The Standard (St. Catharines)

Biden, Trump organize rare duelling events in pandemic era

- WILL WEISSERT AND MARC LEVY

LANCASTER, PA. — Both U.S. President Donald Trump and his Democratic challenger, Joe Biden, were swinging through key battlegrou­nd states on Thursday, presenting duelling events in a way that hasn’t happened much in the age of coronaviru­s and showcased their contrastin­g styles in response to the pandemic.

The former vice-president wore a black mask as he met with three mothers and two children who told of benefiting from the Obama administra­tion’s signature health care law in Lancaster, Pa., and then giving a speech on how he would improve broader access to health insurance. That comes as Biden has spent weeks arguing that the pandemic remains a clear and present danger that Trump is trying to wish away amid a desire to jump-start a crippled economy.

Trump visited Marinette in rural Wisconsin for a private tour of a shipyard and participat­ed in a town hall broadcast by Fox News Channel from an airport in Green Bay. Vicepresid­ent Mike Pence is also travelling in another potential swing state, Ohio.

Biden is planning to use his latest speech to argue that Trump’s opposition to the health care law, coupled with a response to the pandemic that he calls inadequate, ensures that even people who contract the coronaviru­s and survive will “live their lives caught in a vise between Donald Trump’s twin legacies.”

Those are “his failure to protect the American people from the coronaviru­s and his heartless crusade to take health care protection­s away from American families,” the presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee will say, according to excerpts released by his campaign. Biden also plans to scoff at Trump’s comment that more testing for the virus is “a double-edged sword.”

“Testing unequivoca­lly saves lives, and widespread testing is the key to opening up our economy again — so that’s one edge of the sword,” Biden will say. “The other edge: that he thinks finding out that more Americans are sick will make him look bad. And that’s what he’s worried about. He’s worried about looking bad.”

That’s a reference to Trump saying on Saturday that he’d instructed aides to “slow down testing” because more screening was turning up too many positive tests. The White House first said Trump was joking, but the president later insisted that he was not.

Narrow 2016 victories in Wisconsin and Pennsylvan­ia were pivotal in sending Trump to the White House. That he’d build his travel around trying to do that again — and that Biden would respond with trips meant to flip the states back to Democratic — wouldn’t usually be a surprise with the presidenti­al election now less than five months away. But the coronaviru­s has so upended the presidenti­al campaign that normal schedules and travel have been virtually frozen since March.

After long focusing on staging virtual rallies and other online appearance­s from his Delaware home, Biden has in recent weeks begun making frequent trips to Pennsylvan­ia, allowing him to focus on a key swing state without venturing far.

Trump, by contrast, staged a rally in Tulsa, Okla., last weekend and spoke at a megachurch in Arizona on Tuesday after touring a section of that state’s border with Mexico. Biden’s team has been careful to organize very small events and enforce social distancing while its members and its candidate wear masks. Trump’s campaign says Biden is using that cautious approach to hide the fact that he can’t draw large, enthusiast­ic crowds.

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