Springfield News-Sun

Focused on 2024, Biden sees opportunit­y in Gop-held Florida

- By Seung Min Kim and Steve Quinn

TAMPA, FLORIDA — With an eye toward the 2024 campaign, President Joe Biden on Thursday ventured to Florida, a state defined by its growing retiree population and status as the unofficial headquarte­rs of the modern-day Republican Party.

The president sees a chance to use Social Security and Medicare to drive a wedge between GOP lawmakers and their base of older voters who rely on these government programs for income and health insurance. Biden is trying to lay the groundwork for an expected reelection campaign announceme­nt this spring.

White House aides have been using the votes and words of Republican lawmakers to make their case that Social Security and Medicare benefits are under threat, while GOP leaders say their statements are being mischaract­erized.

“He’s going to call out these House Republican­s and Senate Republican­s who have continuous­ly said over the years, and especially the last several months, that they want to cut those two key benefits,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-pierre told reporters on Air Force One.

After delivering his State of the Union address on Tuesday, Biden on Wednesday went to Wisconsin, another political battlegrou­nd, where he said he would block any attempts to slash Social Security and Medicare benefits.

“All of you have been paying into the system every single paycheck you’ve had since you started working,” Biden said. “These benefits belong to you, the American worker. You earned it. And I will not allow anyone to cut them. Not today, not tomorrow, not ever, period.”

Leading Republican lawmakers insist that spending cuts to Social Security and Medicare are off the table with regard to reaching a deal to increase the government’s legal borrowing authority. But enough prominent Republican­s have broached the subject that Biden sees a political opportunit­y.

During the State of the Union address, GOP lawmakers jeered when Biden referenced a proposal by Sen. Rick Scott, R-fla., to require that the programs be reauthoriz­ed every five years. The president seized on the impromptu moment, urging Republican­s and Democrats alike to pledge to avoid cuts to the income and health insurance programs.

“Let’s stand up for seniors,” Biden said as most of those in the chamber took to their feet to applaud, knowing the dangers of being on the wrong side of an aging electorate that values these programs.

To make their case, White House aides distribute­d handouts in Tampa summarizin­g Scott’s plan, highlighti­ng the phrase where the senator wrote: “All federal legislatio­n sunsets in 5 years. If a law is worth keeping, Congress can pass it again.”

Scott said his policy ideas have been misreprese­nted by the president and that he only wants programs up for congressio­nal renewal every five years, which he believes is different from spending cuts to Social Security or Medicare. “They lie about it,” Scott said in a written statement about how administra­tion officials have described his plan.

“I am not for cutting Social Security and Medicare,” Scott said in a CNN interview hours before Biden’s trip. “We’ve got to preserve those benefits.”

It’s a delicate moment for Social Security and Medicare, programs that economists say will drive the national debt to unpreceden­ted highs over the next few decades. The Social Security trust fund will be unable to pay full benefits starting in 2035, prompting some Republican lawmakers to say changes will have to be made to sustain payments.

But any proposed changes can come across as kryptonite to voters, who want their benefits preserved rather than cut. That’s especially true in Republican-held Florida, where Census figures show that nearly a third of adults are older than 62.

COLUMBUS — A Franklin County jury on Thursday found two former Ohio State University football players not guilty of raping a woman at a Northwest Side apartment.

Amir I. Riep and Jahsen L. Wint, both 24, were defensive players for the football team when a then-19-yearold woman in her freshman year at Ohio State accused them of raping her on Feb. 4, 2020.

The jury found them not guilty on all charges: two counts each of rape and one count each of kidnapping.

Riep and Wint broke down crying and embraced after the jury verdict was read.

Defense attorneys Dan Sabol and Sam Shamansky, who represente­d Riep and Wint, respective­ly, argued during the trial that the woman had consensual sex with both men but regretted it afterward, and accused the victim’s father of pushing his daughter and authoritie­s to pursue criminal charges.

Afterward, Riep and Wint told The Dispatch they are relieved and grateful to the jury for giving them their lives back.

“I’m going to get my life back on track, get my degree and keep on being a law-abiding citizen,” Wint said.

Wint has completed his classes at Ohio State, but his degree was held by the university pending the outcome of this trial. Riep has two semesters left at Ohio State before he graduates.

“I’m grateful and you grow through what you go through,” Riep said.

Franklin County Assistant Prosecutor Daniel Meyer declined to comment after the verdict.

Meyer said during the trial that the woman went to the apartment shared by the men expecting to just hang out with Riep, but both men violently raped her at the same time.

Shamansky said Wint and Riep have had their lives upended by a false accusation.

“He’s had his life turned on end by a false accusation with evidence that was so lacking in credibilit­y that charges should never been brought,” Shamansky said.

Sabol said Riep’s account has never changed.

“The jury did a fantastic job discerning the truth and contrastin­g what Amir said and what his accuser said,” Sabol said. “It took a long time but the system worked.”

A key piece of evidence in the case is a cellphone video Riep took of the alleged victim which was played in court. The short video is visually dark but captures the sound of the woman saying she’s crying and then agreeing after Riep asks if the sex was consensual.

Riep and a witness, Lloyd Mcfarquhar, another former Ohio State football player who played defensive back and on special teams, testified Wednesday during the trial that players were told to get evidence that their sexual partners consented to protect themselves from any possible future issues.

Riep and Mcfarquhar did not testify who on the Buckeyes staff told them or other Ohio State players to do this.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Joe Biden takes a photo with workers after delivering remarks on his economic agenda at LIUNA Training Center, Wednesday in Deforest, Wis.
PATRICK SEMANSKY / ASSOCIATED PRESS President Joe Biden takes a photo with workers after delivering remarks on his economic agenda at LIUNA Training Center, Wednesday in Deforest, Wis.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States