• Skip to main content

Search

Just another WordPress site

2020 joe biden

To defeat Ron DeSantis, Florida Democrats are coalescing around Charlie Crist and the Joe Biden playbook

July 17, 2022 by edition.cnn.com Leave a Comment

Miami Gardens, Florida (CNN) Fifteen minutes into a recent Sunday service, a man in a trim pinstriped suit with coiffed white hair and a blue disposable mask strolled to the front row of The Fountain church and began nodding along to a live and loud contemporary gospel band.

“Is that Charlie Crist?” Virginia McNair, a local retiree, whispered from a few rows back at this predominantly Black church. “My favorite.”
It was Charlie Crist — that instantly recognizable, enduring enigma of Florida politics — in his element: campaigning. At age 65, Crist, currently serving his third term in the US House, is running for governor, a job he first won in 2006 as a Republican, left after losing a 2010 US Senate race as an independent, and failed to win back in 2014 as a Democrat. And he’s doing it the only way he knows how: by trying to shake every hand in the state. In 36 hours, he attended the Sunday service, spoke to parents of children killed by gun violence, huddled with Nicaraguan refugees, lunched with Haitian American Democrats and toured Cuban American businesses in Little Havana with his new fiancée.

Florida was once the perennial swing state. 2022 may prove how red it has become

Florida was once the perennial swing state. 2022 may prove how red it has become

Democrats in Florida, entirely shut out of state government for more than two decades, are desperate for power to slow the state’s rightward lurch , but they face a fundraising juggernau t and rising GOP star in Gov. Ron DeSantis . Meanwhile, the country is souring on President Joe Biden , and some Democratic candidates are distancing themselves from their standard-bearer heading into the midterm elections.

Crist, though, is not just embracing Biden, he is channeling the President’s campaign playbook. Like Biden in 2020, he’s running on reestablishing civility, a bet that enough independent and moderate GOP voters are exhausted by the divisive politics of the incumbent Republican administration. Crist is playing up his bipartisan background — at times, even leaning into his Republican roots — in hopes voters will rally around a familiar face with a track record of working across the aisle.
Read More

A year ago, Crist’s entrance into the race was met with a sigh from many state Democrats ready for younger blood and fresh faces. But as mail ballots for the August 23 primary are sent out in many Florida counties, party forces have coalesced around Crist’s strategy. With about five weeks left before the primary, Crist has built a solid fundraising advantage and has endorsements from more than 100 elected Democratic officials and the backing of labor unions and progressive leaders alike.
Crist on Thursday released his first statewide ad of the campaign focused on DeSantis — not his main primary opponent, state Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried . In another sign Crist is already readying for the general election, his campaign has made an eight-figure reservation of airtime for the fall, CNN has learned.

“Whoever has the best chance is who we have to nominate,” said state Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith, an Orlando Democrat and LGBT leader who endorsed Crist last month. “The stakes are just too high.”
Biden framed the 2020 race as a ” battle for the soul of America .” Crist, who has mentioned the Golden Rule at campaign stops for more than a decade, framed the race as “not right versus left, it’s right versus wrong.”
“There’s a similarity, of course,” Crist told CNN. “Good experience, caring heart — I think people are hungry for that.”
“But I’m a Floridian,” he added. “And, God bless the President, but he’s from Delaware.”
Thomas Kennedy, a Miami activist and Democratic National Committee member known for disrupting DeSantis events, said he thinks Crist is a good foil for DeSantis, a conservative favorite who has brought former President Donald Trump ‘s confrontational style to Tallahassee.
“People are tired of the toxicity and partisanship,” Kennedy said at the event where Crist vowed to help Nicaraguan immigrants gain temporary protected states to remain in the US. “There’s so much meanness in the state right now. He’s similar to Biden.”
Not everyone is on board. Fried, the lone Democrat in statewide elected office, has built her campaign around the promise “Something new.” Her allies are quick to point out that Crist as the Democratic nominee in 2014 couldn’t beat then-Gov. Rick Scott and that though Biden’s strategy proved successful in his 2020 race, he lost Florida to Trump by a healthy margin. Fried, meanwhile, won office four years ago in a cycle that saw all other Democrats running statewide lose.
“The definition of insanity is doing the same thing and expecting a different outcome, and our party has a history of that insanity,” said Evan Ross, a Democratic consultant and Fried supporter with deep ties to South Florida’s large Jewish community. “Charlie Crist would be the pinnacle of it. If we’re crazy enough to nominate him, I think it will be one of our worst losses in state history.”
Gavin Newsom goes on the air against Ron DeSantis as political rivalry grows

