Vancouver Sun

‘I WILL BE AN ALLY OF THE LIGHT, NOT THE DARKNESS’

Biden accepts Democratic presidenti­al nomination

- MARK NIQUETTE AND JENNIFER EPSTEIN

WE MUST GIVE THIS COUNTRY ... A CHANCE TO RECOVER.

Joe Biden accepted the Democratic nomination to challenge President Donald Trump, urging Americans in a prime-time address Thursday to vote for new national leadership that will overcome deep U.S. political divisions.

The former vice president’s address capped the final night of the Democratic National Convention, made virtual because of the coronaviru­s outbreak. Biden spoke to a largely empty room at the Chase Center in Wilmington, Del., with supporters parked outside watching on screens as if at a drive-in movie theatre.

Biden’s speech — the most important of his nearly half-century in politics — set the tone for a bruising general election battle against Trump. The former vice president said Trump had “cloaked America in darkness for far too long.”

“I will be an ally of the light, not the darkness,” he said.

Democrats have spent three nights mixing blunt criticism of Trump as an incompeten­t and corrupt threat to democracy with reassuring promises that Biden, 77, has the decency and experience to tackle the pandemic and other difficult problems. They’ve also sought to portray the party’s moderate and liberal wings as largely unified, burying progressiv­e concerns that Biden is too much of an establishm­ent centrist.

At a small rally earlier in the day near Biden’s hometown of Scranton, Pennsylvan­ia, Trump told his supporters that Biden would be their “worst nightmare.”

Biden promised that while he is running as a Democrat, he would be “an American president.” He criticized Trump for his handling of the coronaviru­s outbreak and the economic devastatio­n that followed, saying the country’s condition would get worse if the president is re-elected.

“Cases and deaths will remain far too high,” he said. “More mom and pop businesses will close their doors, and this time for good.”

Trump, he said, “keeps telling us, the virus is going to disappear. I have news for him: no miracle is coming. Our economy is in tatters.

And after all this time, the president still does not have a plan.”

Biden said he’d implement his own coronaviru­s plan on “day one” of his presidency, moving to deploy “rapid” tests to contain the outbreak, build medical supplies in the country and ensure schools can safely open to students.

“Our current president has failed in his most basic duty to the nation,” Biden said. “He’s failed to protect us.”

Biden also more generally assailed Trump’s behaviour while president, describing him as unfit for the office he holds.

“The president takes no responsibi­lity, refuses to lead, blames others, cozies up to dictators, and fans the flames of hate and division,” Biden said.

Andrew Yang, the entreprene­ur who challenged Biden for the Democratic nomination, opened the convention’s fourth night by urging Americans who voted for Trump “or didn’t vote at all” in 2016 to consider the former vice president.

“We are in a deep dark hole, and we need leaders who will help us dig out,” he said. He said he sympathize­d with 2016 Trump voters or those who “despair that our government will ever rise to the challenges of our time.” But, he said, “We must give this country, our country, a chance to recover.”

Biden and his vice presidenti­al nominee, Kamala Harris, are “real people. They understand the problems we face. If we give them the chance, they’ll fight for us and our families every single day.”

Speaker after speaker at the convention, including former President Barack Obama, also have encouraged Americans to vote early and have a plan to cast their ballot, in anticipati­on of potential mail delays and long, socially distanced lines at physical polling stations. Harris, a California senator, warned viewers on Wednesday that Republican­s will seek to suppress the vote in the belief that high turnout would benefit Biden.

A record number of Americans are expected to cast mail-in ballots this year because of the pandemic. Democrats have accused Trump of trying to sabotage the U.S. Postal Service to help his re-election bid, while the president has already begun to try to sow public doubt about any outcome that results in a Biden victory.

 ?? WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden speaks on the fourth night of the Democratic National Convention Thursday.
WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES Presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden speaks on the fourth night of the Democratic National Convention Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada