The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

US democracy could fall if Trump wins, warns Biden

President marked the third anniversar­y of Capitol riots, telling voters it was ‘political violence’

- By Tony Diver, US editor in Washington DC

JOE BIDEN has warned that American democracy could fall if Donald Trump wins a second term in this year’s presidenti­al election.

In a campaign speech to mark the third anniversar­y of the Capitol riots today, Mr Biden accused his leading Republican opponent of embracing “political violence” and warned voters: “Your freedom is on the ballot.”

The speech – Mr Biden’s first campaign event of the year – gave examples of Mr Trump’s links to the “mob” that stormed the Capitol in January 2021 and his plans for a second term in the White House.

“We’ve been blessed for so long with a strong, stable democracy, it’s easy to forget why so many before us risked their lives to strengthen democracy,” Mr Biden said. If democracy falls, we’ll lose that freedom, lose the power of we, the people, to shape our destiny.”

Mr Biden appeared to restrain himself as he recalled how Mr Trump had laughed about a Jan 6 rioter looking for Nancy Pelosi in the Capitol.

“He thinks that’s funny, he laughed about it,” he said. “What a sick–.”

“What’s Trump done? He’s called these insurrecti­onists ‘patriots’, and he promised to pardon them if he returns.”

The speech marked a pivot in Mr Biden’s campaign towards more vocal criticism of Mr Trump and his “MAGA” followers – an initialism of his slogan, “Make America Great Again”.

National polls show that the two men are neck-and-neck in a hypothecat­ed race that would occur if Mr Trump wins the Republican nomination.

Currently, the former president is polling around 50 points ahead of Ron DeSantis and Nikki Haley, and aides believe he will have secured the required Republican delegates to win the nomination by mid-March – just two months into the primary race. Mr Biden’s speech was held near Valley Forge, the historic site where George Washington regrouped American forces during the war of independen­ce nearly 250 years ago.

The speech also repeated a claim of Mr Biden’s that Mr Trump uses the rhetoric of 1930s facism in his campaigns.

“He talks about the blood of Americans being poisoned, echoing the same exact language used in Nazi Germany,” said Mr Biden, who was greeted by chants from supporters of “four more years”.

“Donald Trump’s campaign is obsessed with the past, not the future. He’s willing to sacrifice our democracy, put himself in power,” he added.

Addressing voters in the swing state of Pennsylvan­ia, Mr Biden said the “defence, protection and preservati­on of democracy” would remain the “central cause of [his] presidency” if he was to win a second term in 2024.

Mr Biden’s shift towards personal criticism of Mr Trump comes as polls show his central campaign message of “Bidenomics” has failed to win over swing voters, leaving him trailing his rival on the issue of the economy in six battlegrou­nd states polled for the Telegraph by Redfield & Wilton Strategies.

The president’s reelection campaign is hoping to win back the support of core Democrat voters, including ethnic and religious minority groups and young liberal voters, who have become less enthusiast­ic about Mr Biden since the 2020 election.

It is thought a more emotive campaign based on the excesses of the first Trump presidency could persuade liberals to turn out on polling day in an attempt to keep a Republican out of the White House. Polls show that voters are less likely to associate Mr Trump with the Capitol riots now than they were just after they took place.

In the days after the attack, 52 per cent of US adults said Mr Trump bore a lot of responsibi­lity, according to the Pew Research Center, but by early 2022 that figure had fallen to 43 per cent.

Mr Trump’s alleged involvemen­t in the riots will be examined in a federal trial in Washington DC later this year, when he will stand trial for a raft of charges.

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