Gavin Newsom goes on the air against Ron DeSantis as political rivalry grows

Crist dismissed 2014 as a bad year for Democrats everywhere. He noted that he lost the race by less than 1 percentage point and has since outperformed the top of the Democratic ticket three times en route to winning his purple-hued House seat in the Tampa Bay area. Crist’s advisers have also vowed a robust campaign by Democrats this year, unlike 2020 when Democrats acknowledge Biden was more focused on other battleground states.
Asked what he had learned from his last statewide defeat, Crist responded: “Go to north Florida more.”
But even some Crist supporters question if his brand of politics can win a head-to-head battle against DeSantis, who is seeking a blowout victory to bolster his resume before a possible 2024 run for president .
“All of Charlie’s success was by being nice. And that works until it doesn’t. The Republicans, they don’t play around,” said John Morgan, an Orlando lawyer and longtime friend of Crist. “There’s not a mean bone in Charlie’s body. DeSantis is a brawler with brass knuckles in one hand and a switchblade in the other.”
CNN has reached out to DeSantis’ campaign for comment.

Retail politics 101

On the Saturday before his church appearance, Crist donned a traditional Cuban guayabera shirt and roamed the festive streets of Little Havana in Miami wide-eyed and curious, despite it being an iconic stop for past Florida campaigns, including his own. A Cuban band had serenaded him and Arizona Sen. John McCain there in 2006. He paraded through it in a convertible in 2007. He opened a campaign office there in 2014.
Inside a Cuban coffee shop, Crist watched a worker roast beans and then introduced himself to patrons, including Matt Granat, a graphic designer from Palm Beach Gardens, who had identified the former governor from across the room. Out of earshot from Crist, Granat told CNN he was leaning toward voting for Fried.
Crist and his fiancée, Chelsea Grimes, watch as coffee beans are roasted at La Colada Gourmet in Little Havana in Miami on July, 9, 2022.

Crist and his fiancée, Chelsea Grimes, watch as coffee beans are roasted at La Colada Gourmet in Little Havana in Miami on July, 9, 2022.

“She strikes me as someone who has been a thorn in the side of DeSantis,” Granat said. “He’s switched parties, so I’m not sure about him.”
Ten minutes later, Crist returned after meeting a dozen other people and handed Granat a bumper sticker. “Matt, I want you to have this.”
Granat looked impressed: “Wow, he remembered my name.”
“You need name ID to do this thing in a state this size,” Crist later told CNN. “It’s hard to be recognized unless you’ve done what I’ve done.”
As Crist leans on old connections and a personal touch, Fried has built on an online following through late-night Twitter chats with her audience, sharply edited videos highlighting Crist’s Republican past and capturing viral moments on the campaign trail. The two will debate for the first and only time on July 21.
“Charlie has been doing this for 30 years. He has relationships that go back decades,” Fried said. “And a lot of my relationships are newer and people know I’m not a typical Democrat, meaning I stand up for things differently, I talk differently and I don’t play internal party politics. And unfortunately that’s what Charlie does. I don’t play games. He offers positions to people, he cuts deals, and I’m not willing to do that.”
Crist reacts after trying an iced coffee drink at La Colada Gourmet in Miami on July, 9, 2022.

Crist reacts after trying an iced coffee drink at La Colada Gourmet in Miami on July, 9, 2022.

Fried has seized on the Democratic outrage over the US Supreme Court eliminating the federal right to an abortion to jump-start a campaign that has been beset by staff shake-ups, lackluster fundraising and an ethics complaint over past income disclosures. She said that as a woman, she is uniquely situated to capture this reinvigorated wave of energy from Democratic voters.
“I’m talking to a lot of women from across the state,” Fried said. “They’ve all turned to me with a collective voice, saying, ‘You have to win, you’re our protector and our fighter.'”
Crist, meanwhile, has a complicated and conflicting history on abortion. He has called himself “pro-life” in the past. He explained to a Florida television station earlier this year, “I’m still pro-life, meaning I’m for life. I hope most people are.” He recently said he regretted appointing to the state Supreme Court a pair of justices who have ruled to uphold abortion restrictions.
Yet, Crist has been a reliable vote for abortion rights in the House, and he has secured endorsements from Barbara Zdravecky, the former CEO of Planned Parenthood of Southwest and Central Florida, and Alex Sink, the state’s former elected chief financial officer who founded an organization that recruits and trains Democratic women who support abortion rights to run for office.
“I just think he’s certainly best prepared to be governor and do the things we need him to do,” said Sink, who lost a bid to succeed Crist as governor in 2010. “But also he’s best prepared to win and raise the money to wage the fight against DeSantis.”
In Florida, both sides in abortion fight wait to see how far DeSantis will go

