you ever think we’d be having debates at your stage of your careers where
banning books, banning books and burying history. Extremists in Congress more
determined to shut down the government, to burn the place down than to let the
people’s business be done.
President
Biden issued a broad and blistering attack against former President Donald J.
Trump on Thursday, accusing his predecessor and would-be successor of inciting
violence, seeking unfettered power and plotting to undermine the Constitution
if he returns to office in next year’s elections.
In his most
direct condemnation of his leading Republican challenger in many months, Mr.
Biden portrayed Mr. Trump as a budding autocrat with no fidelity to the tenets
of American democracy and who is motivated by hatred and a desire for
retribution. While he usually avoids referring to Mr. Trump by name, Mr. Biden
this time held nothing back as he offered a dire warning about the consequences
of a new Trump term.
“This is a
dangerous notion, this president is above the law, no limits on power,” Mr.
Biden said in a speech in Tempe, Ariz. “Trump says the Constitution gave him,
quote, the right to do whatever he wants as president, end of quote. I never
heard a president say that in jest. Not guided by the Constitution or by common
service and decency toward our fellow Americans but by vengeance and
vindictiveness.”
Mr. Biden
cited recent comments by Mr. Trump vowing “retribution” against his foes,
accusing NBC News of “treason” and suggesting that the outgoing chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Mark A. Milley, might deserve to be put to death.
The president also decried plans being developed by Mr. Trump’s allies to erode
the independence of major agencies, wipe out much of the top ranks of civil
service and make senior government officials personally loyal to him.
“Seizing
power, concentrating power, attempting to abuse power, purging and packing key
institutions, spewing conspiracy theories, spreading lies for profit and power
to divide America in every way, inciting violence against those who risk their
lives to keep Americans safe, weaponizing against the very soul of who we are
as Americans,” Mr. Biden said. “This MAGA threat is a threat to the brick and
mortar of our democratic institutions. It’s also a threat to the character of
our nation.”
The
gloves-off assault on Mr. Trump represented a marked shift for Mr. Biden, who
has spent months mostly talking up the benefits of his policies while ignoring
the race to choose a Republican nominee to challenge him. But repeated speeches
claiming credit for “Bidenomics” have not moved his anemic approval ratings, as
many voters tell pollsters they worry about the 80-year-old president’s age.
Democratic
strategists have pressed the White House to draw a sharper contrast with Mr.
Trump to remind Democrats and independents disenchanted with Mr. Biden of the
stakes in next year’s election. Whatever Mr. Biden’s weaknesses, Democratic
strategists maintain that swing voters will come back to him once they focus on
Mr. Trump, 77, as the alternative.
Mr. Biden’s
campaign released an ad assailing Mr. Trump as both the current and former
presidents traveled separately to Michigan to meet with striking autoworkers.
“He says he stands with autoworkers,” the ad says, showing images of Mr. Trump
on the golf course, “but as president, Donald Trump passed tax breaks for his
rich friends while automakers shuttered their plants and Michigan lost
manufacturing jobs.”
The newly
aggressive approach drew praise from critics of Mr. Trump. “Biden has never
delivered a more important, powerful or eloquent speech than the one he has
just given about the crucial importance of protecting American democracy,”
Michael Beschloss, the presidential historian, wrote on social media.
Mr. Biden
delivered the speech, his first focused on democracy since just before last
year’s midterm elections, at an event meant to honor his old friend and
adversary, Senator John McCain, one of the most vocal Republican critics of Mr.
Trump before his death from brain cancer in 2018.
Appearing
at the Tempe Center for the Arts in Mr. McCain’s home state, the president
announced that he would direct federal money left over from the Covid-19 relief
plan passed in early 2021 to help build a new library honoring the senator. The
administration later said the federal contribution would be $83 million for an
83,000-square-foot facility near Papago Park.
In
embracing Mr. McCain, Mr. Biden sought to reach out to anti-Trump Republicans
and appeal to voters more generally in one of the battleground states likely to
determine the outcome next year. Mr. Biden and Mr. McCain served in the Senate
together for years and remained friendly even after running on opposing tickets
in 2008, when Mr. McCain was the Republican presidential nominee and Mr. Biden
was the Democratic vice-presidential nominee. Mr. Biden earlier this month
visited a memorial to Mr. McCain in Hanoi, Vietnam.
Mr. McCain
was one of the most vocal Republican critics of Mr. Trump, and Cindy McCain,
the senator’s widow, endorsed Mr. Biden against the incumbent president of her
party in 2020. In return, he appointed her ambassador to United Nations
agencies for food and agriculture in Rome. Earlier this year, she was appointed
executive director of the United Nations World Food Program.
Mrs. McCain
introduced Mr. Biden in glowing terms, noting that while he and Mr. McCain were
in the Senate together, they shared a deep commitment to country and civility
even when they disagreed vigorously over policy. She choked up briefly when she
recalled that Mr. Biden was the one who had introduced her to her late husband.
Kari Lake,
the Trump ally who lost a race for governor of Arizona last year and now plans
to run for Senate next year, fired back at the president even before his
speech, arguing that the recent indictments of Mr. Trump constituted the real
threat to the country.
“Joe Biden
wants to talk about democracy in Arizona — meanwhile he is launching an
unprecedented attack on our democracy, targeting his leading political opponent
for the White House, attempting to put him in jail just months before the
election,” she said in a statement.
The federal
indictments against Mr. Trump, who is accused of trying to corruptly overturn
the 2020 election and of mishandling classified documents, were secured by Jack
Smith, a special counsel appointed by Attorney General Merrick B. Garland.
There is no evidence that Mr. Biden has played any role in the cases, and Mr.
Garland has firmly denied that politics were involved.
In his
address, Mr. Biden cited inflammatory comments made by other Republicans,
including Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, who talked of slitting the throats of
civil servants, and members of Congress who have talked about destroying the
F.B.I. and sought to whitewash the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.
“It’s not
one person; it’s the controlling element of the House Republican Party,” he
said. He noted that he heard few, if anyone, from the other side of the aisle
speak out against Mr. Trump’s talk of treason and death. “The silence is
deafening,” he said.
In a
personal aside, he recalled Mr. Trump’s comments denigrating Mr. McCain’s
military service (“He’s not a war hero. He was a war hero because he was
captured.”) and reports that the former president has referred to soldiers who
went to war as “suckers” and “losers.”
“Is John a
sucker?” he asked of Mr. McCain. Mentioning his son Beau Biden, who served in
Iraq and later died of brain cancer, he added, “Is he a sucker?”
Mr. Biden,
who prides himself on passing some important legislation with bipartisan
support, made a point of not painting every Republican with the brush of
radicalism.
“Not every
Republican — not even the majority of Republicans — adhere to the extremist
MAGA extremist ideology,” he said. “I know because I’ve been able to work with
Republicans my whole career. But there’s no question that today’s Republican
Party is driven and intimidated by MAGA Republican extremists. Their extreme
agenda, if carried out, would fundamentally alter the institutions of American
democracy as we know it.”
Peter Baker
is the chief White House correspondent for The Times. He has covered the last
five presidents and sometimes writes analytical pieces that place presidents
and their administrations in a larger context and historical framework. More
about Peter Baker
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