Cedar Rapids, IA – Biden Laments Trump-era Tone, Offers Possible 2020 Preview

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    Vice President Joe Biden and Tammy Baldwin during an early vote rally at University of Wisconsin-Madison Tuesday  Oct. 30, 2018 at Gordon Dining and Event Center. Attending were Tammy Baldwin, Tony Evers, Mandela Barnes and other Democratic candidates.  (AP Photo/Wisconsin State Journal, Steve Apps)Cedar Rapids, IA – Former Vice President Joe Biden bemoaned the tone of Trump-era politics at a campaign stop in Iowa on Tuesday, previewing on his first trip to the leadoff caucus state how he might take on the Republican president should he seek the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination.

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    “It’s our leaders who need to set the tone and dial down the temperature and restore some dignity to our national dialogue,” Biden said in Cedar Rapids while stumping for Iowa’s Democratic gubernatorial candidate and a House candidate from northeast Iowa.

    Biden was on a trip across the Midwest campaigning for Democrats in states that President Donald Trump carried in 2016. But the Iowa stop had special significance as Biden weighs a third bid for the presidency. Other rising national Democrats eyeing 2020 have visited the early testing ground in recent weeks.

    Biden entered the hall to cheers from the crowd of more than 1,000.

    “Hello, Iowa. Hello, Cedar Rapids. It’s been a long time,” said Biden, a former Delaware senator who has been making trips to Iowa since his early campaign for the 1988 Democratic nomination.

    Biden quickly pivoted from pleasantries to attacking Trump’s moral leadership, indirectly charging him with accommodating intolerance as president. He said moral leadership was particularly important after the slayings of 11 people on Saturday at a Pittsburgh synagogue, the deadliest anti-Semitic attack in U.S. history.

    Biden also noted the two African-Americans shot dead at a Kentucky grocery store and the wave of pipe bombs addressed to prominent Trump critics, including Biden himself.

    “Three times this past week the forces of hate have terrorized our fellow Americans for their political beliefs, the color of their skin or their religion,” Biden noted.

    “What the hell is happening to us?” Biden thundered. “Our children are listening!”

    Josh Murphy, a Cedar Rapids teacher, said he liked Biden’s forcefulness and hoped Biden runs. Biden says he’ll decide by early next year.

    “He’ll take on Trump word for word,” Murphy said.

    Mary Charipar, a retired Cedar Rapids teacher, has mixed feelings.

    “In one sense, I feel he could unite the country because everybody loves Joe,” Charipar said. “But I also feel we need a change.”

    Biden began the day in Wisconsin campaigning for Democratic Sen. Tammy Baldwin and Democratic gubernatorial candidate Tony Evers, who is trying to unseat Republican Gov. Scott Walker. He was in Ohio on Monday and was scheduled to campaign in Missouri on Wednesday. Both have competitive Senate races.

    Some Democratic activists say Biden’s message denouncing hate could resonate, especially amid heightened concerns about the nation’s heated political rhetoric.

    “If I had to say what I want in the next president, it’s personal integrity, character and a moral compass,” said longtime Biden supporter Teri Goodman of Dubuque, Iowa. “Does Joe Biden fit many of those? He does, in my opinion.”

    For months, he has been an unsparing critic of Trump’s moral leadership. Campaigning in Nevada this month, he said American values are “being shredded by a president who is all about himself.”

    But Biden’s criticism has taken on a new resonance following the synagogue shootings.

    “Hate is on the march in America,” he said Saturday.

    Trump, who struggled at first to condemn the white supremacists who clashed with protesters in Charlottesville, Virginia, last year in a deadly confrontation, immediately condemned the synagogue shooting as an “evil, anti-Semitic attack.”

    The president visited Pittsburgh on Tuesday to offer his condolences and meet with some of the survivors of the attack.

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    14 Comments
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    PaulinSaudi
    PaulinSaudi
    7 years ago

    He is too old. The President is also too old. The 2020 race will see the torch being passed to the next generation.

    triumphinwhitehouse
    triumphinwhitehouse
    7 years ago

    run crazy perv Joe.

    AmYisroel
    AmYisroel
    7 years ago

    joe the groper biteme

    hashomer
    hashomer
    7 years ago

    Somehow VIN doesn’t report Trumpf’s latest disaster: to kill the 14th Amendment to the Constitution by ‘executive order’!!!
    All the alt-yidden who came here as refugees, their kids would be denied citizenship if born here!!! Thanks Toxic Tyrant for mobilizing the BLUE WAVE in time for the election.

    puppydogs
    puppydogs
    7 years ago

    Bring it on old man

    DanielBarbaz
    DanielBarbaz
    7 years ago

    Let’s hear what he has to say. Maybe he will bring something positive to the election.

    waitandsee
    waitandsee
    7 years ago

    omg!!! for a crowd more then 1000 people what a joke
    trump had in the same place 20000 people
    obama and joe nobody was Listening to you guys in 2016
    and now in 2018 nobody is listing to you either!!!!

    7 years ago

    To Paul in Saudi-Trump is younger than the King of Saudi Arabia, where you live. Reagan was President until he was almost 78. Although Trump is overweight, as far as I know, his mental health and physical health are fine.