In Florida, both sides in abortion fight wait to see how far DeSantis will go

State Rep. Anna Eskamani , an outspoken advocate for abortion rights, was publicly dismissive of Crist’s gubernatorial run when he first announced in May of last year, tepidly calling him “better than DeSantis.” But Crist worked to convince her of his progressive bona fides. They held events together to oppose a state bill that would curb residential solar power and to fight DeSantis’ tax policies. Eskamani was surprised how many people who showed up knew Crist.
“That name ID, of course, it can trigger different emotions, there’s that trust there and it reminds me of Joe Biden,” she said. “I definitely didn’t predict we would be there, but this is Florida.”

Leaning on Black voters

Much as Biden did, the Crist campaign is banking that his familiarity with Black Floridians will carry him through the primary. Black voters make up 30% of registered Democrats in the state and have been instrumental in determining the party’s nominee in past elections.
Despite earning the moniker “Chain Gang Charlie” for championing the return of chained prison work crews as a state senator in the 1990s, Crist has built long-standing connections with African American and Caribbean American state leaders. At the lunch with Haitian American Democrats, state Rep. Marie Paule Woodson, who was born in Haiti, gave a full-throated backing of Crist and laid out the stakes for November.
Crist places campaign bumper stickers around a table before the Haitian American Democratic Club of Broward luncheon in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on July 10, 2022.

Crist places campaign bumper stickers around a table before the Haitian American Democratic Club of Broward luncheon in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on July 10, 2022.

“If you don’t wake up and help Charlie be the next governor, every single one of you will be sitting in the back of the bus,” she said.
Crist backs legalization and decriminalization of marijuana and has promised to restore the voting rights of felons who have served their sentences. But as he positions himself for the general election, Crist has also sought to distance himself from some of the more divisive rhetoric on policing from his party’s left flank.
At a breakfast hosted by Florida Parents of Murdered Children, a predominantly Black advocacy group for families victimized by homicide, Crist received an unexpected turn at the lectern, when he called on the room to recognize a table of police officers. He promised as governor to put funding into law enforcement to stop “these horrible crimes that happen all over our country.”
“We know that sometimes, you know, strange things have happened in law enforcement like in Minneapolis, and George Floyd, but you’re good,” Crist said to the table. “You’re good.”
Florida is losing two Black-led congressional districts

Florida is losing two Black-led congressional districts

Aramis Ayala , Florida’s first Black state attorney and the event’s keynote speaker, appeared stunned by Crist’s remarks. Ayala, who earned a reputation as a reformer, once published a list of officers who couldn’t be trusted to testify in criminal cases. During her turn at the microphone, she called out the “mass incarceration of Black and brown people.” By then, Crist was on his way to his next event.
Asked by CNN about Crist’s remarks, Ayala, who is running for Florida attorney general, said: “Each person has to have their own message. If he’s the governor, he has to explain what he’s going to do, and I must explain what I would do.” She declined to say which Democratic candidate she intends to vote for in August.
Fried has earned the endorsement of the Democratic Black Caucus of Florida and the Florida College Democrats, signaling that her campaign has gained a foothold with the party’s grassroots.
Camara Williams, a Florida attorney and community organizer, recently hosted both candidates on his Black culture and politics podcast. He told CNN he was unimpressed by Crist’s folksy one-liners and thought the Democrat was relying on a dated mentality for getting Black voters to the polls. Crist said he would bring former President Barack Obama to campaign for him .
When Williams suggested some Black voters think DeSantis has helped their economic standing by keeping businesses open during most of the pandemic, Crist scoffed.
“Doubtful,” Crist said. “Not for you.”
“I’ve heard Black voters say that,” Williams responded.
“That’s crazy, man,” Crist replied. He ultimately cut the interview shorter than the requested hour.
Williams this past week endorsed Fried. The two clicked during a wonky 70-minute interview that touched on Black farming, generational wealth and marijuana policy. In an interview last month with CNN, Williams said he felt Crist lacked authenticity and was underestimating DeSantis.
“He may hold a fond place in some African American voters’ hearts, but if you think that’s going to bring tailwinds to get people interested in your campaign, you’re wrong,” Williams said. “DeSantis will do a good job of messaging to a certain sector of Black voters because of economics. You have to address that.”

