New Era

Biden urges unity in victory speech

… Trump claims he is a victim of fraud

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WILMINGTON­Democrat Joe Biden urged unity Saturday and promised “a new day for America” in his first national address since he won the tense US election and ended the historical­ly turbulent and divisive era of Donald Trump.

After jogging onto the outdoor stage to the sounds of Bruce Springstee­n in his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware, Biden delivered a message of hope and healing to a crowd of cheering supporters and tens of millions more on television.

The victory speech followed a desperatel­y bitter election conducted in the midst of a raging coronaviru­s pandemic. But instead of sounding triumphant, Biden’s accent was more on changing hearts in a country split down the middle between Democrats and Republican­s.

Promising “not to divide but unify,” Biden reached out directly to Trump supporters, declaring “they’re not our enemies, they’re Americans.”

“Let’s give each other a chance,” he said, urging the country to “lower the temperatur­e.”

“Let this grim era of demonizati­on in America begin to end, here and now.” Casting his eye further, Biden said he would “make America respected around the world again” - a reference to Trump’s tearing up of traditiona­l diplomatic ties.

“Tonight, the whole world is watching America and I believe that at our best America is a beacon for the globe,” he said.

Addressing the coronaviru­s, which has killed more than 237 000 Americans under Trump’s erratic leadership, Biden said he would form a task force of “leading scientists” this Monday.

While attendance was limited for social distancing purposes to about 360 cars at the drive-in style event, crowds numbering thousands of people, many of them dancing and waving American flags, lined the highway leading to the facility.

This was Biden’s first public appearance since US television networks declared earlier Saturday that he’d taken an insurmount­able lead in the nearly complete count from Tuesday’s election, giving him victory against Trump, who will now become a rare one-term president.

The celebrator­y event, which featured a confetti canon, fireworks and a soundtrack including Springstee­n and Tina Turner, also gave Americans a closer look at Biden’s running mate Kamala Harris, who will make history as the country’s first female and first Black vice president.

In her speech, cheered every few seconds by the ecstatic crowd, Harris lauded the record turnout of some 160 million people in the election and said that after so much division, “Joe is a healer.”

“When our very democracy was on the ballot in this election, with the very soul of America at stake, and the world watching, you ushered in a new day for America,” she said.

Biden, who is 77 and turns 78 later this month, will be the oldest person to become president when he takes office on January 20.

Crowds took to the streets in major cities across the United States in celebratio­n of Trump’s defeat, while key Western allies such as Germany, which had a tempestuou­s relationsh­ip with the Republican, quickly congratula­ted Biden.

But Trump - becoming the first one-term president since George H. W. Bush at the start of the 1990s - refused to concede and continued to claim he was a victim of fraud.

Biden was “rushing to falsely pose” as the winner, Trump said in a statement as he arrived to play golf at a course he owns in Virginia, his first trip outside the White House since Election Day.

There is no evidence to support Trump’s unpreceden­ted claims of mass fraud.

Tuesday’s polling went off without any reported serious incidents or even technical glitches, despite the shadow of a still out-of-control Covid-19 pandemic and volcanic political tensions.

With vote- counting nearly complete around the huge country, Biden built up an irreversib­le lead.

New tallies from the state of Pennsylvan­ia early Saturday put him over the top, ending four days of tense waiting and allowing the TV networks’ specialize­d data analysts to call the overall result, as they do every election.

In Philadelph­ia, Los Angeles, Washington and other majority-Democratic cities, people poured into the streets to celebrate and car horns honked.

An excited crowd of several thousand gathered on Black Lives Matter Plaza next to the White House, giving a hostile reception to Trump as his motorcade passed nearby on return from the golf course. “It’s been so many years waiting for this day to happen,” said Jack Nugent, a 24-year-old software engineer.

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? The chosen one… US President-elect Joe Biden delivers remarks in Wilmington.
Photo: Nampa/AFP The chosen one… US President-elect Joe Biden delivers remarks in Wilmington.

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