White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows urged Democratic Presidential nominee Joe Biden to give a “dark speech” at last week’s Democratic convention, but was even more critical of his political record.
In an interview with “Fox News Sunday”, Meadows claimed that Biden had done almost no substance to matters during his decades in office, including his time as senator and a vice president.
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“Joe Biden has barely passed two bills, one of which he is trying to run away from because of left,” said Meadows, an apparent reference to a 1994 crime bill he was behind. Biden acknowledged during his campaign that the bill had its failures, but notes that it had support at the time.
“This president has achieved more in the first 100 days than Joe Biden has done in the last 40 years,” Meadows added.
Meadows also accused Biden of a negative message at the convention.
“You could not have seen anything of it without considering the darkness,” he said, noting that the president would be more positive during the upcoming Republican convention.
Earlier in the interview, Meadows covered a recent report of secretly recorded conversations that President Mary Trump’s cousin had with his sister, retired federal judge Marianne Trump Barry. According to the recordings, Barry stated that the president did not read and did not miss any principles.
“A number of accusations have been made, I have been able to testify personally and they are simply not true,” Meadows said. “The president is not only well prepared, but reads so much that it makes me read many times a night to pick him up.”
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As for criticism of the president’s principles, Meadows said Trump had already addressed this, but defended what he believed to be an important principle that the president has.
“I can tell you the principle he has is that he loves this country, he’s proud of this country, he’s proud of the American people that actually make this country,” Meadows said, “and he’s ready for anything. to sacrifice, even the personal attacks that come against this president every Sunday. “
Meadows also addressed President Trump’s assertion that sheriffs and other law enforcement officials would be at the polls this November to keep order in the election. This drew criticism from Second Chamber member Nancy Pelosi, who accused Trump of trying to intimidate people into not voting for her.
“I think what the president really did was to make sure that if you personally want to show up and vote, we’ll make sure that’s safe,” Meadows said. “To the extent that we will deploy thousands of sheriffs, no, we will not do that.”
Finally, Meadows directed the group of conspiracy theorists, known as QAnon, that has received media attention in recent days, with the New York Times publishing a report claiming that some Republicans are “embracing it.”
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“We do not even know what it is,” Meadows said, adding later, “we will not address it, we will talk about things that are important.”
White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany told America’s Newsroom on Thursday that she “never heard the president mention it.”