Savage and mocking: Attack ads mark US presidential debate
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US President Joe Biden greets supporters outside his hotel, ahead of the first presidential debate of the 2024 elections, in Atlanta, on June 27.
PHOTO: AFP
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ATLANTA - Giant billboards welcome Donald Trump to Atlanta as a “convicted felon,” while television ads show President Joe Biden falling off a bicycle.
The June 27 debate
To mark the event in Georgia’s state capital, Mr Biden’s Democratic Party paid for several huge billboards across the city.
“Donald, welcome to Atlanta for the first time since becoming a convicted felon. Congrats - or whatever,” read the sarcastic message under a picture of Trump’s police mugshot.
Trump was recently convicted in New York on 34 felony counts a separate case in Georgia
Never one to pull its punches, Team Trump had its own attacks ready.
One 30-second television ad to be aired during the debate savagely mocks Mr Biden’s advanced age of 81.
Called “Who’s Laughing Now,” it shows footage of Mr Biden stumbling on the stairs of his Air Force One plane, falling over while clipped into his bike
The narrator suggests Mr Biden is too frail to complete a second term.
“Do you think the guy who was defeated by the stairs... got taken down by his bike ... lost a fight with his jacket ... and regularly gets lost... makes it four more years in the White House?“ the voiceover asks.
Another ad focuses on Mr Biden’s perceived weak points of migration and inflation, saying: “After four years of failure under Joe Biden, it’s time to make America prosperous and strong again.”
The potshots were also fired in social media messages and print ads, with Trump posting hours before the debate that Mr Biden is “a threat to the survival and existence of our country itself.”
Biden’s campaign launched a new drive “laying out Trump’s extreme agenda” if he were to win the Nov 5 election
One ad contrasts “Donald Trump’s record as a self-centred criminal to President Biden’s record of fighting for the American people.” AFP
US President Joe Biden (right) arriving in Georgia, on June 27, ahead of the presidential debate in Atlanta.
PHOTO: REUTERS

