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Trump turns Hong Kong announcement into campaign-style attack on Joe Biden

Donald Trump speaks during a news conference with Polish President Andrzej Duda in the Rose Garden of the White House: AP
Donald Trump speaks during a news conference with Polish President Andrzej Duda in the Rose Garden of the White House: AP

Donald Trump on Tuesday announced he signed an executive order ending Hong Kong‘s favoured trading status after a new Chinese law his administration says vastly erodes Hong Kong’s autonomy. But he appeared to use the policy announcement as a mechanism to hammer his 2020 general election foe in yet another surreal scene at the White House under the 45th president, a former reality television host.

He also signed bipartisan legislation slapping sanctions on China over its Hong Kong policy. But the Hong Kong-China policy news was almost immediately obliterated by what happened next.

What transpired in the steamy Rose Garden was a campaign event – paid for by the American taxpayer, not Mr Trump’s political donors via his campaign organisation – as a clearly aggrieved and frustrated president pivoted to hard line rhetoric and appearing to understand the uphill fight he has to win a second term. At one point, he said his travel ban keeping some from Muslim-majority countries closes America to ”jihadist regions.” He accused Mr Biden of proposing to “abolish police” and “abolish prisons”.

The president, amid plummeting poll numbers in key swing states, said the “entire” career of former vice president Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, has been “a gift for the Chinese Communist Party”.

He went on to paint many of the foreign policies Mr Biden supported as VP and a senator as against America’s interest and helping China. Mr Trump also said the former vice president’s policy platform would “demolish” the US economy, which has shed tens of millions of jobs during Mr Trump’s handling of the Covid-19 outbreak.

The president used most of what was billed as a press conference to hammer Mr Biden, starting early in the event and not letting up. Almost an hour into the event, Mr Trump finally took questions.

The president was asked if he expected to lose on 3 November. He replied: “No, I don’t.”

He then continued on a few minutes-long answer in which he touted some of his counter-coronavirus moves, and said “enthusiasm” was stronger among conservative voters.

But he also plainly acknowledged his campaign is in trouble, as he trails Mr Biden nationally and in key battleground states.

“When we turn it around for the second time,” he said, predicting the news media might give him a “fair” shake.

Not only did he paint him as in China’s pocket, he said his opponent has been a “friend” of the US adversary for decades. He accused Mr Biden of advocating policies that would allow millions of immigrants to pour into the United States, including “to get Welfare benefits”.

“If we had listened to Joe Biden” millions more US lives would have been lost to coronavirus than the over 135,000 that have died under Mr Trump’s watch, the president said.

The thinly masked campaign speech also featured Mr Trump attacking his general election foe for failing to upgrade the country’s roads, bridges and other infrastructure. He also said Mr Biden did a poor job leading the Obama administration’s “Swine Flu” response.

The scene in the Rose Garden shocked some former White House officials, including former Obama aide Dan Pfeiffer, who tweeted: “Not for nothing, but Trump using the Rose Garden to give a campaign speech assailing Biden is definitely illegal and his campaign owes the taxpayers a lot of money for this event.”

The Biden campaign responded in real-time to the White House campaign speech.

“Donald Trump is busy trying to rewrite his miserable history as president of caving to President Xi and the Chinese government at every turn, but try as he may, Trump can’t hide from a record of weakness and bad deals that consistently put China first and America last,” the Democrat’s campaign said in a statement.

“At every step of the way, Trump has failed America,” the Biden campaign said. “He failed our values when he endorsed the Chinese government’s repression of basic human rights and crackdown on democracy in Hong Kong, he failed our workers with a bad trade deal, and he failed the American people when he refused to hold the Chinese government accountable for their misleading and incompetent response on COVID-19.”

The president kept on the attack, however.

“Biden sides with China over America time and time again,” Mr Trump said. “He’s so proud of that.”

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