President Donald Trump assailed likely opponent Joe Biden as “not competent” to lead the United States, speaking as polls over the weekend showed deepening voter disenchantment with his own handling of the coronavirus pandemic.
“He’s shot, he’s mentally shot,” Trump said about Biden in a wide-ranging interview with “Fox News Sunday.”
Trump claims Biden not competent
He said that if Biden is elected on November 3, he will “destroy this country.”
Facing the multiple challenges of a spreading pandemic, racial unrest and a struggling economy, Trump made several unfounded or highly speculative accusations against the former vice president, saying Biden would “triple your taxes” and “defund the police.”
Read more: Biden clinches Democratic nomination for 2020 election against Trump
He added broadly that “religion will be gone,” referring to Democratic officials banning large church services to stem the virus spread.
Asked whether he would accept the election result in November, even if he loses, Trump echoed his position of 2016, saying, “I have to see … I’m not going to just say yes.”
The interview, which was taped in advance, came as new polling results showed support for Biden increasing as doubts about Trump’s handling of the pandemic grow amid a resurgence of infections in many states.
NEW @ABC/@washingtonpost poll shows @JoeBiden leading @realDonaldTrump by 15 points among registered voters and 10 points among likely voters
Registered voters
Biden: 55%
Trump: 40%Likely voters:
Biden 54%
Trump: 44%https://t.co/KcfTJGFeiT— Johnny Verhovek (@JTHVerhovek) July 19, 2020
Interviewer Chris Wallace told the president that a new Fox opinion poll showed Biden with a substantial lead over Trump not only on his ability to manage the pandemic (with a 17-point edge) and to deal with racial unrest (by 21 points), but even — by a single point — on handling the economy, long a Trump strong point.
And a new Washington Post-ABC News poll has Biden leading Trump among registered voters nationwide by a resounding 15-point margin, 55-to-40 percent.
Trump dismissed such polling as “fake,” saying White House surveys show him winning both nationally and in key swing states.
‘Biden on the ground crying’
After claiming him to be not competent, Trump repeatedly pummeled Biden, who has kept a relatively low profile amid the restraints imposed by the pandemic.
Trump claimed that the Democrat wanted to “defund the police” — a battle cry of some anti-racist protesters — and insisted that such language was in a Biden policy document, though he was unable to produce it when challenged by Wallace.
Read more: Trump doesn’t waste any opportunity to insult Biden
As Trump, who is 74, repeatedly questioned his rival’s mental acuity, Wallace asked him directly if thought Biden, 77, was senile.
“I don’t want to say that,” Trump replied. “I say he’s not competent to be president.”
He questioned whether the Democrat could pass a cognitive ability test that Trump said he had “aced,” and said the former vice president would fall apart under tough questioning.
“Let Biden sit through an interview like this, he’ll be on the ground crying for Mommy. He’ll say, ‘Mommy, Mommy, please take me home.'”
'Let Biden sit through an interview like this, he'll be on the ground crying for mommy' https://t.co/wiMxDtr7zY
— Daily Mail US (@DailyMail) July 19, 2020
Trump again defended his handling of the pandemic, claiming that “we are the envy of the world” on testing; and, of his early prediction that the virus would someday disappear, said, “I’ll be right eventually.”
He again opposed any national mandate for mask-wearing, saying, “I want people to have a certain freedom.”
Biden responded on Sunday, saying in a statement focused on the pandemic that “it’s long past due for President Trump to listen to somebody other than himself in how to fight this virus, because after six straight months of deadly mismanagement it is spiraling even more out of control.
Read more: Trump suffocated by coronavirus but Biden breathes easy
“Mr. President, your ignorance isn’t a virtue or a sign of your strength — it’s undercutting our response to this unprecedented crisis at every turn,” he added.
Trump says he doesn’t care what the military says
Asked by Wallace about statistics showing American blacks are twice as likely to be shot and killed by police as whites, Trump replied, “Many whites are killed also. You have to say that.”
And he equated those who fly the Confederate flag with those saying that “Black Lives Matter,” adding, “It’s freedom of speech.”
Trump stood behind his pledge to veto a $740 billion defense bill over a requirement that the Defense Department change the names of bases named for Confederate military leaders.“We’re going to name it after the Reverend Al Sharpton?” Trump asked.https://t.co/Sa0S6NxNY9
— Aamer Madhani (@AamerISmad) July 19, 2020
Trump again stated his opposition to renaming US military bases named after Confederate generals — even after the military supported the idea.
“I don’t care what the military says,” the president said.
“We’re going to name it after the Reverend Al Sharpton?” he asked rhetorically, referring to a prominent African-American civil rights leader.
Read more: Russia and China interfering in American Elections: Biden
On other subjects, Trump said the economy was “doing very well,” even as millions remain jobless, with some states reimposing lockdowns. The stock market, he said, was near record highs.
AFP with additional input by GVS News Desk