Joe Biden Blasts Donald Trump’s “Bad Fairy Tale,” Warns Of Rival’s Threat To The Future Of Democracy In First Campaign Speech Of 2024

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Joe Biden, in his first reelection speech of 2024, sought to focus the coming year’s theme on the threat that Donald Trump poses to American democracy.

Tied to Saturday’s third anniversary of the attack on the Capitol, the speech also was intended to be a reminder of what happened that day, amid polling showing significant numbers of Republicans embracing conspiracy theories or diminishing what actually happened then.

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“Donald Trump is trying to steal history in the same way he is trying to steal the election,” Biden said.

All the major cable news networks carried the speech live and full screen, even Fox News.

In fact, the Rupert Murdoch-created outlet was on Biden’s mind today, several times.

At one point, Biden made reference to the $787.5 million settlement that Fox News made last year with Dominion Voting Systems “for the lies they told about voter fraud.” Trump’s embrace of the falsehood that the election was rigged and stolen from him, despite losing dozens of court challenges, gave fuel to the attack on the Capitol.

The speech, taking place near Valley Forge, PA, was heavy in references to George Washington, as Biden referred to the first president’s decision to give up power at the end of the Revolutionary War as a great moment in history, setting a democratic norm that defined America but one that Trump has violated.

Calling Trump “despicable,” Biden almost referred to his 2020 and likely 2024 rival as a “sick f*ck” for laughing about the attack by a hammer welding assailant on the skull of Nancy Pelosi’s husband in the couple’s San Francisco home last year. Getting tougher in his delivery as the speech went on, the incumbent got out the “sick,” before pausing and catching himself. Biden then received a round of applause from the crowd.

The president also slammed Trump’s allies and supporters, noting that some who had condemned the January 6th attack no longer are doing so.

“As time has gone on, politics, fear, money have all intervened,” Biden said. “And those MAGA voices who know the truth about Trump and January 6th have abandoned the truth and abandoned our democracy. They’ve made their choice. Now the rest of us – Democrats, independents, mainstream Republicans – we have to make our choice.”

The speech was singularly focused on Trump and did not even mention any of this rivals, the assumption being that the former president will win the Republican nomination. Trump has had a wide lead, but some recent polls show former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley gaining ground in New Hampshire.

Biden noted that Trump’s kickoff rally featured a convicted “January 6th insurrectionist singing from prison on a cell phone while images of the January 6th riot played on the big screen behind him…Can you believe that? This is like something out of a fairy tale – a bad fairy tale.”

Other parts of the speech seemed to be an effort to trigger Trump, as when Biden repeatedly used the word “loser” to describe what happened in 2020. “I won the election, and he was the loser,” Biden said.

Trump spoke later to a crowd in Sioux Center, IA, telling them, “We have never been closer than we are right now to World War III. There is only one candidate in this race who is going to be up to the task of saving America from every single Biden disaster, starting on day one.”

The former president also sought to claim that the media distorted his remarks to Sean Hannity last month, in which he said that he would not be a dictator “other than day one,” and on the issues of the border and drilling. Trump complained that media coverage of those remarks left out that he also said, “After that I am not going to be” a dictator. Biden noted in his speech that Trump “went on to say he’d be a dictator on day one.”

Speaking live to MSNBC’s Katy Tur right after Biden’s speech ended, NBC News White House correspondent Mike Memoli noted the president’s shift in tone and substance in recent weeks, crystallizing in today’s speech.

“The biggest strategic difference in the way the Biden team views this election and views politics is that you can’t get into …a fight with Donald Trump on a daily basis without sacrificing your ability to set your own agenda,” Memoli said. “So this does represent what the campaign says is not a shift, but a sharpening of the message that as President Biden just said, will be the voting issue of 2024: Will we protect, will we secure our democracy moving forward?”

On Fox News, one of the anchors took Biden’s speech very personally.

“He took a couple potshots at this network, which more people in America watch than any other network in the country,” said Martha MacCallum, apparently in reference to Biden’s remarks about the Dominion settlement. MacCallum told her guests and viewers, “So I don’t know if they feel like that represents someone who is president to all of America.”

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