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The assassination attempt on Donald Trump has forced Joe Biden’s campaign to dial down its attacks for now, with the US president admitting he was wrong to say his rival should be put in the “bullseye.”
But Biden has more broadly defended his rhetoric describing his Republican predecessor as a threat to democracy, and is signaling he will not hold back for long while criticizing the man he beat in 2020.
When Biden urged Americans to “lower the temperature” in a rare Oval Office speech on Sunday after the Trump shooting, it seemed it could deprive him of his core attack line.