Trump, Biden spar over economy, workers in Labor Day blitz

RISBURG, Pa. — Demo­c­ra­t­ic pres­i­den­tial nom­i­nee Joe Biden and Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump spent Mon­day dimin­ish­ing each other’s cre­den­tials on the econ­o­my and under­stand­ing of the Amer­i­can work­er as the pres­i­den­tial cam­paign entered its final, post-Labor Day stretch.

While work­ers live by an “Amer­i­can code,” Biden said Trump “lives by a code of lies, greed and self­ish­ness” as he met with labor lead­ers in Har­ris­burg, Penn­syl­va­nia, a key swing state. Trump, mean­while, tried to put the halt­ing eco­nom­ic recov­ery under the best light in a White House press con­fer­ence where he said Biden and his run­ning mate, Sen. Kamala Har­ris, would “destroy this coun­try and would destroy this economy.”

Labor Day typ­i­cal­ly marks the unof­fi­cial start to the fall cam­paign sea­son as can­di­dates accel­er­ate their activ­i­ty for the final sprint to Elec­tion Day. Both cam­paigns reflect­ed that urgency Mon­day, as Har­ris and Vice Pres­i­dent Mike Pence each cam­paigned in Wis­con­sin, a state Trump nar­row­ly won in 2016. The events played out against the back­ground of the pan­dem­ic, which has upend­ed cam­paign­ing and pushed Biden and Har­ris in par­tic­u­lar to con­duct much of the tra­di­tion­al elec­tion activ­i­ty online.

While the health of the Amer­i­can econ­o­my and sta­tus of work­ers were dom­i­nant Labor Day themes, both cam­paigns also focused on recent protests that have roiled Wis­con­sin and the rest of the nation after police shot Jacob Blake, a Black man, in Kenosha last month.

Har­ris, the first Black woman on a major par­ty pres­i­den­tial tick­et, met pri­vate­ly with Blake’s fam­i­ly at the Mil­wau­kee air­port after arriv­ing in the state, where she spoke with Blake by phone from his hos­pi­tal bed. Har­ris told Blake she was proud of him and indi­vid­u­al­ly spoke to each of his fam­i­ly mem­bers, in per­son and on the phone, urg­ing them to take care of their phys­i­cal and men­tal health, Blake’s lawyers said in a statement.

Biden met with Blake’s fam­i­ly dur­ing a vis­it to Wis­con­sin last week. Trump did not dur­ing a trip of his own last week, instead meet­ing with law enforce­ment and busi­ness own­ers whose prop­er­ty had been dam­aged dur­ing protests. Nor did Pence, who touched on the protests dur­ing a speech in La Crosse, where he toured an ener­gy facility.

“We will have law and order in every city in this coun­try for every Amer­i­can of every race and creed,” Pence said.

Out on the trail, signs of the pan­dem­ic were evi­dent. While Pence didn’t speak with a mask on, work­ers from the pow­er com­pa­ny he toured did as they stood behind him. Har­ris was care­ful not to stray far from blue “X” marks taped on the floor to encour­age social dis­tanc­ing as she toured an Inter­na­tion­al Broth­er­hood of Elec­tri­cal Work­ers train­ing facil­i­ty. While sup­port­ers gath­ered out­side the can­di­dates’ stops, they had min­i­mal inter­ac­tion with mem­bers of the pub­lic beyond the peo­ple invit­ed to their events.

After meet­ing with Black busi­ness own­ers, Har­ris greet­ed a crowd of about 50 sup­port­ers out­side as she left, remov­ing her mask briefly while telling them, “We have to get this done, I need your help in Mil­wau­kee.” She not­ed in-per­son absen­tee vot­ing begins in the state on Oct. 20, which is her birthday.

Har­ris also met with Black busi­ness own­ers in Mil­wau­kee, where she said her day of cam­paign­ing was focused on “the dig­ni­ty of work and the dig­ni­ty of human beings.”

