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Biden on Assault Allegation: ‘I Wouldn’t Vote for Me if I Believed Tara Reade’


Capping a day through which he appeared with two Democratic ladies within the operating to be his vice chairman, Joseph R. Biden Jr. mentioned on Thursday evening that he didn’t keep in mind Tara Reade, the lady who has accused him of sexual assault, and mentioned that Individuals “most likely shouldn’t vote for me” in the event that they imagine the accusation, which he has strenuously denied.

“I feel they need to vote their coronary heart,” he mentioned on MSNBC, requested about his message to voters who had been inclined to help him however believed the Reade allegation. “I wouldn’t vote for me if I believed Tara Reade.”

“Look at Tara Reade’s story,” he said. “It changes considerably. But I don’t want to question her motive. I don’t want to question anything other than to say the truth matters.”

“I was never a part, or had any knowledge, of any criminal investigation into Flynn while I was in office,” Mr. Biden said. “Period. Not one single time.”

Mr. Biden was joined for much of his MSNBC interview by Stacey Abrams, the 2018 Democratic nominee for governor of Georgia and a potential vice-presidential candidate, who has been open about her interest in the position. Earlier in the day, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan — another possible running mate — joined a virtual round table with Mr. Biden.

A few hours earlier, he appeared with Ms. Whitmer and Govs. Philip D. Murphy of New Jersey and Ned Lamont of Connecticut, all Democrats, part of a day of virtual meetings with mayors and with the governors of three states hit hard by the coronavirus. He praised the officials on the front lines of the local response to the coronavirus and asked what they most needed from the federal government, positioning himself as a leader who could offer them the sort of support the current administration has not.

In an hourlong event, he peppered the governors with questions: What were they worried about? What did they need? Did they have enough personal protective equipment stockpiled to weather a resurgence of the virus in the fall if, as many public health experts expect, it does resurge?

If the conversation was granular at times, it spoke to the image of sober steadiness Mr. Biden has been trying to convey as he navigates the extraordinary challenge of simply staying visible, much less demonstrating leadership, during a pandemic that has shut down normal campaigning.

The governors are chief executives charged with managing a crisis, and Mr. Biden — who wants to be a chief executive charged with managing a crisis but has had little opportunity to show voters how he would do it — was aligning himself with them.

On Thursday evening, he and his wife, Jill Biden, also addressed a virtual gathering of his finance committee, where he indicated that he believes a growing number of battleground states are in play, and promised aggressive pushback to Mr. Trump in what he expects to be an extraordinarily ugly election, according to two participants. A Biden spokesman didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Mr. Biden is leading in the polls, both nationally and in key swing states. But the retail politicking Mr. Biden excels at is no longer possible, and unlike Mr. Trump — who is also missing his usual rallies — he does not have access to the daily platform of televised coronavirus news briefings, which Mr. Trump has often turned into de facto campaign events.



www.nytimes.com

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