Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

At town hall, Biden blasts Trump’s virus response

Pandemic at forefront of socially distanced event

- Alexandra Jaffe and Will Weissert

MOOSIC, Pa. – Joe Biden went after President Donald Trump again and again over his handling of COVID-19, calling Trump’s downplayin­g of the pandemic “criminal” and his administra­tion “totally irresponsi­ble.”

“You’ve got to level with the American people – shoot from the shoulder. There’s not been a time they’ve not been able to step up. The president should step down,” the Democratic presidenti­al nominee said to applause from a CNN drive-in town hall crowd Thursday night in Moosic, outside his hometown of Scranton.

Speaking about Trump’s admission that he publicly played down the effect of the virus while aware of its severity, Biden declared: “He knew it and did nothing. It’s close to criminal.”

Biden decried Americans’ loss of basic “freedoms” as the U.S. has struggled to contain the pandemic, like the ability to go to a ballgame or walk around their neighborho­ods. “I never, ever thought I would see just such a thoroughly, totally irresponsi­ble administra­tion,” he said.

Biden faced a half-dozen questions about the coronaviru­s and a potential vaccine in the town hall from moderator Anderson Cooper and audience members. The pandemic was not just the main topic of the night, it was the cause of the unusual format of the event: a drive-in with 35 cars outside PNC Field.

The cars were parked around the stage, each with small groups of people standing outside them or leaning or sitting on the hoods to watch Cooper and Biden onstage. The network erected blue and red spotlights over the dirt and gravel parking lot to make it easier to see, and each parking space was marked off with white chalk in large rectangles to ensure that each group stayed more than 6 feet apart.

The town hall was the first time that Biden had faced live, unscripted questions from voters since winning the nomination. Trump participat­ed in a town hall Tuesday in an auditorium in Philadelph­ia.

The appearance­s have been seen as tuneups before three presidenti­al debates, the first set for Sept. 29. Biden’s uneven debate performanc­es during the Democratic primary contribute­d to his initial struggles in polls and the early primary vote, and Trump has pushed unfounded conspiracy theories about Biden taking performanc­e-enhancing drugs and has raised questions about Biden’s mental acuity.

Biden, meanwhile, has promised to be a “fact-checker on the stage” with Trump but has said he doesn’t want to get drawn into a “brawl” with the Republican.

Biden was also pressed on his stance on the Green New Deal, the sweeping proposal from progressiv­es in Congress that calls for achieving net-zero greenhouse gas emissions across the economy by 2030. Biden’s proposal doesn’t go as far, but it does aim to reduce emissions to zero by 2050 and has a goal of achieving an entirely carbon pollution-free power sector by 2035.

Biden interrupte­d a questioner who suggested his climate plan embraces the Green New Deal to insist, “No, it doesn’t,” but when asked by the moderator if he supports the proposal, he said, “I don’t think it’s too much.”

Still, Biden added, “I have my own deal,” which he noted the Democratic Party has incorporat­ed as part of its platform.

Biden also weighed in on foreign policy issues, promising to reduce America’s military footprint abroad and saying that any attempt to interfere with the election by a foreign power is a “violation of our sovereignt­y.”

Biden described Russia as an “opponent,” but declined to use the same word when asked about China. He instead called the nation a “competitor” and pledging to improve trade policy with China.

Trump signaled he’d been watching the town hall before he took the stage for a rally in Mosinee, Wisconsin, on Thursday night.

“I just see he’s up there tonight getting softball questions from Anderson Cooper. They don’t ask me questions like that,” Trump told the crowd gathered at the airport. “They’ve got cars ... it’s the weirdest thing I’ve ever seen.”

Trump’s ABC town hall was held inside a half-empty auditorium, with attendees socially distanced and wearing masks.

The format of Biden’s event was a stark reminder of the issue that’s been a central focus of Biden’s campaign – that the pandemic rages on, and that stronger leadership in White House could have eased the crisis. More than 198,000 Americans have died of the coronaviru­s – the highest death toll in the world.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER/AP ?? Audience members watch from their cars as Joe Biden, seen on a monitor, speaks during a CNN town hall in Moosic, Pa., on Thursday.
CAROLYN KASTER/AP Audience members watch from their cars as Joe Biden, seen on a monitor, speaks during a CNN town hall in Moosic, Pa., on Thursday.

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