INTERNATIONAL
US POLITICS
Trump brands Biden 'enemy of the state' at
Pennsylvania rally
Donald Trump branded Joe Biden an "enemy of the
state" Saturday as he hit back at the US president's assertion that the
Republican and his supporters are undermining American democracy.
Le Monde
with AFP
Published
on September 4, 2022 at 04h27, updated at 05h35 on September 4, 2022
Donald
Trump branded Joe Biden an "enemy of the state" Saturday as he hit
back at the US president's assertion that the Republican and his supporters are
undermining American democracy, and slammed last month's FBI raid of his
Florida home.
Making his
first public appearance since the August 8 raid, Trump told a rally in
Pennsylvania that the search was a "travesty of justice" and warned
it would produce "a backlash the likes of which nobody has ever
seen."
"There
can be no more vivid example of the very real threats from American freedom
than just a few weeks ago, you saw, when we witnessed one of the most shocking
abuses of power by any administration in American history," Trump claimed,
despite long-standing protocols by which the Justice Department and the FBI act
independently of the White House.
Trump told
cheering supporters at the "Save America" gathering in the city of
Wilkes-Barre that the "egregious abuse of the law" was going to
produce "a backlash the likes of which nobody has ever seen." He also
hit back at Biden's speech this week in which the president said his predecessor
and Republican supporters "represent an extremism that threatens the very
foundations of our republic."
Speaking in
Philadelphia, the cradle of US democracy, on Thursday, the president launched
an extraordinary assault on those Republicans who embrace Trump's "Make
America Great Again" ideology - and urged his own supporters to fight back
in what he billed as a "battle for the Soul of the Nation."
Trump
slammed it as the "most vicious, hateful and divisive speech ever
delivered by an American president." "He's an enemy of the state. You
want to know the truth. The enemy of the state is him," Trump said.
"Republicans in the MAGA movement are not the ones trying to undermine our
democracy," continued Trump, who has repeatedly claimed the 2020
presidential election, which he lost, was rigged; and whose party has made
unfounded claims of voter fraud a central plank of their platform. "We are
the ones trying to save our democracy, very simple. The danger to democracy
comes from the radical left, not from the right," Trump added.
He was
appearing at the rally ahead of November's midterm elections, which could see
Biden's Democrats lose control of both houses of Congress.
'Top
secret' files
Although
Trump is not on the ballot, Biden, 79, is seeking to turn the vote into a
referendum on his predecessor in a bid to hold on to the Senate and House of
Representatives. At the Wilkes-Barre rally - where Trump took to the stage to
support his candidate in the Senate race, TV physician Mehmet Oz - Trump
supporter Edward Young said he had been "disgusted" by Biden's
speech. "He declared war on me. He declared war on half of America,"
Young told AFP.
The dueling
visits by Biden and Trump to Pennsylvania, a key battleground state, come as
the Republican is under increasing legal pressure over the documents found by
the FBI at his Mar-a-Lago estate. The Justice Department has said in court
filings that highly classified government documents, including some marked
"Top Secret," were discovered in Trump's personal office during the
raid.
A detailed
list of what was seized also showed Trump held on to more than 11,000
unclassified government records that he claims are his to keep - but legally
are owned by the National Archives. Among the papers seized were 18 documents
labeled "top secret", 53 labeled "secret" and another 31
marked "confidential." Of those, seven top secret files, 17 secret
files and three confidential files were retrieved from Trump's private office.
Agents also
found several dozen empty folders labeled "classified" in the office,
raising speculation that sensitive documents may have been lost, destroyed or
moved.
Trump, who
is keeping supporters and commentators guessing about whether he intends to run
for president again in 2024, has sued to have the documents turned over to a
neutral "special master," a move that could slow the government's
probe.


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