Los Angeles Times

Biden calls for national unity

In Gettysburg with a growing lead in polls, he calls for national unity, racial healing.

- BY JANET HOOK

At Gettysburg with a growing lead in polls, he invokes Lincoln and bipartisan­ship.

WASHINGTON — Joe Biden called Tuesday for an end to the divisions and partisansh­ip that now define U. S. politics, traveling to the historic battlefiel­d at Gettysburg, Pa., for a speech that did not mention President Trump and that probably sets the tone for the f inal four weeks of his presidenti­al campaign.

Biden repeatedly urged Americans to set politics aside in the spirit of President Lincoln’s call for unity in his iconic Gettysburg address. It’s an implausibl­e request in what is probably the most heated presidenti­al campaign of the modern era, but it encapsulat­es the tone that Biden, enjoying his front- runner status in the race, wants to use as his closing argument to the nation’s voters.

“Today once again, we are a house divided,” he said, speaking against the backdrop of a sun- splashed rural landscape at the site of the bloodiest battle of the Civil War. “But that, my friends, can no longer be. We’re facing too many crises. We have too much work to do. We have too bright a future to have a shipwreck on the shores of hate and anger and division.”

“You don’t have to agree with me on everything — or even on most things — to see that what we’re experienci­ng today is neither good nor normal,” he added.

His 22- minute speech offered a stark contrast to Trump’s polarizing bravado, which has been undiminish­ed by his illness with COVID- 19. Within hours of returning from the hospital on Monday, Trump was sending partisan thunderbol­ts that dismissed the seriousnes­s of the infection that has killed more than 210,000 Americans. On Tuesday, he abruptly ended negotiatio­ns with Congress over legislatio­n to extend economic aid for victims of the pandemic and recession.

With its bipartisan appeal and above- the- fray tone, Biden’s speech clearly ref lected the state of the presidenti­al race in its closing month, with many voters already casting ballots by mail or through early voting. Biden exuded confidence at a time when polls show him leading by comfortabl­e margins, both nationally and in battlegrou­nd states like Pennsylvan­ia, the site of the speech.

The polls indicate that Trump, who trailed Biden going into last week’s presidenti­al debate, lost more ground in the aftermath of that encounter, in which the president repeatedly interrupte­d his challenger and got into quarrels with the event’s moderator, Chris Wallace of Fox News. His COVID- 19 diagnosis does not appear to have brought Trump any sympathy bonus. Instead, some polls show further slippage for him since his hospitaliz­ation on Friday.

Biden’s speech — which he’d said earlier in the day he had spent a lot of time writing — set a high- road tone of the sort a front- runner can employ. With support of his party’s base secure, he could dispense with partisan rhetoric and instead make a pitch to attract moderates and disaffecte­d Republican­s who are weary of the drama of the Trump era.

He also sought to disarm one of the principal wedge issues that Republican­s are trying to deploy against him — the argument that his sympathy for Black voters and approval of protests for racial justice signal a lack of support for law and order and the police.

“I do not believe we have to choose between law and order and racial justice in America,” he said, reiteratin­g that he does not support the calls to defund police that have been embraced by many progressiv­es.

“This nation is strong enough to both honestly face systemic racism and strong enough to provide safe streets for our families and small businesses that too often bear the brunt of this looting and burning,” he added.

Although he did not mention Trump, Biden dwelled on the white supremacis­ts and hate groups that have gained prominence following the debate, in which the president invited one such group, the Proud Boys, to “stand by.”

“I will send a clear, unequivoca­l message to the entire nation: There’s no place for hate in America,” Biden said. “It will be given no license, it will be given no oxygen, it will be given no safe harbor.”

Repeatedly calling on Americans to “put politics aside,” Biden said the COVID- 19 pandemic and the recession are problems that cry out for bipartisan solutions.

“Wearing a mask is not a political statement; it is a scientific recommenda­tion,” he said, a contrast to Trump’s decision to whip off his mask before cameras as he entered the White House after leaving the hospital Monday night.

“It is a virus,” Biden added. “It is not a political weapon.”

Biden’s appeals to bipartisan­ship could presage postelecti­on conf licts with his party’s progressiv­e wing, which is advocating moves such as expanding the size of the Supreme Court that would surely meet furious opposition from Republican­s.

And he acknowledg­ed that many in his own party have called him “naive” for his faith in the possibilit­y of building a working relationsh­ip between the parties.

“I’m told, ‘ Maybe that’s the way things used to work, Joe, but they can’t work that way anymore,’ ” he said. “Well, I’m here to tell you they can. And they must if we’re going to get anything done. I’m running as a proud Democrat, but I will govern as an American president.”

The event also drew contrast with a speech that Trump made in Gettysburg in October 2016, as he seemed to be headed toward defeat by Hillary Clinton. In that speech, which also served as a closing argument of sorts, Trump laid out his populist themes and also talked about unity, but his remarks were notable for their divisivene­ss.

Trump declared that the election was rigged against him, that the media was corrupt and that he would sue the many women who had accused him of sexual misconduct — a threat he never followed up on.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK Associated Press ?? JOE BIDEN speaks with reporters in Hagerstown, Md., after his speech at the Gettysburg battlef ield set a tone in stark contrast to President Trump’s bravado.
ANDREW HARNIK Associated Press JOE BIDEN speaks with reporters in Hagerstown, Md., after his speech at the Gettysburg battlef ield set a tone in stark contrast to President Trump’s bravado.

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