Houston Chronicle Sunday

Trump blasts Biden at Pa. rally for GOP

- Jonathan Tamari and William Bender

WILKES-BARRE, Pa. — Former President Donald Trump forcefully hit back at President Joe Biden on Saturday night, saying the Democrat’s recent address in Philadelph­ia was “the most vicious, hateful and divisive speech ever delivered by an American president, vilifying 75 million citizens.”

“He’s an enemy of the state,” Trump told a roaring crowd of thousands. And he said Philadelph­ia was the right place for the speech, “because the city is being devastated under Democrat rule.”

While the speech was billed as a rally to help Pennsylvan­ia’s top GOP candidates, Mehmet Oz, for Senate, and state Sen. Doug Mastriano, for governor, Trump spent most of his speech airing his old personal grievances, and some new ones.

He briefly mentioned Oz and Mastriano, before immediatel­y pivoting to his anger at Biden, and the recent FBI search of his Mara-Lago home as they tried to recover classified documents.

He called it an “evil and demented persecutio­n of you and me.”

It was Trump’s first public response to Biden’s blistering condemnati­on Thursday, when Biden cast Trump and “MAGA Republican­s” as a threat to democracy, pointing to Trump’s attempts to overthrow the 2020 election and the Jan. 6, 2021, riot he inspired.

After a presidency marked by his own slashand-burn style, personally insulting Democrats for their looks, calling them “sick” and “evil,” pressuring law enforcemen­t to prosecute his rivals and go easy on his friends, Trump on Saturday pointed those same accusation­s at Democrats, casting them as vicious.

“The danger to democracy comes from the radical left, not from the right,” he said, as the crowd roared in approval. Trump then continued to lie about the 2020 election, calling it rigged despite that claim being refuted by law enforcemen­t and his own aides.

The event was Trump’s first major general election event this year, and his first formal public appearance since the FBI search.

Trump airs grievances

While Trump nodded to the campaign arguments that Republican­s hope will power their campaigns this fall — calling the election “a referendum on skyrocketi­ng inflation, rampaging crime,” and “the corruption and extremism of Joe Biden and the radical Democrat Party” — he was mostly focused on his own complaints.

Over the first hour of his talk he mostly railed against his two impeachmen­ts, the Russia investigat­ion, the 2020 election outcome, and Hillary Clinton, the Democrat he defeated six years ago. He complained about electric cars and wind turbines, barely mentioning Oz or Mastriano through his first 80 minutes of speaking. He condemned the Senate’s top Republican, Sen. Mitch McConnell, twice before getting to Pennsylvan­ia’s Democratic Senate candidate, Lt. Gov. John Fetterman.

Biden, days earlier, had sharply excoriated Trump and his allies as a danger to American values. “Donald Trump and the MAGA Republican­s represent an extremism that threatens the foundation­s of our very republic,” Biden said at Independen­ce Hall.

The event came as the two major candidates Trump has endorsed in Pennsylvan­ia, Oz and Mastriano, have trailed their Democratic rivals over the summer.

Pennsylvan­ia’s races for Senate and governor are two of the country’s marquee contests, and he could get credit for GOP wins — or blame if his picks cost the party winnable races.

Trump’s rally also came in the midst of Biden’s three-event swing through the state. He was also in Wilkes-Barre on Tuesday, in Philadelph­ia on Thursday and will be back Monday for Pittsburgh’s Labor Day march.

Days after Biden warned about the lawless tilt of much of the GOP, the opening portion of the rally was infused with sympathy for those arrested during the Jan. 6 riot.

Other Republican­s hit back at Biden’s speech also.

High stakes for races

The series of events by the current and former presidents, and potential 2024 rivals, has highlighte­d the national stakes of Pennsylvan­ia’s races this year and the way they may foreshadow the next presidenti­al election, when the state will again be a premier battlegrou­nd.

