Sébastien Le Belzic, with AFP / Photo credit: SHAWN THEW / POOL / AFP 9:19 a.m., March 8, 2024

Joe Biden delivered his State of the Union speech, a general policy exercise which, a few months before the presidential election, mainly took on the features of a campaign speech.

Tackling his predecessor, the American president also returned to the international situation.

He promises to embody “optimism” against the “rancor” of Donald Trump, “moral force” against the “hatred” fueled by the Republican: Thursday before Congress, Joe Biden attacked his rival with rare ferocity.

During his State of the Union speech, lasting more than an hour, the 81-year-old Democrat mentioned his “predecessor” 13 times, whom he is almost guaranteed to face again in the November presidential election. .

>> READ ALSO -

 Trump ready to debate with Biden “anywhere, anytime”

Without ever naming him, he particularly accused the 77-year-old Republican of "submitting" to Russian President Vladimir Putin and of putting American democracy in "danger."

Donald Trump, who increased his inflammatory statements during his campaign, denounced, on his Truth social network, an “angry, divisive and hateful speech”.

Responding with animation and even with relish to the invectives of a few Trumpist elected officials, Joe Biden may also have calmed, for a time, the persistent doubts of voters about his physical and mental endurance.

“Four more years!”

“At my age, some things become clearer than ever,” he said, promising to defend “honesty, moral strength, dignity, equality.”

“And now someone of my age is telling another story, that of an America turned towards resentment, vengeance and revenge,” said the president, whose speech was punctuated by ovations and the “Four more years! Four more years!”

elected officials from his camp.

Donald Trump, surrounded by legal proceedings, has promised several times to take “revenge”, he who has never acknowledged his defeat in 2020.

Faced with the rhetoric of the Republican's "decline", Joe Biden boasted of having presided over the "greatest rebound" that America has known, after a Covid-19 pandemic which had brought the world's largest economy to its knees .

This outlines “a future full of promise”, according to the American president.

“The question for our country is not our age, it is the age of our ideas. Hate, anger, revenge, resentment are the oldest ideas there is,” he said. he proclaimed.

Economy and abortion

He pledged never to “demonize” migrants like his predecessor, and praised American economic prosperity, “the envy of the entire world.”

Joe Biden criticized Donald Trump's proximity to the NRA, the powerful gun lobby, when he wants to ban semi-automatic rifles.

>> READ ALSO - 

United States: who will Nikki Haley's supporters vote for, after her big defeat in the primaries?

He promised to "restore" protection throughout the country for the right to abortion, dynamited by the ultra-conservative Supreme Court reconstituted by the Republican, and to tax multinationals like billionaires more.

All these promises imply not only winning the presidential election, but also regaining, and largely, control of Congress during the legislative elections that accompany it.

In terms of foreign policy, Joe Biden also wanted to distinguish himself from his “predecessor”.

Putin and Gaza

Donald Trump "told Putin 'do what you want.' That's a quote, a former president actually said that, submitting to a Russian leader. I think it's outrageous. It's dangerous, and This is unacceptable!”, condemned the democrat, assuring that he would “never bend”.

Concerning the war in Gaza, the American president spoke, at greater length than he had ever done so far, of the suffering of Palestinian civilians.

He warned Israel that humanitarian aid "cannot be a secondary consideration or a bargaining chip."

To reach the Capitol, the American president took an extended route to avoid groups of demonstrators demanding a ceasefire.

Joe Biden and Donald Trump crushed all competition in the primaries.

American voters, who have little desire to do so, will have to choose between one or the other on November 5, unless there is a general surprise.

If the Democrat stumbles over the question of his age, his rival must juggle a busy legal schedule: no fewer than four criminal charges.