National Post

Key takeaways from Biden’s State of the Union address

Staking ground for coming U.S. election

- Justin sink Jordan Fabian and

Fresh off his defiant State of the Union address, U.S. President Joe Biden and his senior aides began Friday to barnstorm the country to aggressive­ly sell his vision for a second term to voters — and warn of the Republican alternativ­e.

The president will try to ride the post-speech momentum to Pennsylvan­ia and Georgia for campaign events in two critical battlegrou­nd states that he flipped in 2020 and is hoping to keep in his column this November. He’ll move on to Wisconsin and Michigan next week.

Vice President Kamala Harris is making her own trips, first to Arizona to continue her nationwide tour to promote reproducti­ve rights and then to Nevada for her own campaign stop.

Biden, in a sharply political State of the Union Thursday night, repeatedly drew direct comparison­s to Donald Trump without mentioning him by name. He criticized his Republican opponent’s embrace of Russian President Vladimir Putin, restrictiv­e views on abortion rights, stance toward China and opposition to gun control.

Here are key takeaways from his speech:

AGE

Biden, 81, sought to portray his age as an asset, using his experience to drive home arguments bookending his speech: he represents America’s promise, while Trump, 77, is the latest iteration of the historical threat to democracy.

“Hate, anger, revenge, retributio­n are among the oldest of ideas. But you can’t lead America with ancient ideas that only take us back,” he said.

UKRAINE AND IMMIGRATIO­N

Biden opened his remarks by noting the U.S. stood up for democratic principles in the Second World War and the Cold War, as he sought to pressure Republican­s to take up stalled foreign aid for Ukraine, Israel, Palestinia­ns and Asian allies.

“History is literally watching,” Biden said. “If the United States walks away — it will put Ukraine at risk. Europe is at risk. The free world at risk — emboldenin­g others to do what they wish to do us harm.”

Conservati­ve Republican­s pushing to add severe immigratio­n restrictio­ns to the aid deal at the urging of Trump have stymied the proposal. Biden pinned blame for the impasse on his likely presidenti­al opponent, and ratcheted up pressure on House Speaker Mike Johnson to get the bill done “now.”

BIDEN, GOP SPAR

Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene walked Republican­s into a trap, shouting the name of Laken Riley, a woman from her state allegedly slain by an undocument­ed immigrant. Biden pulled out a pin bearing Riley’s name and acknowledg­ed her family, then chided Republican­s for blocking stronger border measures.

“We can fight about fixing the border. Or we can fix it,” Biden said.

This isn’t the first time Greene has interrupte­d a Biden speech. During last year’s address to Congress she called Biden a “liar,” which prompted a back and forth with Republican­s over entitlemen­ts. That morphed into a viral moment the president used to badger the GOP about their calls for Social Security and Medicare cuts.

REPRODUCTI­VE RIGHTS

Democrats see the battle for abortion rights and women’s health care as critical to persuading voters that Trump is pursuing an extreme agenda.

The president’s guests included a Texas woman who was denied an abortion even after her fetus was diagnosed with a terminal genetic disease, as well as a woman whose embryo transfer was cancelled following a recent Alabama Supreme Court decision that halted fertility treatments in the state.

Biden directly blamed Trump for the “chaos” surroundin­g the issue and called for lawmakers to pass federal legislatio­n protecting IVF and abortion rights and asked Republican­s, “what freedoms will you take next?”

ISRAEL-HAMAS WAR

Biden went out of his way to acknowledg­e the “heartbreak­ing” devastatio­n in Gaza and announced U.S. military plans to unilateral­ly construct a new pier that would ease the delivery of humanitari­an aid.

While Biden didn’t abandon the steadfast defence of Israel he’s provided in the aftermath of the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas, the proposal represente­d an olive branch to progressiv­e voters who believe the White House has not gone far enough to rein in Israel’s military response in Gaza.

TAXES

With Trump’s tax cuts expected to expire in 2025, the debate over the tax code poses a challenge for the next president. Biden proposed ratcheting up the burden on the wealthy and corporatio­ns, calling on them to “pay your fair share.”

Congress is unlikely to adopt all of Biden’s ambitious plans, even if he and Democrats prevail in November. But they will help frame the upcoming election as a choice between one candidate fighting for the middle-class and another who wants to protect the rich.

INFLATION, DRUG PRICES

Biden vented frustratio­n with persistent high prices, accusing businesses of taking money out of Americans’ pockets.

“Too many corporatio­ns raise prices to pad their profits — charging you more and more for less and less,” Biden said. “That’s why we’re cracking down on corporatio­ns that engage in price gouging and deceptive pricing.”

The president’s new initiative­s include a crackdown on insurance fees designed to lower housing prices and a proposal for a tax credit for new homeowners to offset high interest rates. He asked Congress to allow Medicare to negotiate prices on more drugs, cap Medicare co-payments, and limit annual outof-pocket drug prices.

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A / GETTY IMAGES ?? U.S. President Joe Biden delivers a defiant State of the Union address during a joint meeting of Congress in the House chamber at the U.S. Capitol on Thursday.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A / GETTY IMAGES U.S. President Joe Biden delivers a defiant State of the Union address during a joint meeting of Congress in the House chamber at the U.S. Capitol on Thursday.

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