by Peter Hall, Pennsylvania Capital-Star
January 5, 2024
WHITPAIN TOWNSHIP, Pa. — Reflecting on the fight to establish America as a democracy and the events that nearly toppled it three years ago, President Joe Biden warned of the danger he believes former President Donald Trump poses to American ideals.

President Joe Biden speaks during a campaign event at Montgomery County Community College January 5, 2024 in Pennsylvania. In his first campaign event of the 2024 election season, Biden stated that democracy and fundamental freedoms are under threat if former U.S. President Donald Trump returns to the White House. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
“Today, we’re here to answer the most important question. Is democracy still America’s sacred cause?” Biden said. “It’s what the 2024 election is all about.”
In his first campaign speech of 2024, Biden said there is a clear choice between him and Trump, his likely Republican opponent.
“Donald Trump’s campaign is about him, not America, not you,” Biden said. “He’s obsessed with the past, not the future. He’s willing to sacrifice our democracy, put himself in power.”
Biden said his campaign, in contrast, would strengthen and preserve American democracy and reflect people of every age and background.
“It’s about the future we’re going to continue to build together,” he said.
Gov. Josh Shapiro told reporters before the speech that Biden’s message about Democracy is one that resonates with Pennsylvania residents, who take great pride in the state’s history as the birthplace of democracy. But Shapiro said he believes that Trump should also be held accountable for the chaos he sowed during his presidency and the promises he has made to continue. Gov. Josh Shapiro prepares to speak during a television interview before U.S. President Joe Biden takes the stage during a campaign event at Montgomery County Community College. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
As an example, Shapiro noted that Trump’s policies, such as his pledge to repeal the American Healthcare Act, would cause upheaval for more than a million Pennsylvania residents who buy their insurance through the program.
“You are creating chaos in their families; you’re creating real problems,” Shapiro said.
U.S. Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) drew cheers as he worked the crowd at Montgomery County Community College in the Philadelphia suburbs wearing his trademark shorts, Carhartt hoodie and a Pittsburgh Steelers knit cap with a black bauble on top.
“Whoever wins Pennsylvania is going to be the president for their second term,” Fetterman said, adding he was confident Biden would win again “just like he did in 2020.”
He called the setting of the speech symbolic. “I just can’t think of a better kind of a background,” Fetterman told reporters after the speech.
Biden, who walked out on stage with First Lady Jill Biden to chants of “four more years,” delivered his speech a few miles from Valley Forge National Park, which he visited after landing there in Marine One on Friday afternoon.
Biden invoked the imagery of the harsh winter that the Continental Army spent at Valley Forge, without proper clothing or supplies, under the leadership of Gen. George Washington, who led Americans to victory in the Revolutionary War.
“This ragtag army, made up of ordinary people, their mission, George Washington declared, was nothing less than a sacred cause … freedom, liberty, democracy, American democracy,” Biden said.
Biden spoke, he noted, one day before the third anniversary of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol when the United States came close to losing everything Washington and his troops had suffered and fought for.
Throughout his speech, Biden referred to Trump by name nearly 40 times, invoking the string of lawsuits, personal attacks, false statements, and what he called the former president’s dereliction of duty in the lies and incitement that led to the insurrection. Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) speaks with a reporter before U.S. President Joe Biden takes the stage during a campaign event at Montgomery County Community College (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
“As America was attacked from within, Donald Trump watched on TV from a small private dining room off the Oval Office. The entire nation watched in horror, the whole world watched in disbelief and Trump did nothing,” Biden said.
In the years since the insurrection, Biden said, Trump has embraced the violence of that day, calling the people arrested for their role in the attack “patriots” and even cracking jokes in a campaign rally about the hammer attack by a supporter “whipped up by the big lie” that left former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband Paul severely injured.
“He laughed about it. What a sick …” Biden said without finishing the sentence.
Biden, who was fiery for most of the speech, paused to contain his anger as he recalled Trump referring to soldiers as “suckers and losers” during a visit to a cemetery where U.S. soldiers killed in World War I were interred in France.
“How dare he? Who in God’s name does he think he is?” Biden asked. His late son, Beau Biden, was an Army officer.
In the wake of the Jan. 6 attack, conservative members of Congress and political commentators publicly and privately condemned Trump’s conduct, Biden noted, calling it embarrassing and humiliating for the nation. But as time went on, many have renewed their allegiance to Trump and abandoned democracy.
Those who remain, Democrats, independents and mainstream Republicans, must make a hard choice, Biden said.
“Today I make the sacred pledge to you, the defense, protection, and preservation of American democracy will remain, as it has been, the central cause of my presidency,” Biden said.
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Pennsylvania Capital-Star is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Pennsylvania Capital-Star maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Kim Lyons for questions: info@penncapital-star.com. Follow Pennsylvania Capital-Star on Facebook and Twitter.
The Pennsylvania Capital-Star is a nonpartisan, nonprofit news site dedicated to honest and aggressive coverage of state government, politics and policy.
The nearly 13 million people who call the commonwealth home depend on their interests being safeguarded by one of the nation’s largest, most expensive, and often inefficient and corrupt full-time state legislatures. The actions of the legislative, executive and judicial branches touch on almost every aspect of Pennsylvanians’ daily lives.
Since our launch in February 2019, the Capital-Star has emerged as a go-to source for in-depth original reporting, explainers on complex topics, features that ground policy debates, as well as progressive commentary on a range of issues.
There is an old southern saying – he who does the accusin is he who usually doing the doin’ I’m wondering what he definition of democracy is, especially as this country is a Republic.
In spite of those who say the opposite, the economy is doing superb returning from Covid with neither a recession nor continued high inflation. The stock market is at or near all time highs. Inflation is coming down. Crime is coming down. Even oil is being pumped at a higher rate than ever in the US. Our country is no longer the laughingstock of the world in world meetings – except when it comes to gun violence I suppose since we refuse to act sanely with restrictions. All of these will be supported by actual data if one uses google… Read more »
Joe Biden and his puppeteers are raking us to world war 3 turned out economy to worse than crap has committed ungodly acts of treason and is leaving our southern border open so foreign armies are just walking across his democracy is f that’s what you calling treason these days is something no American wants or needs now’s he is pushing to take away everything every American owns including our lives wake up America before it’s to late which it may already be to late it’s not a conspiracy theory any more it’s facts