President Joe Biden questioned the number of times former president Donald Trump needed to prove that “we” can’t be trusted in his latest gaffe on the campaign trail Tuesday.
“Folks, in a sense, I don’t know why we’re surprised by Trump,” Biden said during a stop in Florida. “How many times does he have to prove we can’t be trusted?”
The 81-year-old was slamming his Republican opponent for the repeal of women’s reproductive and healthcare rights across the country in the wake of the overturning of Roe V. Wade when he slipped on his words.
Instead of saying he, meaning Trump, he said “we” can’t be trusted.
Last week, the presumed Democratic nominee for 2024 confused the Israeli port city of Haifa with the last refuge for civilians in the Gaza Strip — Rafah — in a stunning blunder.
That error came in an interview with Nexstar Media’s Reshad Hudson who asked the president about his plan to win back pro-Palestinian voters in the wake of Israel’s war against Hamas.
“I’ve been meeting with them, number one,” Biden said. “Number two, I made it clear that we have to vastly increase the amount of food, water, healthcare going into Gaza.”
“And I made it clear to Israelis – don’t move on Haifa,” he added, apparently meaning to say Rafah.
On Tuesday, when Biden misspoke, he was at a community college in Tampa to denounce the state’s 6-week abortion ban, which goes into effect next Wednesday.
Women often do not find out they are pregnant until after six weeks.
He blamed Trump for the “healthcare crisis for women all over this country” in his remarks at Hillsborough Community College.
“There was one person who was responsible for this nightmare,” Biden said. “And he’s acknowledged it and he brags about it — Donald Trump.”
In November, Floridians will be able to vote on a ballot measure that would change the ban on abortions after six weeks of pregnancy to after 24 weeks.
Every time that the issue of abortion has been on the ticket — including in solidly conservative states — voters have chosen to adopt greater protections for women’s right to abortion.