Biden Blasts Trump As An ‘Absolute Fool’ For Caving To ‘Macho’ Pressure And Not Wearing Mask
Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden offered a stark contrast to President Donald Trump on Memorial Day when he appeared in public with a mask. Biden criticized Trump's insistence on not wearing one as contrary to doctors' advice and Trump's own experts' guidance.
Joseph R. Biden Jr. laced into President Trump on Tuesday, calling him an 鈥渁bsolute fool鈥 for refusing to wear a mask in public on Memorial Day and for appearing to scoff at the former vice president for wearing one. 鈥淗e鈥檚 a fool, an absolute fool to talk that way,鈥 Mr. Biden said in an interview with Dana Bash of CNN, his first in-person interview since the coronavirus crisis took him off the campaign trail. Castigating Mr. Trump for 鈥渢his macho stuff,鈥 Mr. Biden accused him of 鈥渟toking deaths鈥 and aggravating cultural divisions over mask-wearing. (Ember, 5/26)
He accused Trump of caving to 鈥渕acho stuff,鈥 the argument advanced by some opposed to wearing masks that doing so is a sign of weakness. 鈥淭hat's not going to increase the likelihood that people are going to be better off,鈥 he added later. Asked Tuesday how he viewed wearing a face covering, Biden said he believes doing so projects 鈥渓eadership.鈥(Oprysko, 5/26)
President Trump dismissed a mask-wearing reporter as being 鈥減olitically correct鈥 on Tuesday while the presumptive Democratic candidate, Joe Biden, called him a 鈥渇ool鈥 for mocking their use. The president鈥檚 refusal to wear a face mask in public, defying recommendations from public health experts, has become a symbol for his supporters resisting stay-at-home orders amid the coronavirus crisis. To wear one then is seen by some as being anti-Trump. (Itkowtiz, 5/26)
White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said at a briefing on Tuesday that it was "peculiar" that Biden wore a mask outside but does not wear a mask inside next to his wife. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends wearing a mask in public settings where social distancing measures are difficult to maintain. (Manchester, 5/26)
Some of President Donald Trump鈥榮 political allies and donors are starting to get antsy. With only five months until the November general election, several Trump advisers, campaign veterans and prominent Republicans see the Trump campaign鈥檚 efforts to define and damage former vice president Joe Biden falling short. (Cook, 5/27)