NEWPORT NEWS: With just 39 days until the US election, President Donald Trump ramped up his campaigning with back-to-back events Friday in battleground states -- a frenetic pace in contrast with the more sedate approach of Democratic rival Joe Biden. The 74-year-old president's grueling 12-hour, three-state schedule culminated with a nighttime rally in Newport News, Virginia. By that time US media was reporting that he was set to nominate Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court, who if confirmed would cement a solid conservative majority on the country's highest court.
"We are going to be announcing somebody great," he told the crowd without mentioning a name. "Tomorrow [Saturday] I think is going to be a big day!" he added, as the crowd roared with approval. Trump -- who trails Biden in national polling and is narrowly behind in several swing states seen as crucial to his path to re-election -- is under pressure to make the most of the remaining weeks before the November 3 election.
During his whirlwind day the president mocked his rival for a lower-energy campaign, saying Biden was "staying in again today." "This guy never goes out. It's terrible huh?" he told a black economic empowerment event in Atlanta, where few people wore masks and social distancing was non-existent. "If I lose to a man who doesn't campaign… I don't know," he told the laughing crowd. Biden traveled from his home in Delaware to Washington on Friday to attend a ceremony at the US Capitol as late Supreme Court justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg lay in state there.
But there was no in-person campaigning on the former vice president's schedule. In a bid to fire up his base over the weekend, the president will announce his pick to replace the liberal icon Ginsburg, who died last week at 87. Trump began the day in Florida with a roundtable with Latino voters, a crucial constituency in the swing state. Biden has "been very bad to Hispanics," the president said at the event which took place at his golf club in Doral, near Miami.
"I'm a wall between the American dream and chaos." Trump next flew to neighboring Georgia, which has voted Republican in the last six elections but is now rated a toss-up, where he insisted that as president he did "even more than I promised" for African Americans. "I did more for the black community in 47 months… than Joe Biden did in 47 years," he said, repeatedly swiping at Biden's legislative record in co-sponsoring 1990s tough-on-crime legislation that many experts say resulted in high incarceration rates for black Americans.
Trump said he was unveiling a "platinum plan" that aims to increase capital to African Americans, create three million new jobs for the black community and implement "the highest standards of policing." Trump then returned to Washington to gather with supporters and flew to a Make America Great Again nighttime rally in Newport News, Virginia. The state's Democratic governor meanwhile announced that he and his wife have tested positive for Covid-19.
"As I've been reminding Virginians throughout this crisis, Covid-19 is very real and very contagious," Governor Ralph Northam said in a statement. Trump appears to dismiss coronavirus concerns at his events, where he appears maskless and crowds are often packed together -- a scenario his own government experts have warned against. Biden's campaign has been cautious ever since the pandemic forced several US states into extended lockdown, with the US death toll now topping 200,000. Biden, 77, spent months mostly hunkered down in his Delaware home. While he has increased campaigning in swing states like Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Michigan, his events are tightly scripted with only occasional interaction with voters. - AFP