Springfield News-Sun

White House developing plan to combat Trump

- Michael D. Shear

WASHINGTON — With Donald J. Trump’s announceme­nt that he is officially running to reclaim the Oval Office he falsely asserts was stolen from him, President Biden is ready to implement what some of his top aides refer to as “the Trump project.”

Biden has spent much of the last year putting a fearsome face on the “ultramaga” agenda, taking aim at Republican senators, governors and state lawmakers. Now, he will return the focus to his once and future foil — Mr. “Make America Great Again” himself.

Inside the West Wing, a small group of presidenti­al advisers has been working to develop a plan for how Biden and the White House will respond to what they expect will be a constant stream of invective from the former president now that he is formally a candidate.

Trump started the attacks almost immediatel­y in his speech on Tuesday night announcing his presidenti­al run, as he complained about “Biden and the radical-left lunatics running our government right into the ground.”

Biden will continue to underscore his belief that Trump is a threat to democracy, advisers say. But his political handlers are determined to show that Trump’s four years did not yield actual accomplish­ments for the American people.

On Tuesday, just hours before Trump’s announceme­nt, Biden’s political Twitter account posted a video mocking the former president’s claims that he was doing something about the nation’s crumbling infrastruc­ture. The video, titled “The difference between talking and delivering,” showed Biden signing his $1 trillion infrastruc­ture measure into law, juxtaposed with a compilatio­n of clips of the former president using the word “infrastruc­ture.”

In the middle of Trump’s speech, the Twitter account posted another video, titled “Donald Trump failed America,” showing scenes of the Jan. 6, 2021, riot on Capitol Hill.

The effort to coordinate the Trump response has involved months of research and is being led by Anita Dunn, one of Biden’s top communicat­ions strategist­s, and Jen O’malley Dillon, who ran Biden’s 2020 campaign and is now the deputy chief of staff at the White House.

Biden said last week that he “intends” to run in 2024 but would talk with his family before announcing a decision early next year.

Still, officials said Trump’s presence in the race would motivate him to run again. Biden views his predecesso­r as a danger that needs to be stopped. He regularly notes that he is the only person who has ever defeated Trump, implying that he would have the best chance of doing it again. He has publicly said he would “not be disappoint­ed” to face Trump in a rematch.

Biden was encouraged by the better-than-expected showing among Democrats during the midterm elections. But he remains deeply unpopular himself, according to polls, and he faces political headwinds.

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