In Kenosha, Biden charges Trump ‘legitimizes the dark side of human nature’

Democratic presidential nominee meets with family of Jacob Blake during visit to Wisconsin city that saw several nights of violence following police shooting

Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden speaks at Grace Lutheran Church in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on September 3, 2020. (Jim Watson/AFP)
Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden speaks at Grace Lutheran Church in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on September 3, 2020. (Jim Watson/AFP)

KENOSHA, Wisconsin (AFP) — Joe Biden called out the “underlying racism” in America on Thursday as he sought to soothe the protest-scarred Midwestern city of Kenosha, where the US presidential hopeful spoke with a black father shot in the back by a white policeman.

Biden sat down for a private talk with Jacob Blake’s father and other relatives, and revealed later that he had spoken for about 15 minutes by telephone with Blake as the 29-year-old was recovering in hospital.

“He talked about how nothing was going to defeat him, how whether he walked again or not, he was not going to give up,” Biden said of Blake, whose lawyers say he is likely paralyzed from the waist down.

Describing himself repeatedly as an optimist, Biden — speaking through a face mask — told a small community gathering in Kenosha that the majority of Americans support the Black Lives Matter movement for racial equality.

But he also warned that US President Donald Trump has fueled the racial animus which has roiled the nation in recent months.

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden greets Tim Mahone, Chair of Mahone Foundation, with an elbow bump as he arrives at a meeting with members of the community at Grace Lutheran Church on September 3, 2020 in Kenosha, Wisconsin. (Alex Wong/Getty Images/AFP)

“Not all his fault,” but Trump’s heated and racially charged language “legitimizes the dark side of human nature,” Biden said at Grace Lutheran Church, where a crowd of mostly-masked supporters gathered outside.

The president’s rhetoric has exposed “the underlying racism that is institutionalized in the United States, and still exists, and has existed for 400 years,” he added.

“I promise you, win or lose… I’m going to go down fighting the good fight for racial equality,” Biden said, adding: “We’re not going to go down.”

The optics in Wisconsin offered a contrast from two days earlier when Biden’s Republican rival brought his law-and-order message to Kenosha, where he surveyed damage and met law enforcement and business owners.

President Donald Trump tours an area Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2020, that damaged during demonstrations after a police officer shot Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wis. (AP/Evan Vucci)

Unlike Biden, Trump did not speak with Blake or his family, and he visited in defiance of pleas by the mayor and state governor, both Democrats, who feared that his presence would stoke tensions.

During Trump’s meeting with police, he equated the demonstrations demanding racial justice with “domestic terror” by violent mobs.

Campaign turning point

Biden’s visit, his first major trip since June due to months of coronavirus-driven lockdown and restrictions, marks an intensification of his presidential campaign two months before the US election.

The campaign has announced Biden trips to battlegrounds Michigan next Wednesday and Pennsylvania on September 11.

As the Democrat emerges more from his Wilmington, Delaware home, Trump is already barnstorming across battleground states, warning voters that a Biden administration would leave them less safe and repeating his baseless attacks on the integrity of mail-in voting.

In recent weeks Trump has visited Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Arizona, New Hampshire and North Carolina and Pennsylvania.

Trump mocked Biden’s foray into Wisconsin, pushing a new nickname for the challenger that presumably refers to lower recent profile on the campaign trail.

Until now Biden has hesitated to hit the road, rigorously adhering to local pandemic health guidelines and campaigning through webcasts, advertising and television.

“Joe Hiden’ gets off his airplane, grabs and shakes a rather stunned man’s hand (like in the old days), then touches his (Joe’s) face and mask with the same hand,” the president tweeted, using one of his nicknames for his rival.

“No crowd, no enthusiasm for Joe today. Law & Order!”

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden and his wife Dr. Jill Biden participate in a conversation with parents and educators on September 3, 2020, in Wauwatosa, Wisconsin. (Alex Wong/Getty Images/AFP)

Biden leads Trump in national polling but the gap is closer in swing states including Wisconsin, which Trump narrowly flipped from Democrats in his improbable 2016 election victory.

He is no doubt using security fears to hammer home his law-and-order message.

Demonstrations in Kenosha began peacefully the night Blake was shot, but descended into violence for several nights running.

Police attempt to push back protesters outside the Kenosha County Courthouse, late Monday, August 24, 2020, in Kenosha, Wisconsin. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

It culminated August 25 when two people were shot dead. A 17-year-old white Trump supporter has been arrested and charged with murder.

The president has refused to condemn the killings or the growing presence of armed vigilantes at protests, and during his visit he equated the demonstrations demanding racial justice with “domestic terror” by violent mobs.

Community leader Tim Mahone, who moderated the roundtable, applauded Biden for presenting a more optimistic vision.

“We’re hurting right now,” he told Biden. “Your leadership is important, in Kenosha and in our country.”

Most Popular
read more: