Biden, Sanders offer contrasts to Trump during outbreak
WILMINGTON, Del. — Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden on Thursday called for a sweeping national response to the coronavirus outbreak, chiding President Donald Trump for a response he said was woefully insufficient and warning that the widening public health crisis should not be viewed through a lens of politics.
“This administration has left us woefully unprepared for the exact crisis we now face,” Biden said in a speech delivered from his hometown of Wilmington and tailored to draw sharp contrasts between the former vice president and the Republican incumbent he hopes to topple this fall.
A short time later, Biden’s Democratic presidential rival, Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, said the outbreak may isolate Americans working from home and in quarantine and he suggested the country needed to band together, not divide.
“If there ever was a time in the modern history of our country when we were all in this together, this is the moment,” Sanders said. He said of Trump’s White House, “We have an administration that is largely incompetent and whose incompetence and recklessness have threatened the lives of many, many people in this country.”
Biden said he is already up to meeting such challenges better than Trump.
“No president can promise to prevent future outbreaks, but I can promise you this, when I’m president we will be better prepared, respond better and recover better,” Biden declared. “We will lead with science, listen to the experts, will heed their advice. We’ll build American leadership and rebuild it to rally the world to meet the global threats that we are likely to face again.”
Biden cautioned that the virus, which some Trump allies have dismissed as overblown fodder for the president’s critics, “does not have a political affiliation.” And in a direct dig at Trump, Biden added another pledge: “I’ll always tell you the truth. This is the responsibility of a president. That’s what is owed the American people.”
The former vice president and Sanders gave their dueling addresses on the coronavirus less than 24 hours after Trump spoke to the nation from the Oval Office about a public health crisis he’d previously downplayed.
Sanders called on Trump to declare a national emergency and said a hotline should be established for people seeking information about coronavirus.
He also said the U.S. was at a “major disadvantage” compared with other countries, since many people have no medical insurance.
Sanders has advocated for fully government-financed health care under a “Medicare for All” system that is the centerpiece of his campaign. But he said Thursday that in the meantime during the outbreak, the government must ensure that “everyone must be able to get all of the health care that they need without cost.” He added that if a vaccine to the virus is developed, it should be free.
“We need an emergency response to the emergency,” Sanders said, “and we need it immediately.” With his speech, Biden unveiled a slate of policy proposals and said Trump is “welcome to adopt all of it today.”
Biden called for all medically necessary testing for the virus to be accessible and without cost, and for Congress to enact paid leave for all Americans, both as a temporary fix in responding to the current health crisis and a longterm solution to what he describes as a key gap in U.S. labor practices.
Biden also proposed mobilizing federal resources to ensure at least 10 testing sites in every state and providing federal aid, including from the Pentagon, to put a stand-up hospital in any American city where an outbreak exceeds the capacity of existing health care infrastructure.
The former vice president pledged that his administration would hold daily briefings in any such crisis, with top public health professionals in front of cameras to address the nation directly.