Trump To Wade Into Racial Tensions With Visit To Kenosha
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump is diving head-first into the latest eruption in the nationโs reckoning over racial injustice with a trip Tuesday to Kenosha, Wisconsin, over the objections of local leaders.
The city has been riven by protests since the Aug. 23 shooting of Jacob Blake, a Black man hit seven times in the back by police. On the eve of his visit, Trump defended a teenage supporter accused of fatally shooting two men in Kenosha last week and accused Democrat Joe Biden of siding with โanarchistsโ and โriotersโ in the unrest.
Wisconsinโs Democratic governor, Tony Evers, who deployed the National Guard to quell demonstrations in response to the Blake shooting, pleaded with Trump to stay away for fear of straining tensions further. The White House said the president was expected to meet with law enforcement and tour โproperty affected by recent riots.โ
โI am concerned your presence will only hinder our healing,โ Evers wrote in a letter to Trump. โI am concerned your presence will only delay our work to overcome division and move forward together.โ
Trump, claiming the mantle of the โlaw and orderโ candidate, is offering himself as the leader best positioned to keep Americans safe. Biden, in turn, has assailed him over the deadly protests that have sprung up on his watch.
Trump insisted his appearance in Kenosha could โincrease enthusiasmโ in Wisconsin, perhaps the most hotly contested battleground state in the presidential race, as the White House said he โwants to visit hurting Americans.โ He was expected to take credit for calling in the National Guard โ an act taken by Evers โ and for surging federal law enforcement to the city to restore the peace. The White House said Trump was not going to meet with Blakeโs family.
โI am a tremendous fan of law enforcement and I want to thank law enforcement,โ Trump told Fox News in an interview Monday night. โTheyโve done a good job.โ
Trump suggested that some police officers โchokeโ when faced with challenging situations and compared them to golfers who โmiss a 3-foot putt.โ
Biden, in his most direct attacks yet, accused Trump earlier Monday of causing the divisions that have ignited the violence. He delivered an uncharacteristically blistering speech in Pittsburgh and distanced himself from radical forces involved in altercations.
Biden said of Trump: โHe doesnโt want to shed light, he wants to generate heat, and heโs stoking violence in our cities. He canโt stop the violence because for years heโs fomented it.โ
Trump, for his part, reiterated that he blames radical troublemakers stirred up and backed by Biden. But when he was asked about one of his own supporters who was charged with killing two men during the mayhem in Kenosha, Trump declined to denounce the killings and suggested that the 17-year-old suspect, Kyle Rittenhouse, was acting in self-defense.
After a confrontation in which he fatally shot one man, police say, Rittenhouse fell while being chased by people trying to disarm him. A second person was shot and killed.
โThat was an interesting situation,โ Trump said Monday during a news conference. โHe was trying to get away from them, I guess, it looks like, and he fell. And then they very violently attacked him. … He was in very big trouble. He would have been โ he probably wouldโve been killed.โ
Biden saw Trumpโs impact far differently, accusing the president of โpoisoningโ the nationโs values.
In a statement after Trumpโs news conference but before his Fox News remarks, Biden said: โTonight, the president declined to rebuke violence. He wouldnโt even repudiate one of his supporters who is charged with murder because of his attacks on others. He is too weak, too scared of the hatred he has stirred to put an end to it.โ
Trump and his campaign team have seized upon the unrest in Kenosha, as well as in Portland, Oregon, where a Trump supporter was shot and killed, leaning hard into a defense of law and order while suggesting that Biden is beholden to extremists. Trump aides believe that tough-on-crime stance will help him with voters and that the more the national discourse is about anything other than the coronavirus, the better it is for the president.
In the interview with Fox, Trump insisted that if he were not president, โyou would have riots like youโve never seen.โ
In Pittsburgh, Biden resoundingly condemned violent protesters and called for their prosecution โ addressing a key Trump critique.
โItโs lawlessness, plain and simple. And those who do it should be prosecuted,โ Biden said. And he leaned on his own 47-year career in politics to defend himself against Republican attacks.
โYou know me. You know my heart. You know my story, my familyโs story,โ he said. โAsk yourself: Do I look like a radical socialist with a soft spot for rioters? Really?โ
The former vice president also tried to refocus the race on what has been its defining theme โ Trumpโs handling of the coronavirus pandemic, which has left more than 180,000 Americans dead โ after a multi-day onslaught by the presidentโs team to make the campaign about the violence rattling American cities.
Worried Democrats, including some inside his own campaign, have pushed Biden to deal with the violence head on and at greater length, though he had previously condemned it. With Trump pounding the issue in his convention speech, which was then followed by more bloodshed over the weekend, many in Bidenโs party, still shell-shocked by the 2016 loss, urged Biden to get ahead of the rare issue that has broken through the national focus on the pandemic.
Biden declared that even as Trump is โtrying to scare America,โ whatโs really causing the nationโs fear is Trumpโs own failures.
โYou want to talk about fear? Theyโre afraid theyโre going to get COVID, theyโre afraid theyโre going to get sick and die,โ Biden said.
