The Guardian (USA)

‘Gratuitous, inaccurate’: White House disputes special counsel report on Biden

- Chris Stein and Alice Herman in Washington DC

Democrats and the White House on Friday launched an aggressive push back against a special counsel report that pushed Joe Biden’s age and memory to the front and center of the presidenti­al election campaign and spurred a series of Republican attacks on the US president.

The special counsel Robert Hur’s report on Biden’s handling of confidenti­al documents on Thursday said the US president would not face criminal charges in the case but in a series of remarks characteri­zed Biden as elderly and with a failing memory – triggering a political bombshell on an issue seen as a core weakness of Biden’s re-election campaign.

“He gets it. He gets how he’s viewed. He gets what people see and what’s written about him and what the American people also see. But there are other things to know,” the White House spokespers­on Karine Jean-Pierre said, pointing to reports that the former Republican House speaker Kevin McCarthy considered the president a sharp negotiator.

In an unusually lengthy question and answer session with the White House press corps other Biden administra­tion officials also joined the chorus of voices defending the president, his lengthy legislativ­e record in his first term as president and his handling of a multitude of crises – both domestic and foreign.

The White House spokespers­on Ian Sams said he fundamenta­lly disagreed with the special counsel’s descriptio­n’s of Joe Biden’s ability to recall details. “I dispute that the characteri­zations about his memory in the report are accurate, because they’re not,” he said as he and Jean-Pierre faced a barrage of questions on the issue.

Sams also indicated that it was possible transcript­s of Biden’s interviews with Hur’s team could be released. The transcript­s could shine some light on some of the more jarring comments about the president’s memory Hur made in his report, such as that he could not recall the years he was vice-president, or when his son, Beau Biden, died.

Democrats have also been quick to compare Biden’s issues with that of his almost certain rival in the 2024 race – the former US president Donald Trump. Trump also faces political problems due to his handling of confidenti­al documents, but unlike Biden, he is being prosecuted for obstructin­g the recovery of papers held at his Mar-aLago resort in Florida.

Trump also regularly makes gaffes on the campaign trail and faces a raft of other criminal charges in relation to his business dealings, allegedly paying off an adult film star, his role in the January 6 attack on the Capitol and trying to subvert the 2020 election in Georgia.

But that did not stop the former US president and his many loyal allies in the Republican party from going on the offensive and seeking to portray Biden as mentally unfit for office.

That barrage of attacks was met by a firm response from Democrats.

The vice-president, Kamala Harris, condemned Hur’s comments about Biden’s age and memory as “gratuitous, inaccurate and inappropri­ate”, and noted that the president’s interview was conducted in the “intense” aftermath of the 7 October terrorist attack in Israel.

“The way that the president’s demeanor in that report was characteri­zed could not be more wrong on the facts, and clearly politicall­y motivated, gratuitous,” she said.

The Pennsylvan­ia Democratic sen

ator John Fetterman said he believes Biden is still up to the job as president, and criticized Hur as having concocted a “smear job”. The senator added: “The president was very clear in that he is absolutely in full control.”

The Wisconsin Democratic senator Tammy Baldwin said: “I judge a president on what they’ve done and whose side they’re on,” Baldwin told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. She pointed to Biden’s “strong record of creating good-paying jobs, rebuilding our infrastruc­ture, and lowering prescripti­on drug prices”.

Similarly, the Wisconsin Democratic congressma­n Mark Pocan stated that Biden “got things done for the

American people”, while Trump “has used hate to try to divide this nation and in a way unseen before”.

Not all Democrats were quite so unified, especially as polling has shown that many Americans – including Democrats – consider Biden’s age a source of deep concern. Paul Begala, a former top aide to Bill Clinton and now a CNN commentato­r said: “I’m a

Biden supporter and I slept like a baby last night – I woke up every two hours crying and wet the bed. This is terrible for Democrats.”

In a policy response to the issue the Biden administra­tion plans to appoint a taskforce to review how classified documents are handled during often chaotic transition­s between presidenti­al administra­tions. Aside from

Biden and Trump, Trump’s ex-vice president, Mike Pence, was also found to have some confidenti­al documents inadverten­tly in his possession.

“The president’s going to appoint a taskforce to review how transition­s look at classified material to ensure that there are better processes in place,” Sams said.

 ?? Photograph: Nathan Howard/Getty Images ?? Joe Biden speaks at the White House on 8 February.
Photograph: Nathan Howard/Getty Images Joe Biden speaks at the White House on 8 February.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States