Orlando Sentinel

Trump, Biden spar in Labor Day blitz

Pence, Harris in Wis. as campaign season ramps up

- By Noreen Nasir, Alexandra Jaffe and Kathleen Ronayne

HARRISBURG, Pa. — Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden and President Donald Trump spent Monday diminishin­g each other’s credential­s on the economy and understand­ing of the American worker as the presidenti­al campaign entered its final, post-Labor Day stretch.

While workers live by an “American code,” Biden said Trump “lives by a code of lies, greed and selfishnes­s” as he met with labor leaders in Harrisburg, Pennsylvan­ia, a key swing state. Trump, meanwhile, tried to put the halting economic recovery under the best light in a White House news conference where he

said Biden and his running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris, would “destroy this country and would destroy this economy.”

Labor Day typically marks the unofficial start to the fall campaign season as candidates accelerate their activity for the final sprint to Election Day. Both campaigns reflected that urgency Monday, as Harris and Vice President Mike Pence each campaigned in Wisconsin — a state Trump narrowly won in 2016.

The events played out against the background of the pandemic, which has upended campaignin­g and pushed Biden and Harris in particular to conduct much of the traditiona­l election activity online.

While the health of the American economy and status of workers were dominant Labor Day themes, both campaigns also focused on recent protests that have roiled Wisconsin and the rest of the nation after police shot Jacob Blake, a Black man, in Kenosha last month.

Harris, the first Black woman on a major party presidenti­al ticket, met privately with Blake’s family at the Milwaukee airport after arriving in the state, where she spoke with Blake by phone from his hospital bed. Harris told Blake she was proud of him and individual­ly spoke to each of his family members, in person and on the phone, urging them to take care of their physical and mental health, Blake’s lawyers said in a statement.

Biden met with Blake’s family during a visit to Wisconsin last week. Trump did not during a trip of his own last week, instead meeting with law enforcemen­t and business owners whose property had been damaged during protests. Nor did Pence, who touched on the protests during a speech in La Crosse, where he toured an energy facility.

“We will have law and order in every city in this country for every American of every race and creed,” Pence said.

Harris also met with Black business owners in Milwaukee, while Biden spoke to a small group of labor leaders in a backyard in Lancaster, where he criticized Trump for “refusing to deal with the problems that affect ordinary people“and called for strengthen­ing unions. His campaign announced endorsemen­ts from the Laborers’ Internatio­nal Union of North America, the Internatio­nal Union of Elevator Constructo­rs and the National Federation of Federal Employees, collective­ly representi­ng hundreds of thousands of union workers nationwide.

Later, at an AFL-CIO virtual town hall with union President Richard Trumka, Biden called Trump’s alleged remarks about fallen soldiers being “losers” and “suckers” un-American and said Trump would never understand why Americans serve. Trump has denied the remarks.

“He’ll never understand you, he’ll never understand us, he’ll never understand our cops, our firefighte­rs, because he’s not made of the same stuff,” Biden said.

Earlier in the day, Trump painted Biden as a leader incapable of handling the coronaviru­s and reviving the economy and pledged his own “undying loyalty to the American worker.”

He boasted of adding more than 10 million jobs since May, without mentioning that’s only about half of the jobs lost since the pandemic began. He also said the unemployme­nt rate “plunged” to 8.4%. It was a sharper decline than many economists expected from the prior month, but economists broadly view the latest report as evidence that further economic improvemen­t will be sluggish.

He alleged Biden and Democrats would “immediatel­y collapse the economy.”

Trump also accused Democrats of “disparagin­g” for political gain a coronaviru­s vaccine he repeatedly has said could be available before the election.

“It’s so dangerous for our country, what they say, but the vaccine will be very safe and very effective,” the president said, adding that it could be available “during the month of October.”

But polls consistent­ly show the economy as an issue at the top of voters’ minds.

A strong economy that was Trump’s biggest asset for reelection has now become a potential liability, brought down by the corona virus. Bid en says Trump has had an inadequate response to the pandemic, resulting in more loss of life and jobs than necessary.

The U.S. economy has been steadily rebounding from its epic collapse in the spring as many businesses have reopened and rehired some laid-off employees. Yet the recovery is far from complete. Only about half the 22 million jobs that vanished in the pandemic have been recovered.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER/AP ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden meets with union leaders Monday in Harrisburg, Pennsylvan­ia.
CAROLYN KASTER/AP Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden meets with union leaders Monday in Harrisburg, Pennsylvan­ia.

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