Crist shrugged off the criticism. Black voters know him, he insisted.
“I’m sorry he feels that way,” Crist said of Williams. “He has a right to his opinion. But he doesn’t know me.”

Filed Under: politics politics, To defeat Ron DeSantis, Florida Democrats coalesce around Charlie Crist and the Joe Biden playbook - CNNPolitics, ..., where is joe biden, where is joe biden today, joe biden son, who is joe biden, vicepresident joe biden, joe biden and obama, congressman charlie crist, contact joe biden, joe biden book, ron desantis yale

Will second presidential debate be canceled? Trump insists on facing Biden despite having COVID

October 7, 2020 by www.newsweek.com Leave a Comment

The second presidential debate is scheduled to take place in Miami on October 15, but President Donald Trump ‘s positive test for coronavirus has raised questions about whether it should go ahead.

While the president has insisted he wants to debate former Vice President Joe Biden in person, both Biden and the mayor of Miami have said Trump should not attend if he is still testing positive for the virus.

On Tuesday, the Democratic nominee said that he wanted to debate Trump but not if there was a risk that other people could be exposed to COVID. The Trump campaign said the president will be “healthy.”

“I think if he still has COVID, we shouldn’t have a debate,” Biden told reporters. “We’re going to have to follow very strict guidelines. Too many people have been infected. It’s a very serious problem.”

“I’m not sure what President Trump is all about now. I don’t know what his status is. I’m looking forward to being able to debate him, but I just hope all the protocols are followed.

“I just hope all the protocols are followed,” he said.

“President Trump will be healthy and will be there,” Trump campaign spokesman Tim Murtaugh said in a statement on Tuesday. “There’s no getting out of this one for Biden and his protectors in the media can’t cover for him.”

The Mayor of Miami, Francis Suarez, a Republican, has said that Trump should not attend the debate if he is still testing positive for the disease. Suarez told Politico it could be dangerous for the people Trump meets.

“I don’t think it’s safe, not for him and anybody else, anywhere or anyone he interacts with,” Suarez said on Tuesday.

“Remember, this thing is highly contagious,” he said. “How many people are infected in his inner circle, in the White House, senators, et cetera?”

On Tuesday, the president’s senior advisor, Stephen Miller, became the latest person in Trump’s orbit to reveal that they had contracted the virus.More than a dozen White House officials have now tested positive.

The Commission on Presidential Debates is responsible for organizing the debates and works with the candidates’ teams to agree conditions. Any decision to cancel could fall on the commission. Alternatively, either Biden or Trump could simply refuse to attend.

Trump has been upbeat about the debate and his health since his discharge from Walter Reed medical center. In recent days, the president has used his Twitter account to criticize his opponents and make the case for his re-election.

“Feeling really good! Don’t be afraid of Covid. Don’t let it dominate your life. We have developed, under the Trump Administration, some really great drugs & knowledge. I feel better than I did 20 years ago!” he wrote Monday.

“I am looking forward to the debate on the evening of Thursday, October 15th in Miami. It will be great!” he tweeted the following day.

The Trump and Biden campaigns have been contacted for comment.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Politics, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, 2020 Election, 2020 Presidential Debates, Coronavirus, 2020 Presidential..., studio c presidential debate, 2 presidential debate, when will presidential debates start, in presidential debate 2016, democratic presidential debates, democratic presidential debate, democratic presidential debate when, democratic presidential debates when, presidential debates 2019, presidential debates 2020

Pro-Biden group pouring millions into new ad campaign to promote new climate, health care legislation

August 17, 2022 by www.cbsnews.com Leave a Comment

As President Biden and Democrats running in the midterm elections are planning to spend the next several weeks on the road promoting passage of the their climate, health care and tax legislation, several national political groups are making plans to pour millions of dollars into advertising to help boost the campaign — and the president’s low approval ratings — especially with the party’s base.

