Trump lacked ‘courage’ to stop January 6th attack, says Biden

US president attacks predecessor and other senior Republicans over US Capitol riot

US president Joe Biden, speaking in a recorded address to police officers, has said that Donald Trump "lacked the courage to act" during the US Capitol riots.

US president Joe Biden criticised several of his possible Republican 2024 election opponents on Monday, including saying that his predecessor Donald Trump lacked the “courage” to stop the January 6th, 2021, attack on the US Capitol.

“The police were heroes that day: Donald Trump lacked the courage to act,” Mr Biden said in taped remarks to the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives Conference.

"The brave women and men in blue all across the nation should never forget that. You can't be pro-insurrection and pro-cop. You can't be pro-insurrection and pro-democracy. You can't be pro-insurrection and pro-American."

His remarks for the Florida event included jabs at other prominent Republicans in the state such as Governor Ron DeSantis, a rising star in the party regarded as a possible presidential contender.

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“In the state you’re in today, Governor DeSantis, senator Marco Rubio, senator Rick Scott all opposed banning assault weapons,” said Mr Biden, who has been recuperating from Covid-19 in isolation at the White House.

"To me it's simple: You can't support bringing weapons of war on American streets; you're not on the side of police."

Mr Biden generally refrains from discussing his political foes by name. Mr Trump and Mr DeSantis have both flirted with the possibility of challenging Mr Biden in the 2024 elections.

Midterm elections on November 8th will determine whether Biden’s Democratic Party retains control of US Congress and are regarded as a test of the arguments that will be made to voters for and against a second, four-year term for Mr Biden.

Mr Biden’s comments united several hot-button themes — law enforcement, guns and threats to democracy — on which Democrats hope to put Republicans on the defensive.

Mr Trump branded himself an ally of gun owners, the police and “law and order” after protests over racial brutality. Mr Biden, who last month signed a bipartisan gun safety Bill into law, has sought to make the case that further measures like those will keep police safe.

In the Capitol attack, thousands of Mr Trump’s supporters breached the building in an attempt to stop Congress from certifying Mr Biden’s November 2020 presidential election victory.

Trump has been condemned by January 6th committee - but consequences remain unclearOpens in new window ]

Over the past six weeks, a US House of Representatives panel has laid out a case that the president stoked the violent mob and then sat back and watched.

Mr Trump and many Republicans have dismissed the January 6th committee as politically motivated even though it relies on testimony from the Republican former president’s aides and allies.

Mr Biden’s allies think the hearings could cause Mr Trump supporters to re-think their allegiance. A Reuters/Ipsos poll last week found that 32 per cent of Republicans say Trump should not run for president in 2024, up from 26 per cent who said that at the start of the hearings. — Reuters