The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Biden, Trump tangle over pandemic

Candidates press each other over taxes, foreign influence in race where few voters are undecided.

- By Greg Bluestein Greg.Bluestein@ajc.com

President Donald Trump faced searing criticism from Joe Biden for his “absolutely tragic” handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic during Thursday’s fifinal debate of the tumultuous campaign, as the Republican sounded an optimistic note about a disease he insisted was on the decline.

The clash over the pandemic highlighte­d a showdown that featured several heated exchanges but fewof the fiery interrupti­ons that dominated the fifirst chaotic debate this month. Polls in Georgia and across the nation show the COVID- 19 outbreak and its resulting economic fallout is the dominant 2020 issue, and the two offered competing visions of how to defeat it.

The former vice president warned of a “dark winter ahead” of rising infection rates, and he said themountin­g death toll fromthe disease should cement Trump’s defeat in November. Somberly mentioning the disease’s death toll of more than 220,000 Americans, Biden asserted that “anyone responsibl­e for that many deaths should not remain” in the White House.

Trump maintained a sunnier outlook as he defended his administra­tion’s handling of the deadliest health crisis in more than a century, and he repeated claims

that a yet- to- be released vaccine for the disease is weeks away.

“It will go away. We’re rounding the turn. We’re rounding the corner. It’s going away,” Trump said, despite rising infection rates in parts of the country.

The tangle over the COVID- 19 outbreak shaped a face- to- face debate that might have been the president’s final chance to transform a reelection campaign that could be slipping away fromhim.

Polls show Trump trailing Bid en both nationally and in battle ground states, and Thursday’s debate provided a moment guaranteed to draw the attention of tens of millions of voters with less than two weeks remaining in the contest.

It opened with an understate­d tone, unlike the cantankero­us clash earlier this month, when Trump interrupte­d Biden so frequently that debate organizers installed a virtual “mute” button to maintain order during Thursday’s debate.

Still, for the broad majority of Americans, the debate’s backandfor­th won’t have any bearing on their decision. In the heat of a polarizing race, polls show only a small number of Americans still up in the air over the White House race, including about 2% in recent Georgia surveys.

And roughly 46million people across the country have already cast their ballots, either by mail or through in- person early voting, as the coronaviru­s pandemic led to a surge in pre- Election Day participat­ion. In Georgia, more than 2.3 million voters have already cast their ballots.

Trump sought to port ray a sense of control over the still- ragingpand­emic, saying that Americans are “learning to live with it — we have no choice.”

“More and more people are getting better,” Trump said at one point, adding that sweeping economic restrictio­ns threatened more harm than the virus. “The cure cannot be worse than the problem itself.”

Bid en accused Trump of repeatedly down playing the virus, ignoring public health experts and differenti­ating between “blue states and red states” in providing federal resources for struggling local officials.

“They’re all the United States,” Biden said. “And look at all the states that are having a spike in the coronaviru­s — they’re the red states.”

Tall tasks

Trump entered with a mission to rebound his standing in the polls and put Biden on the defensive, while the Democrat aimed to focus attention on the pandemic and its resulting economic fallout. Among Biden’s invited guests was Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, one of his earliest high- profile supporters.

But the head- to- head matchup also took a personal turn, as Trump invoked an unconfirme­d New York Post report that claims the former vice president received funds from Russian sources and demanded that Biden give “an explanatio­n to the American people.”

Flashing a hint of anger, Biden responded that he has“not taken a penny from any foreign source ever in my life,” and he declared the talk about his son Hunter Biden’s struggles “malarkey” before turning directly to the cameras.

“It’s not about his family and my family,” Biden said. “It’s about your family. And your family is hurting badly.”

Swinging back, the Democrat referred to a New York Times report about Trump’s financial struggles, challengin­g the president to “release your tax returns or stop talking about corruption.”

As he has asserted since his 2016 campaign, Trump said he would release his returns as “soon as we can” but that he won’t do so while he’s under audit. There are no restrictio­ns that ban him from releasing the documents during an audit.

After the ugly first showdown, the Commission on Presidenti­al Debates announced that both candidates would have their microphone cut off while the other delivered a two-minute answer on the six featured topics Thursday. The “mute” button didn’t apply to the open discussion portion of the debate.

A second debate that was to air last week was scrapped after Trump’ s corona virus diagnosis triggered the commission to announce itwould have been held virtually. Trump pulled out of the event, and instead, the candidates held dueling town hall meetings on competing television networks.

 ??  ?? JOEBIDEN: “Anyone responsibl­e for thatmany deaths should not remain president of theUnited States of America.”
JOEBIDEN: “Anyone responsibl­e for thatmany deaths should not remain president of theUnited States of America.”
 ??  ?? DONALDTRUM­P:“We have a problemtha­t’s aworldwide problem, but I’ve been congratula­ted by people on whatwe’ve been able to do.”
DONALDTRUM­P:“We have a problemtha­t’s aworldwide problem, but I’ve been congratula­ted by people on whatwe’ve been able to do.”
 ?? JIMBOURG VIA AP POOL ?? President Donald Trump( right) and Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Joe Biden participat­e Thursday night, with moderator KristenWel­ker, in the final presidenti­al debate at Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn.
JIMBOURG VIA AP POOL President Donald Trump( right) and Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Joe Biden participat­e Thursday night, with moderator KristenWel­ker, in the final presidenti­al debate at Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn.
 ?? MORRY GASH VIA AP POOL ?? FormerVice President Joe Biden gestures toward President Donald Trumpdurin­g the second and final presidenti­al debate Thursday at BelmontUni­versity in Nashville, Tenn.
MORRY GASH VIA AP POOL FormerVice President Joe Biden gestures toward President Donald Trumpdurin­g the second and final presidenti­al debate Thursday at BelmontUni­versity in Nashville, Tenn.
 ?? MORRY GASH VIA AP POOL ?? Moderator KristenWel­ker ofNBCNews asks a question Thursday. For the first time, each candidate’s microphone­wasmuted while the other candidate had the floor.
MORRY GASH VIA AP POOL Moderator KristenWel­ker ofNBCNews asks a question Thursday. For the first time, each candidate’s microphone­wasmuted while the other candidate had the floor.

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