Building Back Together (BBT), a pro-Biden outside organization launched by the president and his campaign team to help promote policy priorities, on Thursday is launching a new $1 million ad campaign this week specifically targeting Black and Latino voters, two groups whose support for the president has sagged in recent months amid concerns with inflation and the direction of the economy. Though the new law is called the “Inflation Reduction Act,” it doesn’t directly tackle the underlying causes of inflation . It may, however, help bring down some costs for Americans.

The television , radio and digital ads are airing in English and Spanish in Nevada, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and the Washington, D.C. media market with plans to expand the campaign in the coming weeks, according to BBT. (If you’re wondering, the Inflation Reduction Act translated into Spanish is, la Ley de Reducción de la Inflación.)

Here’s one of the new ads:

The TV spot quickly outlines the basic sales and contrast pitch Democrats will be making to voters in the coming weeks: “Joe Biden promised to deliver for working families over special interests. That’s what the Inflation Reduction Act does: Lowers prescription drug costs for millions of families. Lowers health care costs for millions of families. Lowers energy costs for millions of families. But every single MAGA politician voted against it. Because when it really matters, they’re on the side of special interests.”

The digital ad stars a Black man who tells the camera, “It’s baffling to me that politicians would block things that will help millions of families. I’m glad we have a president who’s fighting for us.” And the Spanish-language radio ad also recounts what’s in the legislation. The group has now spent $35 million since the beginning of the Biden presidency on similar advertising, including recent ads designed to coax Congress into passing the legislation.

Attempts to increase support for the president — and his handling of economic matters — will be critical to improving the Democratic Party’s chances in several competitive statewide races in the places where BBT is running these ads. In the closing weeks of gubernatorial and Senate contests especially in Nevada, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Arizona, and Georgia, Black and Latino voters will be leaned on by Democrats to show up.

The most recent CBS News Battleground Tracker poll found 72%of Black voters approve of the job the president is doing. Latino voters were more divided: 45% approve, while 55% disapprove. As with voters overall, the president’s approval rating among Black voters has fallen over the course of his presidency. Compared to recent Democratic presidents, Mr. Biden’s approval rating among Black voters is similar to Bill Clinton’s at this point in his presidency but considerably lower than Barack Obama’s.

The lower numbers among Latino voters are reflected in other national surveys and are why the Republican Party is aggressively wooing Hispanics, especially in competitive southern and western House districts.

Like registered voters overall, these two groups of voters gave the president his lowest marks on inflation of the issues asked about — 43% of Black voters approved of his handling of inflation; only 26% of Latino voters did. Majorities of both groups said the national economy is in bad shape with Latino voters more likely than Black voters to feel that way.

Building Back Together launched in Feb. 2021 as a 501(c)(4) nonprofit advocacy organization that isn’t required to disclose its donors. These kinds of social welfare organizations can launch grassroots campaigns, lobby and conduct some election-related work, but legally it cannot be the main focus of the organization. BBT is primarily designed to help explain and defend Biden administration work, a response to concerns among many Democrats — especially Obama-era White House veterans — that the party failed to properly tout the benefits of the Affordable Care Act after it passed in the months before the 2020 midterm elections, which led to record congressional losses for the party.

Several other left-leaning organizations are also launching advertising this week or planning to do so to support passage of the climate change and health care legislation. Third Way — a group supporting moderate Democrats — has launched ads this week designed to thank several Democratic lawmakers, including Arizona senators Mark Kelly and Kyrsten Sinema , for supporting the legislation.

As the advertising begins, so does a more intense official travel schedule for administration officials, designed to indirectly assist Democrats on the ballot this fall. The White House announced this week that that Cabinet secretaries will be making more than 35 stops in 23 states to tout passage of the legislation, with appearances scheduled alongside Democratic lawmakers. Separately, the president is set to visit Ohio and Pennsylvania in the coming weeks to discuss climate change, health care and the bipartisan gun control and mental health bill passed earlier this summer, according to the White House.

While the Biden administration cannot coordinate travel or political activities with outside political groups like BBT, the aspirations are similar: Official events will be held, they are likely to earn local news coverage and during advertising breaks before or after those news reports, the hope is voters will see or hear ads like the ones mentioned here.

Will it help turn the number around for Democrats? Stay tuned.

Jennifer De Pinto contributed to this report.

