| During dueling remarks on Monday, Joe Biden and President Trump sliced into each other against an emotional backdrop of police killings, violent demonstrations and public calls for racial justice in America. Biden, the Democratic presidential nominee, traveled from Wilmington, Del., to a steel mill in Pittsburgh to deliver a stark campaign speech that placed the blame for civil unrest squarely on Trump, asserting the president has inflamed tensions since the police killing of George Floyd in May, The Hill’s Jonathan Easley reports. “This president long ago forfeited any moral leadership in this country,” Biden said. “He can’t stop the violence because for years he’s fomented it.” The former vice president, who is trying to retain his shrinking lead in national polls as the contest enters its final two months, forcefully condemned rioting and looting and pressed for calm. “I want to be very clear about all of this: Rioting is not protesting,” Biden said. “Looting is not protesting. Setting fires is not protesting. None of this is protesting. It’s lawlessness plain and simple. And those who do it should be prosecuted. Violence will not bring change. It will only bring destruction. It’s wrong in every way. It divides instead of unites.”  © Getty Images The Hill: Biden brought pizzas to Pittsburgh first responders after his Monday speech (pictured above). Trump appeared in the White House briefing room a few hours later to slam Biden as among the “radical left maniacs” he said are making America unsafe. “When you enforce the law, order follows,” the president added while explaining his administration’s approach and boasting about the campaign endorsements he’s received from organizations representing police officers and sheriffs. “Biden’s strategy is to surrender to the left-wing mob. ... I don’t think he even knows what he’s doing — and give them control over every lever of power in the United States government,” Trump said, briefly riffing while reading from prepared notes. “But when you surrender to the mob, you don’t get freedom. You get fascism.” The president today will fly to Kenosha — a trip he predicted would be “very interesting” and an itinerary Gov. Tony Evers (D) asked Trump to reconsider. Trump’s arrival follows the police shooting of Jacob Blake, a 29-year-old Black man who was shot in the back by police more than a week ago. Trump has blamed Democratic mayors and governors, not police officers, for violence and protests seen this year in communities stretching from Portland, Ore., and Oakland, Calif., to Washington, D.C., and Baltimore. He suggested the catalyst is not shootings of Black men by police, which the president called “mistakes” by good cops making life-or-death decisions in stressful situations, but rather the “surrender” of Democratic politicians in cities and states that refuse to crack down on violence. The Hill’s Amie Parnes reports that it’s unclear which candidate may get the better of such raw arguments about the nation’s current upheaval. "Biden has an advantage and he's held on steadily but 2016 taught us that races can change. It could move more in Biden's direction and it could move in Trump's. It could go either way,” said Madison, Wis.-based Charles Franklin, a professor of law and public policy and the director of the Marquette Law School Poll. The Hill: Trump defends Kenosha suspect Kyle Rittenhouse, a teenager accused of killing two protesters, as acting in self-defense. Trump is expected to meet today with law enforcement and survey property damage, but he will not meet with Blake, who is hospitalized, or his relatives. Trump, who said he has spoken with a Blake family pastor by phone, did not acknowledge on Monday that the family has blamed him for inciting violence. An attorney working for the family later said the president spoke with a pastor tied to Blake’s mother after Jacob Blake’s father denied the family had a pastor (The Hill). Trump on Monday criticized Black Lives Matter as “discriminatory” during a Fox News interview at the White House during which he also asserted with no evidence that Biden is somehow tied to unnamed people in cities in “dark shadows” who are “under investigation.” Trump said “some very stupid rich people” are funding protest groups, according to hearsay he said he picked up during the Republican National Convention (Fox News and Politico). The Daily Beast: Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf on Monday told Fox News that the administration is “working on” corruption charges and “targeting and investigating” leaders of organizations, including the political movement Black Lives Matter. Wolf said he spoke with Attorney General William Barr about information that others may be “paying for those individuals to move across the country.” “We know they are moving around,” Wolf continued. “We have seen them in D.C., in Sacramento, and elsewhere. They are organized. We have seen similar tactics being used from Portland and other cities across the country as well. So we know that the Department of Justice is also working on that as well.” Wolf and Barr met with Trump at the White House on Monday. The Hill: Trump compares police who use force to golfers who “choke.” Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, along with Michigan, are swing states that helped Trump capture the presidency in the Electoral College in 2016, in part because of his support from older, white, non-college educated men. While Biden focused during his convention on Trump’s wobbly handling of the coronavirus pandemic, the president and his campaign have succeeded in changing the subject to themes they think resonate strongly with blue-collar white voters in cities and suburbs who back police and frown on the liberal tilt of the Democratic Party. Biden’s 3.5 point lead is down from 8 points at the end of June in Wisconsin surveys, according to the RealClearPolitics average. The state is among 29, plus the District of Columbia, that will soon allow general election voters to cast absentee ballots by mail or in person for any reason. The Hill: Senate Republicans seeking re-election are not all of like mind about Trump's aggressive posture toward Black Lives Matter protests. The Hill: Emerson College poll finds Trump-Biden race tightening post-conventions.  © Getty Images |