Biden spoke to a small group of labor lead­ers in a back­yard in Lan­cast­er, where he crit­i­cized Trump for “refus­ing to deal with the prob­lems that affect ordi­nary peo­ple” and called for strength­en­ing unions. His cam­paign announced endorse­ments from the Labor­ers’ Inter­na­tion­al Union of North Amer­i­ca, the Inter­na­tion­al Union of Ele­va­tor Con­struc­tors and the Nation­al Fed­er­a­tion of Fed­er­al Employ­ees, col­lec­tive­ly rep­re­sent­ing hun­dreds of thou­sands of union work­ers nationwide.

Lat­er, at an AFL-CIO vir­tu­al town hall with union Pres­i­dent Richard Trum­ka, Biden called Trump’s alleged remarks about fall­en sol­diers being “losers” and “suck­ers” un-Amer­i­can and said Trump would nev­er under­stand why Amer­i­cans serve. Trump has denied the remarks.

“He’ll nev­er under­stand you, he’ll nev­er under­stand us, he’ll nev­er under­stand our cops, our fire­fight­ers, because he’s not made of the same stuff,” Biden said.

Ear­li­er in the day, Trump paint­ed Biden as a leader inca­pable of han­dling the coro­n­avirus and reviv­ing the econ­o­my and pledged his own “undy­ing loy­al­ty to the Amer­i­can worker.”

He boast­ed of adding more than 10 mil­lion jobs since May, with­out men­tion­ing that’s only about half of the jobs lost since the pan­dem­ic began. He also said the unem­ploy­ment rate “plunged” to 8.4%. It was a sharp­er decline than many econ­o­mists expect­ed from the pri­or month, but econ­o­mists broad­ly view the lat­est report as evi­dence that fur­ther eco­nom­ic improve­ment will be sluggish.

He alleged Biden and Democ­rats would “imme­di­ate­ly col­lapse the economy.”

The day marked Har­ris’ first solo for­ay onto the cam­paign trail for in-per­son events since she became Biden’s run­ning mate near­ly a month ago. Biden him­self has stepped up his cam­paign­ing over the past week, trav­el­ing to Pitts­burgh and Kenosha and hold­ing two news con­fer­ences. Aides say to expect both Biden and Har­ris to increase their cam­paign­ing for the remain­ing weeks.

Polls con­sis­tent­ly show the econ­o­my as an issue at the top of vot­ers’ minds.

A strong econ­o­my that was Trump’s biggest asset for reelec­tion has now become a poten­tial lia­bil­i­ty, brought down by the coro­n­avirus. Biden says Trump has had an inad­e­quate response to the pan­dem­ic, result­ing in more loss of life and jobs than necessary.

The U.S. econ­o­my has been steadi­ly rebound­ing from its epic col­lapse in the spring as many busi­ness­es have reopened and rehired some laid-off employ­ees. Yet the recov­ery is far from com­plete. Only about half the 22 mil­lion jobs that van­ished in the pan­dem­ic have been recovered.

Eco­nom­ic inequal­i­ties also appear to have widened, with low­er-income and minor­i­ty work­ers suf­fer­ing dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly while afflu­ent Amer­i­cans have lost few­er jobs and even ben­e­fit­ed from ris­ing stock and home prices.

Ron­ayne report­ed from Sacra­men­to, Cal­i­for­nia, and Nasir report­ed from Mil­wau­kee. Asso­ci­at­ed Press writer Amy For­l­i­ti con­tributed from Minneapolis.

(Vis­it­ed 1 times, 1 vis­its today)



Tags: suchen suche search tag anzeigen besucherzahl brows­er design domain inhalt jahr karpfen kon­to prob­lem inhalt schal­ten mod­ell­bahn spiele­max spiel tag web­seite preise werbung 

Ein Reichsmarschall von Adolf Hitler hatte auch Märklin Modelleisenbahn Modelle > read more

Schreibe einen Kommentar