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Friday, April 19, 2024 | Back issues
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Biden Makes It Personal, Goes After Jared Kushner

Joe Biden called it "improper" for President Donald Trump to have his daughter and son-in-law hold positions in the White House, suggesting in a CBS interview Sunday that Jared Kushner is not qualified to weigh in on the complex affairs assigned by his father-in-law.

(AP) — Joe Biden called it "improper" for President Donald Trump to have his daughter and son-in-law hold positions in the White House, suggesting in a CBS interview Sunday that Jared Kushner is not qualified to weigh in on the complex affairs assigned by his father-in-law.

That assessment, which the Democratic presidential hopeful offered in a wide-ranging "60 Minutes" interview, ratchets up the rhetoric between Trump and Biden over each other's adult children and family business affairs.

Biden told CBS that he doesn't like "going after" politicians’ children, but he said none of his children would hold White House posts, as he continued to defend his son, Hunter, against Trump's charges that the Bidens are corrupt because of the younger Biden's international business affairs while his father was vice president.

"You should make it clear to the American public that everything you're doing is for them," Biden said, according to a CBS transcript, when he was asked about Ivanka Trump and Kushner, her husband, in White House posts with significant policy portfolios.

"Their actions speak for themselves," Biden said of the Trump family. "I can just tell you this, that if I'm president get elected president

my children are not going to have offices in the White House. My children are not going to sit in on Cabinet meetings."

Asked whether he thinks Kushner should be tasked with negotiating Middle East peace agreements, Biden laughed. "No, I don't," he said. "What credentials does he bring to that?"

Hunter Biden's work in Ukraine and China remains an emphasis of Trump's broadsides against Biden, a frontrunner for the Democratic presidential nomination. The younger Biden took a post on the board of a Ukrainian energy firm after his father became the Obama administration's point man on U.S.-Ukraine relations.

Trump's focus on finding information about the Bidens’ Ukraine connections is at the heart of a House impeachment inquiry against the president. Investigators have found no legal wrongdoing by either Biden.

Noting that, the former vice president blasted Facebook for allowing the Trump campaign to distribute online ads framing the Bidens as corrupt.

"You know, I'm glad they brought the Russians down," Biden said, noting Facebook's recent decision to shut down accounts that were distributing misinformation, including about him. But the former vice president asked: "Why don't you bring down the lies that Trump is telling and everybody knows are lies?"

Hunter Biden in a recent interview said the only thing his father said to him when he took the post at Burisma was: "I hope you know what you're doing."

Joe Biden told CBS he never got into any details over the firm, which had been the focus on Ukrainian corruption inquiries.

"What I meant by that is, ‘I hope you've thought this through. I hope you know exactly what you're doing here,’" the elder Biden said. "That's all I meant. Nothing more than that because I've never discussed my business or their business, my sons’ or daughter’s. And I've never discussed them because they know where I have to do my job and that's it, and they have to make their own judgments."

Turning the issue back on the president, Biden repeated a line he's started using on the campaign trail, urging Trump to release his tax returns.

"Mr. President ... let's see how straight you are, OK, old buddy?" Biden said. "I put out 21 years of mine. You want to deal with corruption? Start to act like it. Release your tax returns or shut up."

Trump's attacks have not displaced Biden as a duel Democratic frontrunner alongside Sen. Elizabeth Warren. But it has raised new questions about Biden's argument that he'd be the best Democrat to take on Trump in a general election. And the Biden attack ads Trump and Republicans have financed in early nominating states, combined with Biden's own lagging fundraising, have led some of his wealthy supporters to discuss the possibility of launching an independent political action committee.

Biden's CBS interview was taped before his recent decision to reverse his previous opposition to such a Super PAC, a move that Warren and Sen. Bernie Sanders have indirectly criticized. Biden did address his campaign's cash balance being dwarfed by Warren and Sanders, saying he's "not worried" about raising enough money.

As to how he can withstand Sanders’ and Warren's grassroots fundraising juggernauts, he replied, "I just flat beat them."

Categories / Government, National, Politics

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