Israel and Jewish issues played a small
but explosive role in the presidential debate between U.S. President Joe
Biden and former President Donald Trump on Thursday night.
In an exchange about what leverage Biden
would use to get Hamas to agree to a ceasefire-for-hostages deal that he
announced in May, Trump accused Biden of wanting to let Hamas remain in
power.
“Israel is the one, and you should let ’em
go and let ’em finish the job,” Trump said. “He doesn’t want to do it.
He’s become like a Palestinian. But they don’t like him because he’s a
very bad Palestinian, he’s a weak one.”
Biden in his preceding answer claimed that
he had “saved Israel,” but that the Jewish state had “killed a lot of
innocent people.”
“We’re providing Israel with all the
weapons they need and when they need them,” Biden said, in apparent
reference to accusations that he has been slow-walking arms shipments to
Israel. “They’ve been greatly weakened, Hamas, and they should be
eliminated. But you’ve got to be careful when using certain weapons
among population centers.”
U.S. foreign policy and the Israeli
response to the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks occupied only a fraction of the
90-minute debate, which focused largely on domestic issues and the
respective records of the two presidents in office.
Biden’s at-times halting and
difficult-to-understand responses provoked immediate comment from Trump
with obvious implications about Biden’s age and fitness for a second
term.
“I’m going to continue to move until we
get the total ban on the total initiative relative to what we can do
with more border patrol and more asylum officers,” Biden said in
response to a question about immigration.
“I really don’t know what he said at the end of that sentence,” Trump replied. “I don’t think he knows what he said either.”
The format of the CNN debate at
times also seemed to help Trump with Biden cutting off his own answers
mid-sentence at the end of the time limit when his microphone was about
to be muted, per the rules.
“We finally beat Medicare,” Biden said, as part of an unclear answer to a question about the national debt.
“He was right, he did beat Medicare,”
Trump replied, transitioning to illegal immigration. “Because all of
these people are coming in, they’re putting them on Medicare, they’re
putting them on Social Security. They’re gonna destroy Social Security.
This man is going to single-handedly destroy Social Security.”
Trump faced tougher questions from Biden
after the first 30 minutes of the debate, when the moderators shifted to
discussing Trump’s actions on Jan. 6, 2021, and his personal and legal
conduct.
“How many billions of dollars do you owe
in civil penalties for molesting a woman in public, for doing a whole
range of things, for having sex with a pornstar on a night while your
wife is pregnant?” Biden asked. “What are you talking about? You have
the morals of an alleycat.”
The weakness of Biden’s overall
performance nonetheless prompted questions about whether he can remain
the Democratic nominee for president.
“Mark my words … Biden will not be the Democrat nominee,” former Republican candidate for president Nikki Haley wrote on social media. “Republicans, get your guard up!”
No questions in the debate referred to the
explosion of antisemitism on college campuses since Oct. 7, but Trump
compared that wave of Jew-hatred to the alt-right, antisemitic
demonstration in Charlottesville, Va., in August 2017 that Biden
repeatedly alluded to in his closing remarks.
“You talk about Charlottesville, this is 100 times Charlottesville,
1,000 times Charlottesville, the whole country is exploding because of
you, because they don’t respect you,” Trump said. “And they have to
respect their president.”
1 comment:
President Trumps exact quote was “He was right, he did beat Medicare, He beat it to death." (USA)
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