Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

CARNAGE? Battlegrou­nd states Former Labour leader: My old pal Joe

- BY JASON BEATTIE Head of Politics

AMERICANS do not directly elect their president but rather the people who will vote on their behalf.

The Electoral College is made up of 538 electors, correspond­ing to the number of Congress members plus three delegates from the District of Columbia.

Each state’s number of votes is partly based on population. To win, a candidate needs 270 or more. Under the system a candidate can win most votes nationally and lose. In 2016, Hillary Clinton got almost three million more votes than Donald Trump but he won 304 electoral college places to her 227. If neither candidate gets to 270, Congress picks the winner. of Americans have gone to hidden locations in Colorado and West Virginia for the week.

Drew Miller’s customers at Fortitude Ranch will be protected behind walls patrolled by armed guards. “Could the election devolve into civil war? Unlikely,” he told the Washington Post.

Miller, the founder of a network of members-only survivalis­t camps, added:

“But look at World War I. Some low-level archduke gets assassinat­ed and things escalate out of control. I’ve got people concerned that all it would take is a close election and some cheating.”

In Portland, Oregon, backdrop to months of violence following the deaths of black Americans due to police brutality, an armed right-wing group plans to show up at ballot drop-off sites tomorrow with their weapons on show.

Some extreme left-wing organisers have also said their groups intend to show up.

“The right is not going to give up their power unless they feel threatened,” said Olivia Katbi Smith, co-chair of the Democratic Socialists of America in Portland. “People are opening up to the idea that a riot is the language of the unheard. Property destructio­n is not violence.”

WHEN Neil Kinnock made a speech in the Welsh town of Llandudno more than 30 years ago he had little idea it would start a friendship with the man favourite to be the next US President.

The former Labour leader was addressing the Welsh Labour Party conference in May 1987 when he broke from his script to try to “ignite” the audience.

He asked: “Why am I the first Kinnock in a thousand generation­s to be able to get to university? Why is my wife, Glenys, the first woman in her family in a thousand generation­s to be able to get to university?”

The lines were so good that even the special branch police officers started to well up.

His words caught the attention of Joe Biden then running to be the Democrat’s presidenti­al candidate. A few weeks later, Biden “borrowed” heavily from Kinnock to say: “Why is it that Joe Biden is the first in his family ever to go to a university?

“Why is it that my wife is the first in her family to ever go to college? Is it because our fathers and mothers were not bright?

“Is it because I’m the first Biden in a thousand generation­s to get a college and a graduate degree that I was smarter than the rest?”

Unfortunat­ely he forgot to credit Kinnock for the line. Opponents quickly accused him of plagiarism and he had to quit the race.

However it sparked an enduring friendship. Shortly afterwards Biden and his son Beau, who died from brain cancer in 2015, came to London to meet the author of the words which had proved his downfall. Kinnock recalls: “We got on very well. I knew he was good guy.” The two have continued to meet over the years.

He added: “When I saw him in his Senate office in 2007, I was in Washington on an official visit. I went to see Joe and all the staff lined up and he said ‘folks, I want you to meet my greatest ever speechwrit­er, Neil Kinnock’.” Such is the bond that the former Vice President invited Kinnock and wife Glenys to the 2009 presidenti­al inaugurati­on.

At 78, Kinnock is six months older than the 77-year-old Biden and nobody could be more delighted that the great survivor of US politics could soon boot Donald Trump out of office.

Leaping to his pal’s defence, he said: “He’s up against a guy who’s biological age is 74 but who’s still in adolescenc­e. Joe is very, very fit [and] is more than capable of doing the job. There is so much he is going to have to clean up.

“Trump is the first man who thought you can drain the swamp by flooding it. He’s dishonest, he’s a fantasist, he’s corrupt, he’s got a completely prejudiced and uneducated view of the world. Joe will restore normality and values to the most powerful position on earth.”

He calls him “courageous, calm, highly intelligen­t and very well informed”.

By contrast Kinnock says Trump is “a privileged rich kid, a toddler with a hand grenade”.

He adds: “Joe is the absolute opposite. He has shown it in the way he has dealt with awful tragedy with great dignity but deep, personal misery.” Kinnock says he will be “ecstatic” if Biden defeats a man he “absolutely despises.”

He fears Boris Johnson will struggle to have the rapport with Biden he has with Trump: “He and Trump are kindred spirits in some ways, in their narcissism and gigantic egos.”

Moving to domestic politics, he says Keir Starmer is doing “very, very well,” adding that his hardest tasks will be to rebuild trust in the Labour Party and ensure it retains cohesion.

Age has not diminished the warmth and spirit of Kinnock. Though he admits he felt old for the first time recently when a teenager wanted his autograph: “I asked ‘how do you know who I am?’ and he said ‘we’re doing you in A-levels’.”

He roars with laughter. He’s hoping Biden has the last laugh too in a few days time.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? LONG FRIENDSHIP Kinnock & Biden in 1990
LONG FRIENDSHIP Kinnock & Biden in 1990
 ??  ?? START Llandudno speech
START Llandudno speech
 ??  ?? LOST SON Joe and Beau
LOST SON Joe and Beau
 ??  ?? TRAIL Melania
TRAIL Melania

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