The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Biden says he was too ‘cavalier’ about black Trump backers

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ATLANTA — Joe Biden declared he “should not have been so cavalier” on Friday after he told a prominent black radio host that African Americans who back President Donald Trump “ain’t black.”

The presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee quickly moved to address the fallout from his remark, which was interprete­d by some as presuming black Americans would vote for him. In a call with the U.S. Black Chamber of Commerce that was added to his public schedule, Biden said he would never “take the African-American community for granted.”

“I shouldn’t have been such a wise guy,” Biden said. “No one should have to vote for any party based on their race or religion or background.”

That was an acknowledg­ement of the stinging criticism he received in response to his comments, which he made on “The Breakfast Club,” a radio program that is popular in the black community.

The rebukes spanned from allies of Trump’s reelection campaign — anxious to go on offense after weeks of defending the president’s response to the coronaviru­s pandemic — to some activists who warned that Biden must still court black votes, even if African Americans overwhelmi­ngly oppose the president.

“None of us can afford for the party or for this campaign to mess this election up, and comments like these are the kinds that frankly either make black voters feel like we’re not really valued and people don’t care if we show up or not,” said Alicia Garza, a Black Lives Matter co-founder and principal of Black Futures Lab.

Near the end of Biden’s appearance on the radio program, host Charlamagn­e Tha God, pressed him on reports that he is considerin­g Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar, who is white, to be his vice presidenti­al running mate. The host told Biden black voters “saved your political life in the primaries” and “have things they want from you.”

Biden said that “I guarantee you there are multiple black women being considered. Multiple.”

A Biden aide then sought to end the interview, prompting the host to say, “You can’t do that to black media.”

Biden responded, “I do that to black media and white media” and said his wife needed to use the television studio.

He then added: “If you’ve got a problem figuring out whether you’re for me or for Trump, then you ain’t black.”

Trump’s campaign and his allies immediatel­y seized on Biden’s comments. South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, a Trump supporter and the Senate’s sole black Republican, said he was “shocked and surprised” by Biden’s remarks.

“I was struck by the condescens­ion and the arrogance in his comments,“Scott said in a conference call arranged by the Trump campaign. “I could not believe my ears that he would stoop so low to tell folks what they should do, how they should think, and what it means to be black.”

Trump himself has a history of incendiary rhetoric related to race.

When he launched his presidenti­al campaign in 2015, Trump called many Mexican immigrants “rapists.” Campaignin­g in 2016, he asked black voters, “What the hell do you have to lose?”

In 2017, he said there good people on “both sides” of the clash in Charlottes­ville, Va., between white supremacis­ts and anti-racist demonstrat­ors that left one counter-protester dead.

In 2018, during a private White House meeting on immigratio­n, Trump wondered why the United States was admitting so many immigrants from “s—-hole countries” like African nations. He also blasted four Democratic congresswo­men of color, saying they hate America and should “go back” to where they come from, even though all are U.S. citizens and three were born in the U.S.

Black voters helped resurrect Biden’s campaign in this year’s primaries with a second place finish in the Nevada caucuses and a resounding win in the South Carolina primary after he’d started with embarrassi­ng finishes in overwhelmi­ngly white Iowa and New Hampshire. Sixty-one percent of black voters supported Biden during the primary season, according to AP VoteCast surveys across 17 states that voted in February and March.

 ?? Brian Cahn / Tribune News Service ?? A screengrab of Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden appearing on Now This News Friday to lay out his general election economic argument in Wilmington, Del.
Brian Cahn / Tribune News Service A screengrab of Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden appearing on Now This News Friday to lay out his general election economic argument in Wilmington, Del.

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