The Manila Times

Biden, Utah governor call for less bitterness

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WASHINGTON: President Joe Biden and Utah Gov. Spencer Cox disagree on many issues, but they were united Saturday in calling for less bitterness in politics and more bipartisan­ship.

“Politics has gotten too personally bitter,” said Biden, who has practiced politics since he was elected to the US Senate in 1972. “It’s just not like it was.”

The Democratic president commented while delivering a toast to the nation’s governors and their spouses at a black-tie White House dinner in their honor.

Biden said what makes him “feel good” about hosting the governors is “we have a tradition of doing things together. We fight like hell; we make sure that we get our points across. At the end of the day, we know who we work for. The objective is to get things done.”

Cox, a Republican, preceded Biden to the lectern beneath an imposing portrait of Abraham Lincoln above the fireplace in the State Dining Room. The Utah governor said the associatio­n “harkens back to another time, another era when we did work together across partisan lines, when there was no political danger in appearing with someone from the other side of the aisle, and we have to keep this, we have to maintain this, we cannot lose this,” he said.

Cox leads an initiative called “Disagree Better” that aims to reduce divisivene­ss. He had joked earlier in the program that he and Biden might be committing “mutually assured destructio­n” by appearing together at the White House.

He told Biden that as state chief executives, governors “know just a very little bit of the incredible burden that weighs on your shoulders. We can’t imagine what it must be like, the decisions that you have to make, but we feel a small modicum of that pressure, and so tonight, we honor you.”

Biden said he remembered when lawmakers would argue by day and break bread together at night. He is currently embroiled in stalemates with the Republican­controlled House over government funding.

Cox went on to say that his parents taught him to pray for the leader of the country. “Mr. President, I want you to know that our family prays for you and your family every night,” he said.

“We pray that you will be successful because if you are successful, that means that the United States of America is successful, and tonight, we are always Americans first, so thank you.”

Vice President Kamala Harris and her husband, Doug Emhoff, were among Cabinet secretarie­s and White House officials who sat among the governors.

The group included North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, who in December ended his bid to become the Republican presidenti­al nominee and challenge Biden.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? LESS ANIMOSITY
President Joe Biden speaks to members of the National Governors Associatio­n and their wives before a dinner in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024.
AP PHOTO LESS ANIMOSITY President Joe Biden speaks to members of the National Governors Associatio­n and their wives before a dinner in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024.

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