    In:

  • Joe Biden
  • Democrats
Ed O’Keefe

Ed O'Keefe

Ed O’Keefe is a senior White House and political correspondent for CBS News based in Washington, D.C.

Twitter

Filed Under: Uncategorized Joe Biden, Democrats, athena health care group, sec. 9003. promoting integration of primary and behavioral health care, legislator/nurse's role as advocate for improving health care delivery, who guidance for climate resilient and environmentally sustainable health care facilities, wimmera health care group, wimmera health care group jobs, wimmera health care group email, jobs wimmera health care group, accounting manager who handled usf health care funds embezzled millions, avrist group health care

Nolte: Majority of Americans Now See FBI as ‘Joe Biden’s Personal Gestapo’

August 18, 2022 by www.breitbart.com Leave a Comment

A majority of 53 percent of Americans now see the FBI for what it really is: Joe Biden’s personal Gestapo.

This is according to the latest polling of Rasmussen Reports, which found only bad news for America’s fascist FBI:

Rasmussen Reports finds that 44% of Likely U.S. voters say the FBI raid on Trump’s Florida home made them trust the FBI less, compared to 29% who say it made them trust the bureau more. Twenty-three percent (23%) say the Trump raid did not make much difference in their trust of the FBI. …

Fifty percent (50%) of voters have a favorable impression of the FBI, including 26% who have a Very Favorable view of the bureau. Forty-six percent (46%) now view the FBI unfavorably, including 29% who have a Very Unfavorable impression of the bureau.

Roger Stone, an adviser to former President Donald Trump, has said there is “a group of politicized thugs at the top of the FBI who are using the FBI … as Joe Biden‘s personal Gestapo.” A majority (53%) of voters now agree with Stone’s statement – up from 46% in December – including 34% who Strongly Agree. Thirty-six percent (36%) disagree with the quote from Stone, including 26% who Strongly Disagree.

Only 50 percent view the FBI favorably. That is stunningly low. In May 2020, even after the FBI’s corrupt role in protecting Hillary Clinton and launching the Russia Collusion Hoax against Trump, that number sat at 60 percent favorable. But it’s today’s “trust” and “Gestapo” issues that are the FBI’s real problem.

Using the judicial system to punish your political enemies, which is what His Fraudulency Joe Biden and embittered Attorney General Merrick Garland almost certainly did with the Trump raid, is as ugly, corrupt, un-American, and norm-violating as it gets. Raiding the home of a former president just months before a national midterm election… Well, that’s something a political party would only dare do when they know they have billions and billions of corporate media dollars on alert to protect them against any outrage they commit.

WASHINGTON, DC - MAY 16: U.S. President Joe Biden (L) and Attorney General Merrick Garland walk into the East Room for the Public Safety Officer Medals of Valor ceremony at the White House on May 16, 2022, in Washington, DC. The medals are given for “extraordinary valor above and beyond the call of duty.”

U.S. President Joe Biden (L) and Attorney General Merrick Garland walk into the East Room for the Public Safety Officer Medals of Valor ceremony at the White House on May 16, 2022, in Washington, DC. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

As far as the FBI, they are willing coconspirators and eager Gestapo agents. No one with a set of principles would be a part of these outrages. An FBI that employed men and women of integrity would lose people to mass resignations.

To the surprise of no one, this poll also shows that Democrats love them some Federal Gestapo Agents. A full 63 percent of Democrats approve of the FBI. Yes, and only 30 percent of the defund-the-police Democrats view the Nazis in the FBI unfavorably.

Some people see these findings as hypocrisy, but if you understand the left’s goals, it is nothing close to hypocritical or surprising.

You see, nothing would make Democrats happier than dissolving all local and state police departments and replacing them with a centralized federal police force they can control and corrupt. Democrats would love to do to policing what they have already done to education, as well as environmental and fiscal policy — which is to nationalize it into a one-size-fits-all Utopian hellscape for anyone who doesn’t kneel before Black Lives Matter, trade beef for bugs, hand in their guns, accept gay porn in elementary schools, and believe 2+2=5.

