
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden speaks at a campaign event Sept. 14, 2020 (Video screenshot)
Democrat presidential nominee Joe Biden has added to a long list of gaffes for this election campaign – and his career – with a reference to his desire not to have "four more years" of "George."
It was during a virtual event over the weekend that he said, "This is the most consequential election in a long long time, and the character of the country in my view is literally on the ballot. What kind of country are we going to be four more years of George, uh, George, uh…"
Jill Biden, sitting beside him, appears to mutter "Trump" under her breath.
It didn't take long for President Donald Trump to notice, issuing a statement on social media, "Joe Biden called me George yesterday. Couldn't remember my name. Got some help from the anchor to get him through the interview. The Fake News Cartel is working overtime to cover it up!"
Speculation was that Biden was thinking of George W. Bush, president from 2001-09, or perhaps George H.W. who was in office from 1989-93.
The Daily Mail immediately compiled a list of Biden's misstatements just during this election season:
August 8, 2019: He tells the Asian & Latino Coalition in Des Moines, Iowa, that "poor kids are just as bright and just as talented as white kids."
August 9: Biden, asked about genders, affirms, "There are at least three."
August 10: Biden claims he was vice president during the Parkland school shooting, even though it occurred in 2018.
August 24: While speaking in Keene, New Hampshire, Biden states, "I love this place. Look, what's not to like about Vermont in terms of the beauty of it?"
September 2: Biden told Iowans, "The idea that we don't have elimination of assault type weapons, magazines that can hold multiple bullets in them, it's absolutely mindless." By definition a magazine holds multiple rounds.
September 25: Biden couldn't remember the name of Barack Obama's last nominee to the Supreme Court, telling a television show: "Back when, when they were holding up before Trump got elected, they were holding up, uh, um, the nomination of the president put forward for the Supreme Court." Jimmy Kimmel finished his thought for him, "Merrick Garland."
November 2: Biden claims he's in Ohio when actually he's in Iowa.
November 20: Biden forgot, during a primary debate, about Kamala Harris, now his VP selection. He said, "I have more people supporting me in the black community that have vouched for me because they know who I am… The only African-American woman who's ever been elected to the United States Senate." Harris said that wasn't true. "The other one is here!"
December 5: He turns abusive, calling a voter a "damn liar" and "fat" for asking a question about his son.
"I'm not sedentary. You want to check my shape, let's do push ups together, let's run, let's do whatever you want to do, let's take an IQ test," Biden sputtered. "But look, fat, here's the deal."
Then on February 9, 2020, he called a 21-year-old woman a "lying, dog-faced pony soldier."
February 24: In South Carolina he claimed to be running "for the United States Senate."
In the same speech he said he worked with Chinese leader "Deng Xiaoping" on the Paris climate deal, even though Deng died in 1997.
February 25: He said "150 million" people had been killed by guns since 2007.
March 1: He calls Fox News talk show host Chris Wallace "Chuck."
March 3: He got mixed up about Super Tuesday, calling it "Super Thursday."
His version of the Declaration of Independence, during that speech, included: "We hold these truths to be self-evident. All men and women are created, by the, you know, you know the thing."
March 4: He confused his wife with his sister on stage at a rally in California.
March 9: He said he hoped the 2020 election would let Democrats "win back the House." They already have a majority in the House.
March 10: Biden said he would ban the "AR-14" rifle. It's actually the AR-15.
April: He apparently forgot Barack Obama's name when talking about Crimea. He called him "president … my boss."
May 22: Biden tells radio talk show entertainer Charlmagne the God that "if you have a problem figuring out whether you're for me or Trump, then you ain't black."
August 31: He descended into verbal soup in Pittsburgh, explaining: "COVID has taken this year, just since the outbreak, has taken more than 100 years. Look, here's, the lives, it's just, it's uh, I mean think about it. More lives this year than any other year for the past 100 years."
September 15: He claimed rich are able to stay home during health lockdowns because "some black woman was able to stack the grocery shelf."
September 20: Biden said that 200 million Americans have died of coronavirus. Combined with his claim about 150 million dead from guns, the death toll is more than the population of the U.S.
September 21: He changed the Pledge of Allegiance to say: "I pledge allegiance to the United States of America, one nation, indivisible, under God, for real."
October 12: He appeared to forget that he ran against Mitt Romney in 2012. He said, "I got in trouble when we were running against that senator who was a Mormon, the governor."
October 24: He says during an online appearance: "We have put together, I think, the most extensive and inclusive voter fraud organization in the history of American politics."
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