The Boston Globe

Biden warns against support for Trump’s ‘extremist movement’

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President Biden warned Thursday that Donald Trump leads an “extremist movement” that would undermine the nation’s institutio­ns, as he touts efforts to protect democracy as a centerpiec­e of his reelection campaign.

The former president represents a group that “does not share the basic beliefs of our democracy,” and is a risk to the country, Biden said.

“There is something dangerous happening in America,” the president said.

The location of Biden’s speech carried symbolic meaning: It was in Arizona near an institute dedicated to the late Republican Senator John McCain, a friend of Biden who denounced Trump’s brand of politics as well as autocrats worldwide.

“Not every Republican — not even the majority of Republican­s — adheres to the extremist MAGA ideology,” he said. “I know it because I’ve been able to work with Republican­s my whole career. But there is no question that today’s Republican Party is driven and intimidate­d by MAGA Republican extremists.”

Biden’s speech comes one day after Republican candidates held their second debate without Trump, who has consolidat­ed his lead in the GOP primary on promises to use executive powers to root out federal bureaucrat­s who disagree with his views, carry out mass deportatio­ns of migrants, and send the US military to major cities to fight crime.

“They’re pushing the notion that the defeated former president expressed when he was in office and believes applies only to him,” Biden said of Trump and his allies. “Trump says the Constituti­on gave him ‘the right to do whatever he wants as president.’”

“Did you ever think you’d hear leaders of political parties in the United States of America speak like that?” Biden asked the audience.

Arizona is a battlegrou­nd state where Biden beat Trump by less than half a percentage point in 2020, fueling his political rival’s claims the election was stolen. Funds from his 2021 stimulus package will go toward building a new presidenti­al-style library dedicated to McCain, who was the 2008 GOP presidenti­al nominee. Biden grew emotional as he spoke about McCain.

Biden, 80, has highlighte­d themes of protecting democracy often, casting Trump and his supporters as extreme and a persistent threat to US institutio­ns. He made his case in Philadelph­ia’s Independen­ce Hall ahead of last year’s midterms and at this year’s State of the Union, when he highlighte­d the attack on former House speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband by a hammer-wielding intruder who spouted conspiracy theories.

Thursday’s address comes at a critical time in Biden’s reelection bid, as he battles low approval ratings, questions about his economic stewardshi­p, and voter concerns about his age. Polls show Biden running neck and neck with Trump in a hypothetic­al 2024 rematch.

Trump continues to make controvers­ial comments, especially on his Truth Social account, where in recent weeks he has suggested that the top US general deserves execution, accused the news media of treason, attacked prosecutor­s and judges in criminal cases he is facing, and repeated his claims that the 2020 election was stolen.

Biden defended the general, outgoing Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Mark Milley, and criticized Republican­s for failing to condemn “such heinous statements.”

“Democracie­s don’t have to die at the end of a rifle,” Biden said. “They can die when people are silent.”

 ?? JIM WATSON/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? President Biden embraced Cindy McCain, widow of Senator John McCain, as he arrived to deliver remarks on democracy at an event honoring the legacy of McCain at the Tempe Center for the Arts in Tempe, Ariz., on Thursday.
JIM WATSON/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES President Biden embraced Cindy McCain, widow of Senator John McCain, as he arrived to deliver remarks on democracy at an event honoring the legacy of McCain at the Tempe Center for the Arts in Tempe, Ariz., on Thursday.

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