Trump’s visit, just ahead of Labor Day, the traditiona­l start of the campaign homestretc­h, aimed to boost two candidates closely affiliated with him. Oz, whom Trump helped pull over the finish line in a competitiv­e GOP Senate primary, has struggled to consolidat­e support among Republican­s, after rivals sharply questioned his commitment to conservati­ve values. He was even booed by some of the crowd at his last rally with Trump, in May. Trump’s support might help him improve his standing on the right.

Oz won cheers from the crowd Saturday, and he hammered Fetterman as soft on crime, while rehashing many of his scripted lines from his primary stump speech. “The only thing Joe Biden has built back better is the Republican Party,” Oz said before Trump came on stage at Mohegan Sun Arena.

But Mastriano got a far stronger response — “Doug for Gov!” the crowd chanted as he came onstage — and channeled Trump with attacks on transgende­r women playing women’s sports, critical race theory and “illegals.”

“We the people are pissed. I know I am,” he said, “especially after that ridiculous speech the other day.”

Mastriano has endeared himself to the Trump wing of the party but has done little to expand his reach and has struggled to raise the money needed to advertise to a wider audience. The Trump rally represente­d a chance for wider media attention.

Ahead of the speeches, Mastriano gave interviews to conservati­ve news organizati­ons, but when journalist­s from mainstream outlets approached, his aides intervened. As Mastriano and his wife, Rebbie, chatted with Greene, a large man in a blazer repeatedly moved left to right to physically block a New York Times reporter from even witnessing the exchange.

Around 80 minutes into his speech Trump eventually turned to the Pennsylvan­ia races, saying Oz would be “a phenomenal” senator and hailing Mastriano as one of his earliest allies, calling him a “fearless warrior for Pennsylvan­ia workers and Pennsylvan­ia values.”

(At least some in the crowd still called out that Oz is a “RINO,” or Republican in Name Only.)

When Trump did attack Fetterman, he invented a series of charges about personal drug use and policy positions he hasn’t taken while attacking his signature look, saying he dresses “like a teenager getting high in his parents’ basement.”

Rally delights Dems

But for GOP candidates, Trump’s imprint also carries risks. The former president is deeply unpopular in vote-rich areas like Philadelph­ia and its suburbs, and a spotlight on Trump in this fall’s election could take the attention off of anemic approval ratings weighing on Biden.

Democrats were thrilled to see Oz and Mastriano alongside Trump.

“Donald Trump is gunning for Doug Mastriano to be Pennsylvan­ia’s next Governor for one reason: Doug will do anything to make sure that Trump wins in 2024,” said a fundraisin­g email by Mastriano’s Democratic opponent, state Attorney General Josh Shapiro. “Doug and Trump are in lockstep about dismantlin­g our very democracy.”

Fetterman used the event to hit back at weeks of Oz attacks over his record on crime. He pointed out that Oz joined an event with Mastriano, who was at the Capitol on Jan. 6, and Trump, who incited the attack and called Thursday for pardoning rioters, and apologizin­g to them.

“Just like Oz’s medical advice, it’s clear his claim to care about crime is complete bulls-,” Fetterman said in a statement.

Despite Trump’s popularity in northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia, it remains a battlegrou­nd, and Democrats are working to win it back, or at least narrow their losses, as evidenced by Biden’s stop in WilkesBarr­e on Tuesday and Shapiro’s swing through the region Saturday.

 ?? Photos by Mary Altaffer/Associated Press ?? Ex-President Donald Trump greets Doug Mastriano, the Republican candidate for Pennsylvan­ia governor, during a rally Saturday. The appearance was Trump’s first since an FBI raid on his Mar-a-Lago residence.
Photos by Mary Altaffer/Associated Press Ex-President Donald Trump greets Doug Mastriano, the Republican candidate for Pennsylvan­ia governor, during a rally Saturday. The appearance was Trump’s first since an FBI raid on his Mar-a-Lago residence.
 ?? ?? Republican­s hope the rally will help bolster support for Mehmet Oz in his Senate race after he has struggled to attract voters as a political unknown.
Republican­s hope the rally will help bolster support for Mehmet Oz in his Senate race after he has struggled to attract voters as a political unknown.

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