Marin Independent Journal

Biden mixes optimism with angst about Trump

- By Josh Boak and Zeke Miller

>> President Joe Biden ends nearly every speech by saying he's “never been more optimistic” about the country's direction. But lately he also has begun painting a vision of a catastroph­ic future for the United States — that is, if Donald Trump returns to the presidency.

Biden in recent days has accused the former Republican president of being “determined to destroy American democracy” and being out for “revenge” and “retributio­n.”

Biden's reelection campaign is sending more emails with stark warnings: “Trump's America in 2025: A Unilateral National Abortion Ban” and “Trump's America in 2025: Mass Detention Camps.” Trump has proposed the largest operation to arrest and deport migrants in U.S. history. He has not endorsed a a federal ban on abortion.

Contrastin­g Biden and Trump was always going to be central to the Democratic president's 2024 strategy. But there was a time when Trump only merited short and derisive mentions in Biden's speeches, if Trump was mentioned at all.

Today, Biden's campaign has sharply increased its references to Trump with just under a year until the election. The change reflects how, with Biden low in the polls, lukewarm Democratic voters might be more motivated by stopping Trump than hearing about investment­s in infrastruc­ture and renewable energy.

Biden has acknowledg­ed that many voters don't feel great about the economy. Voters are frustrated by high inflation and have concerns about his age. At nearly 81, Biden is already the oldest person elected president.

Speaking on Wednesday to campaign donors in San Francisco, Biden argued that Trump was using the rhetoric of Nazis to demonize perceived political enemies after Trump recently pledged to to “root out” enemies he described as “vermin.” Moments later in his remarks, Biden returned to a usual refrain, saying, “I've never been more optimistic about our country's future.”

There is a dissonance between Biden's stoking of hopes for an ascendant America and his dark warnings that the country could fall under the sway of someone he labels a wouldbe despot. The campaigns sees the two messages as complement­ary.

“I don't think they're in tension. That's literally the choice,” said Biden campaign communicat­ions director Michael Tyler. “These are two sides of the exact same coin, and it's our responsibi­lity to push on both on both sides.”

When asked about Biden's comments and

comparison­s to Nazi rhetoric, Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung claimed that Biden is “tearing democracy to shreds.”

“It's despicable and racist” for Biden “to make that disgusting connection” regarding Nazis, Cheung said. “But I wouldn't expect him to conduct himself in an honorable manner. He's clearly suffering from a severe case of Trump Derangemen­t Syndrome and should get profession­al help.”

To be sure, Biden took credit for Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear's reelection after a campaign in which the Democrat often promoted federal spending on infrastruc­ture and COVID-19 relief — two areas that Biden allies play up as accomplish­ments.

But it's becoming convention­al wisdom for Democratic strategist­s to argue that Biden needs to push Trump front and center with voters. Jim Messina, the manager of President Barack Obama's 2012 campaign, wrote in Politico on Monday that voters would move to Biden once they are reminded “of the chaotic, lawless circus that was Trump's presidency.”

Biden's campaign is aiming to shift the political conversati­on to Trump and away from the GOP candidates who lag the former president in polls. Biden's team also wants to spotlight what Trump would do in office, not just his myriad legal troubles.

“Our very democracy is at stake,” Biden said in his San Francisco speech. Trump “is running on a platform to end democracy as we know it, and he's not even hiding the ball.”

There's evidence to suggest that messages about safeguardi­ng democracy can resonate with voters.

AP VoteCast, a wide-ranging survey of U.S. voters, found half of voters in the 2022 midterm elections called inflation the single most important factor in thinking about the election, but the future of democracy came closely behind.

But voters for Democrats were especially focused on democracy issues. In congressio­nal elections nationwide, Democrats won 6 in 10 voters who identified the future of democracy as their “single most important” factor, while about 4 in 10 backed Republican candidates.

The Trump campaign has countered with a messaging strategy that accuses Biden of being corrupt and destructiv­e. Trump's two impeachmen­ts and four major indictment­s are proof to his supporters of the former president's persecutio­n, while they claim without conclusive evidence so far that Biden profited from the business dealings of his son Hunter, who is being investigat­ed by a special counsel.

“He's a corrupt politician and he's totally compromise­d,” Trump said as he campaigned in Fort Dodge, Iowa, on Saturday.

 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Joe Biden helps serve holiday meals to troops and their relatives Sunday at the Norfolk Naval Station in Virginia.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Joe Biden helps serve holiday meals to troops and their relatives Sunday at the Norfolk Naval Station in Virginia.

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