| Former Vice President Joe Biden and leading Democrats on Sunday called for a de-escalation of violence amid continuing protests and urged President Trump to call for national calm ahead of his planned visit to Wisconsin on Tuesday. Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers (D) on Sunday urged Trump in writing not to make the trip (Milwaukee Journal Sentinel). Accusing the president of fanning the flames of racial unrest in order to side with law enforcement rather than with protesters who decry police shootings of Black men, Biden and leading Democrats lashed Trump for what they charged are his election-focused motives while they put down some political markers of their own. Reuters: Democrats say Trump visit may worsen protests in Wisconsin city. The Hill: Biden during campaign speech near Pittsburgh, Pa., today will ask voters, “are you safe in Donald Trump’s America?” On Sunday, Trump turned his Twitter account against Biden and separately tweeted “LAW & ORDER!!!” in response to the shooting death late Saturday of a man in Portland, Ore., who was later described as a Trump supporter. The man was killed during demonstrations one week after police shot Jacob Blake, a 29-year-old Black man in Kenosha, Wis., as he stood next to his SUV. Both incidents are under investigation. Biden on Sunday returned fire against Trump, using the same word — “weak” — that the president used against him on Thursday during his South Lawn acceptance speech. The Democratic nominee in a statement said Trump “is recklessly encouraging violence. He may believe tweeting about law and order makes him strong — but his failure to call on his supporters to stop seeking conflict shows just how weak he is. He may think that war in our streets is good for his reelection chances, but that is not presidential leadership — or even basic human compassion.” The incendiary back-and-forth just 64 days before Nov. 3 pushed the contest between Trump and Biden more forcefully into divides over racial injustice, policing, the utility of protests and public denunciations of looting, property destruction and violence. Multiple polls suggest that an initial surge in public support for the Black Lives Matter movement following the death of George Floyd at the hands of police in May began to level off by June and July, in large measure because of shifts in views among whites (The Washington Post). The Associated Press: When Trump talks law and order, some Wisconsin voters listen. Following the Trump campaign’s explicit appeal for support from Black voters during last week’s Republican National Convention, Biden and other Democrats say they mistrust Trump’s motives in deciding to travel to the Wisconsin community in which a police officer is accused of shooting Blake in the back seven times. Portland has been the site of nightly protests, vandalism, violence and hundreds of arrests of demonstrators by local and federal law enforcement since Floyd’s murder. The president for months has celebrated endorsements and support from law enforcement groups, including the National Association of Police Organizations (pictured below during a White House event in July). Rep. Cedric Richmond (D-La.), who co-chairs the Biden campaign, argued on Sunday that the White House is backing law enforcement while using explicit references to Republican-led cities and states. "Who is on the side of justice? Who is on the side of constitutional policing?" The congressman said it will be up to Biden to "try to heal this country because the president just doesn't have it in him." The Hill’s Jonathan Easley and Amie Parnes report how Democratic leaders are trying to strike a balance between solidarity with racial justice demonstrations and condemnations of violence and criminal acts that stoke Trump’s descriptions of “mob rule” and “anarchy.” Trump is widely perceived by progressives and even some Republicans as leveraging racial divisions in order to turn out his largely white, male base of supporters. “The job of a president is to lower the temperature,” Biden said in his Sunday statement. “The temperature in the country is higher, tensions run stronger, divisions run deeper. And all of us are less safe because Donald Trump can’t do the job of the American president. The president on Sunday called Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler (D) a “fool,” and urged him to bring in the National Guard after a man was shot and killed on Saturday during skirmishes between Trump supporters and Black Lives Matter demonstrators. The president repeatedly describes unrest over racial justice in some U.S. cities this summer as the result of flawed Democratic leadership. He has repeatedly pledged "law and order" in response (The Hill). Oregonian: Portland mayor to Trump on Sunday: “support us” or “stay the hell out of the way.” “They centered an entire convention around creating more animosity and creating more division around what’s going on in Kenosha,” Wisconsin Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes (D) said during a CNN interview on Sunday, referring to last week’s Republican National Convention. “So I don’t know how, given any of the previous statements that the president made, that he intends to come here to be helpful, and we absolutely don’t need that right now.” The Hill: White House chief of staff Mark Meadows said on Sunday that “most of Donald Trump’s America is peaceful.” NBC News: “The president is on the side of law enforcement and the rule of law and he’s been very consistent in that,” Meadows told NBC’s “Meet the Press.” When asked repeatedly whether Trump would try to de-escalate tensions among his supporters, some of whom have been accused of provoking violence with protesters, Meadows answered that the president is backing law enforcement and that the federal government is “willing to provide additional assets” to states looking to control unrest. The Hill: Rep. Val Demings (D-Fla.), a former Orlando, Fla., police chief, told CBS News on Sunday that the Portland shooting was “what happens” when homeland security is “politicized.” Demings asked Trump to try to soothe national tensions. “Wouldn’t it be nice for the president of the United States to take to the microphone or the airwaves and send a message for peace and calm?” she added. NBC News: An Illinois 17-year-old arrested and charged with the fatal shootings of two people in Kenosha who were protesting Blake’s shooting had displayed “Blue Lives Matter” slogans and firearms online. The Hill’s Morgan Chalfant and Max Greenwood describe how both parties are trafficking in the politics of fear. NBC News: The state of the 2020 race following the conventions. George Packer, The Atlantic: This is how Biden loses. Strategists in both political parties predict the GOP will consolidate Republicans and that as a result, the president’s poll numbers will rise to narrow the national lead Biden enjoyed for much of the summer, The Hill’s Alexander Bolton reports. Yahoo News: In fact, a new Yahoo News/YouGov poll finds Biden’s lead over Trump shrank to 6 points from nearly 9 points among registered voters following the Republican convention — the former vice president’s smallest lead in nearly two months. The survey did not find a clear impact on voters’ choices tied to Blake’s shooting, recorded by witnesses and shared online and by news outlets (Police1.com). The Hill’s upshot from Sunday talk shows: Democrats target Trump as violence flares.  © Getty Images |