Filed Under: Uncategorized FBI, John Nolte, poll, Rasmussen, Trump raid, Politics, vice president joe biden, american association of retired persons, Vice Presidential Joe Biden, joe biden, VP Joe Biden, major problems in american history, American FBI, joe biden 2020, Joe Person, Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton

Biden steers clear Of Trump for now, but reckoning may be unavoidable

August 18, 2022 by www.newsweek.com Leave a Comment

Former President Donald Trump ‘s outbursts directed at the Justice Department following the FBI search of his home in Florida prompted a sharp rebuke from Attorney General Merrick Garland . But so far his biggest political opponent has refused to take the bait.

President Joe Biden has projected a sense of normalcy in the days since the FBI recovered a trove of classified documents from Mar-a-Lago. The president has held regular meetings and events at the White House, vacationed in South Carolina, and presided over bill signings for the Inflation Reduction Act and other recent legislative victories.

Biden’s silence on the investigation is in keeping with his oft-stated pledge to avoid interfering with the Justice Department. But allies said the approach has also helped Biden draw a clear, albeit unspoken, contrast between his business-as-usual governing style and the controversy that would accompany Trump if he mounts another run for president.

“For that suburban mom or labor union dad who’s tired of the drama around Trump, this is a reminder of why they rejected him in 2020,” said Steve Schale, a Democratic strategist who ran a pro-Biden Super PAC in the last presidential election.

Other Democrats argue there is also little advantage for Biden to weigh in on the investigation when so many of the key facts remain unclear, including exactly what information was in the documents that the FBI took from Trump’s home.

Trump has defended his actions by claiming he declassified the documents that had been in his possession and was in the process of negotiating an agreement with the Justice Department to return them to the National Archives and Records Administration.

The former president has also called the latest investigation a “hoax” and political “witch hunt,” using the same argument he made to discredit the special counsel probe into Russia’s ties to his 2016 presidential campaign and the two impeachment investigations he faced in office.

But legal experts told Newsweek that previous investigations into Trump’s conduct centered on questions of executive power and other areas of the law that were open for interpretation, while the current probe is much more straightforward, reducing the need for Biden to wade into the debate.

“It’s an open and shut case,” said Michael Gerhardt, a constitutional law expert at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The documents the FBI seized from Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate “are not his property, they are the property of the U.S. government, and there’s just no question about it. It doesn’t matter whether he declassified them or not,” Gerhardt said.

The Justice Department has signaled it is investigating whether Trump’s actions violated the Espionage Act as well as two other statutes that prohibit officials from mishandling government information. It is typically difficult for federal prosecutors to prove intent, but Trump’s case may be different because there is evidence he disregarded the rules for presidential record keeping, legal experts and former Justice Department officials said.

“If the feeling is there is an indictable offense here, there will be an indictment,” said Michael Greenberger, a former senior Justice Department official. “They can’t afford to set a precedent that a president can walk out the door and treat national security issues in a cavalier way.”

However Garland chooses to proceed, Greenberger added, the attorney general won’t get Biden involved. The final decision about whether to charge Trump “will be Garland’s decision,” he said. “At most I think Biden will be informed ahead of time, and he may not be informed at all.”

As the investigation continues, Biden’s aides are sticking tightly to the script. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre has said the White House is not being briefed on the probe. She told ABC News it would be “inappropriate” for White House officials, including the president, to comment on the investigation.

Still, the strategy hasn’t stopped Trump’s supporters from criticizing the investigation as a politically motivated attempt by the administration to block him from challenging Biden in 2024.

The FBI search of Mar-a-Lago turned “Trump into a victim,” said Peter Wallison, who served as White House counsel to former President Ronald Reagan. A Republican who does not support Trump, Walllison said he feared the Party would rally around Trump instead of searching for new leaders.

“That, to me, is the worst part about this,” he said.

The Justice Department’s decision to take the explosive step of searching Trump’s home put Biden in a corner, Wallison added. At this point, “Biden can’t say his attorney general made a mistake,” he said.

Gerhardt noted that Biden’s silence can’t last forever, and he will eventually have to address the issue. But at least for now, he said, “it makes sense for Biden to defer to Garland about what the law is, and largely stay out of the way as best he can.”

Filed Under: Uncategorized U.S., FBI, Mar-a-lago, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, why steer clear, steer clear discount how much, sentence about steer clear of, who steer clear, what steer clear means, melania trump about jill biden, what's steer clear of, steer clear when, sentence about steer clear

Copyright © 2022 Search. Power by Wordpress.
Home - About Us - Contact Us - Disclaimers - DMCA - Privacy Policy - Submit your story