WASHINGTON (AP) - The Latest on the 2020 presidential campaign (all times local):
5:30 p.m.
Joe Biden plans to meet with family members of Jacob Blake, the Black man from Wisconsin who was shot by police on Aug. 23.
The Democratic presidential nominee plans to travel to Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Thursday to meet with community members. A campaign spokesman says Biden also plans to meet with members of the Blake family.
When President Donald Trump was in Kenosha on Tuesday, he didn’t meet with Blake’s family. He focused on thanking members of law enforcement for how they handled the violence in the nights after Blake’s shooting. Trump also toured damaged buildings and talked with owners who were affected by the destruction.
Biden’s visit will be his first campaign stop in Wisconsin in nearly two years.
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3:35 p.m.
As thunderstorms threatened, President Donald Trump sped through a V-J Day speech during a visit Wednesday to Wilmington, North Carolina.
The president trumpeted American strength but also took some swipes at Democratic rival Joe Biden.
Trump appeared before a World War II-era battleship to declare the port city of Wilmington a World War II “Heritage City.” He pointed to a bolt of lightning and said it was God saluting the event.
He honored war veterans, including 97-year-old Hershel “Woody” Williams, the sole surviving Marine from the war to receive the Medal of Honor. The West Virginia native fought in the Battle of Iowa Jima in the Pacific.
Williams traveled to North Carolina with the president aboard Air Force One.
Trump said the veteran is “100 percent sharp.”
And then referring to Biden, Trump said: “I know a 78-year-old who’s not so sharp.”
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2:15 p.m.
Joe Biden says the police officer in Kenosha, Wisconsin, who shot Jacob Blake in the back on Aug. 23, leaving the 29-year-old Black man paralyzed, “needs to be charged.”
The comment by the Democratic presidential nominee came after he was asked about remarks by his running mate, California Sen. Kamala Harris, that the officer should face charges.
Biden also says officers should be charged in the shooting death of Breonna Taylor in Kentucky.
Biden plans a visit Thursday to Kenosha, where there have been multiple nights of unrest following Blake’s shooting. Biden says there have been “overwhelming requests” that he come to the city.
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1:50 p.m.
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden says the issue of safely reopening America’s schools is a “national emergency.”
He says that if he were president, he’d have the Federal Emergency Management Agency guarantee access to disaster relief for K-12 schools.
Biden says during a campaign event in Wilmington, Delaware, that President Donald Trump “still doesn’t have a real plan” to handle the coronavirus pandemic.
The Democrat says “this is an emergency and Donald Trump and his FEMA should treat it as one.”
FEMA officials said this week that the agency would no longer pay for cloth face masks and disinfectant in schools.
Biden says that as president, he’d declare the issue of school reopening a national emergency and direct FEMA to authorize access to emergency assistance for K-12 schools.
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1:40 p.m.
Both President Donald Trump and Democratic challenger Joe Biden will commemorate the 19th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks in rural Pennsylvania where one of the hijacked planes crashed in a field.
It’s not immediately clear whether their visits to the memorial in Shanksville will overlap. But it probably will be the closest that the candidates have been to one another in months.
The National Park Service, which co-hosts the annual memorial event, is planning an abbreviated ceremony this year to minimize the spread of the coronavirus. The agency plans a 20-minute “Moment of Remembrance” set to begin at 9:45 a.m., without a keynote speaker or musical guests. The name of each passengers and crew member from Flight 93 will be read aloud with the ringing of the “Bells of Remembrance,” according to the agency’s website.
A White House spokesman says the president and first lady Melania Trump would visit the site “to honor and remember the lives lost” on Sept. 11, 2001. Trump is expected to speak, although the White House and Park Service aren’t immediately reconciling that with the planned commemoration.
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12:30 p.m.
The nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates has announced the moderators for the upcoming debates between President Donald Trump and Democratic challenger Joe Biden.
Chris Wallace of Fox News will moderate the first debate on Sept. 29 in Cleveland.
Steve Scully of C-SPAN will moderate the “town meeting” debate on Oct. 15 in Miami.
NBC’s Kristen Welker will moderate the final debate on Oct. 22 in Nashville, Tennessee.
The commission also says USA Today’s Susan Page will moderate the vice presidential debate on Oct. 7 in Salt Lake City with Vice President Mike Pence and Democrat Kamala Harris.
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11:26 a.m.
Joe Biden raised at least $360 million for his election effort in August, a record-shattering sum that will give the Democratic presidential nominee ample resources to compete in the final two months of the campaign.
That’s according to a person with direct knowledge of the fundraising effort who requested anonymity to discuss internal campaign details.
Biden’s campaign declined to comment. President Donald Trump has not yet released his fundraising figure for the month.
The money was raised in conjunction with the Democratic National Committee. While candidates face a $2,800 limit, Biden can raise far more than that through a joint fundraising committee with the DNC that allows him to collect individual checks worth upward of $600,000.
-Associated Press writer Brian Slodysko.
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11 a.m.
Joe Biden is traveling to Wisconsin on Thursday as the swing state becomes the focal point for a political debate over violence at protests there and elsewhere in the nation.
Biden’s campaign says the Democratic presidential nominee plans to travel to the state with his wife, Jill.
The visit comes two days after President Donald Trump toured Kenosha, Wisconsin, the site of recent protests following the shooting of an unarmed Black man, Jacob Blake, left paralyzed after being shot in the back seven times by an officer. Trump used the opportunity to drive home his campaign message of “law and order” by expressing support for law enforcement and blaming “domestic terror” for the looting and arson that’s taken place in the city during the protests.
The president and his allies are hoping to use the violence at recent protests against Biden, and have charged that if the Democrat were elected such incidents would become the norm.
Biden has repeatedly denounced the protest violence but has expressed sympathy for protesters’ concerns over systemic racism and a commitment to enact police reforms if elected.
It will be Biden’s first visit to Wisconsin in nearly two years. It comes after Biden decided against accepting the party’s nomination in Milwaukee, where the Democratic National Convention was to have been held. Instead, the convention was mostly virtual amid the coronavirus pandemic.
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By Bill Barrow.
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