Joe Biden Says European Leaders Feared Strength of Their Own Democracies After Jan. 6: ‘Everybody Looks to Us’
At Biden’s first G7 summit, France and Germany confronted him with concerns that the "leading democracy" was under threat. "I said, 'America’s back,'" Biden recalled, to which one responded: "For how long?"
President Joe Biden is remembering how the world reacted in the months after rioters stormed the U.S. Capitol, when he was still settling in as the nation's new commander-in-chief.
At that year's G7 summit — an annual meeting that consists of seven democratically elected heads of state and two European Union representatives — Biden said he was confronted about the message that Jan. 6, 2021, sent to democracies around the world.
"I went to the G7 meeting ... I sat down and I said, 'America's back,'" Biden recalled Thursday evening during an appearance with Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton. "The French leader [Emmanuel Macron] looked at me and said, 'For how long?' It wasn't humorous, he was serious."
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Biden continued recounting the summit, saying that the "German chancellor" — who was Angela Merkel at the time — jumped in after Macron to try and put the situation in perspective.
According to Biden, the chancellor asked, "What would you think, Mr. President, if in fact you pick up the paper tomorrow and found out that in Great Britain, on the London Times, the headline says, Mob storms Parliament, breaks down the door to the House of Commons to protest the election and two bobbies were killed?"
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"What would you think back in America? Think about that," he quoted her as saying. "What would you say if another democracy, not just a leading democracy, but another democracy went through this thing? What happened?"
Reflecting on his interaction with the world leaders and how it demonstrates the United States' duty to preserve democracy, Biden said, "The rest of the world looks to us like we are the essential nation, and that's not pounding our chest. Everybody in the world looks to us."
After Biden told his story on Thursday, President Obama joined in on how the Capitol riot hurt the United States' global reputation.
"What has always made America exceptional is this radical idea that you can get people from every corner of the globe, don't look alike, don't have the same name, worship differently, speak different languages, have different cultural traditions, and somehow they're going to come together under a set of rules," Obama said. "And we're all going to pledge that that's our creed: that we can live together, self-governing, have a representative government, peacefully transfer power."
"That ideal matters," the former president continued. "It matters to our children and their grandchildren, but it also matters around the world. When we see a de-emphasis, when America's not forthright in speaking on behalf of those ideals, you see backsliding around the world. You see authoritarians emboldened around the world. You see aggression around the world because there's no check."
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The topic of the Capitol riot arose on Thursday when late-night host Stephen Colbert — who was moderating the conversation between Presidents Biden, Obama and Clinton — asked the president what was going through his mind on Jan. 6, 2021, as he prepared to assume control of a divided nation.
"We had no president on January the 6th," Biden began his response. "I was supposed to make a speech on the economy and I decided I couldn't remain silent. So what I did was, I made a speech about January the 6th, what was happening, and I said, 'There's an insurrection underway and it must be dealt with.' And I pleaded with [President Donald Trump] to stop and do his job, to call these people off."
As the nation soon learned, Trump didn't tell his supporters to stand down until the damage had been done.
"He sat there in the dining room of the Oval Office for several hours and watched. Didn't do a damn thing," Biden said. "That's why I felt obliged — even though I wasn't sworn in yet, I was president-elect — but I went out and said, 'This is what we should be doing.' And laid it out."
Biden said that when he thinks of the November election, he sees it as a matter of democracy being "at stake," citing Trump's own comment that he would "be a dictator on day one" if elected president again.
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