National Post

Trump a danger to the world, Biden warns

- Richard Warnica

• U. S. President Barack Obama was expected to portray Hillary Clinton as the anti-Donald Trump Wednesday in a bid to protect his legacy and prevent the election of a man painted by Democrats as a risk to the United States and the world.

According to excerpts from his prepared remarks for the Democratic National Convention, Obama planned to portray his former rival as an experience­d leader with the temperamen­t to guide America in a time of strife.

“Even in the middle of crisis, she listens to people, and keeps her cool, and treats everybody with respect,” he said in speech excerpts. “And no matter how daunting the odds, no matter how much people try to knock her down, she never, ever quits.”

Earlier in the evening, U.S. Vice- President Joe Biden painted Trump as a danger to America and the world in a rousing attack on the Republican nominee that seemed to unite the fractious convention crowd.

“He has no clue about what makes America great,” Biden said. “Actually, he has no clue, period.”

At that point, the crowd in the packed arena in Philadelph­ia began to chant: “No clue! No clue! No clue!”

Biden, speaking on the third night of a convention dominated by battles between Bernie Sanders loyalists and the party’s mainstream, called Trump the least qualified major party nominee in American history. His embrace of torture “betrays our values,” Biden said. “We simply cannot let that happen as Americans.”

Biden’s speech capped an evening of attacks on Trump’ s foreign policy experience and plans. It came on a day when Trump seemed to invite Russian hackers to infiltrate Clinton’s emails and interfere in the American election process.

A host of speakers used t hat moment to skewer Trump with hastily written lines, portraying the New York businessma­n as erratic and near traitorous. “This morning, he personally invited Russia to hack us,” said ret. Rear Admiral John Hutson. “That’s not law and order. That’s criminal intent.”

Former CIA director Leon Panetta told a sometimes hostile crowd that the United States could not afford a president “who believes America should withdraw from the world, threatens our internatio­nal treaties, and violates our moral principles. “We cannot afford an erratic finger on our nuclear weapons,” he said.

“The America we love does not engage in torture ,” said former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley in his speech. It does not build walls or private prisons, he continued. “I say to hell with Trump’s American nightmare. We believe in the American dream!”

Hutson, a poor speaker, still delivered t he most pointed line of the night. Channellin­g the late Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, he t old Trump, who once belittled John McCain for getting captured in Vietnam, that he “wasn’t fit to polish John McCain’s boots.”

O’Malley, though, came t he closest to attacking Trump on his own terms. He called the Republican nominee an “immigrant-bashing carnival barker” and a “bully racist.” He added, “Hillary Clinton actually knows the enduring symbol of America is not a barbed-wire fence. It is the Statue of Liberty.”

Former New York mayor Michael Bloomberg, an independen­t once elected as a Republican, called Trump a “dangerous demagogue” and urged the crowd to vote for Clinton. The billionair­e media entreprene­ur also ridiculed Trump’s business record. “I’m a New Yorker and I know a con when I see one,” he said.

The focus on foreign affairs and terrorism came after an evening heavy on liberal policy. Five years after she was nearly murdered in a mass shooting in Arizona, former representa­tive Gabby Giffords appeared on stage to make an emotional plea for gun control. She emerged to enormous applause, her body still bearing the signs of that 2011 attack. “Speaking is difficult for me,” she said. “But come January, I want to say these two words: Madame President.”

Giffords s aid Clinton “would stand up to the gun lobby,” echoing a parade of earlier speakers who had lost relatives to mass shootings in Orlando, Sandy Hook and elsewhere.

The party also played a short film about climate change directed by James Cameron, the creator of Avatar. Afterward, California Gov. Jerry Brown attacked Trump for denying the science behind global warming.

“Trump says global warming is a hoax. I say Donald Trump is a fraud,” he said. “Trump says there is not drought in California. I say Trump lies.”

The sustained attacks on the Republican nominee came as the party continued to suffer minor mutinies and discord in Philadelph­ia. Delegates loyal to Bernie Sanders once again occupied a media tent at the Wells Fargo arena Wednesday night, to protest what they see as a tainted nomination process. Meanwhile, several speeches were interrupte­d by pockets of angry chanting inside the arena itself.

Obama, s cheduled to speak at the end of the night, faced a double-barrelled task: to reflect on his own legacy and agenda and make the case for the woman who was once his rival. Key parts of his agenda could be undermined within months if Trump, not Clinton, wins in November.

 ?? SAUL LOEB / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? Speaking on Donald Trump at the Democratic National Convention, U. S. Vice-President Joe Biden said “He has no clue about what makes America great. Actually, he has no clue, period.”
SAUL LOEB / AFP / GETTY IMAGES Speaking on Donald Trump at the Democratic National Convention, U. S. Vice-President Joe Biden said “He has no clue about what makes America great. Actually, he has no clue, period.”

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