Jill Biden, the wife of Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden, campaigned in Minneapolis and St. Paul on Saturday, telling voters her husband will serve all Americans and has a plan to address the COVID-19 pandemic if elected.
Biden ended the day addressing about 50 guests at a Minnesota Women for Biden event in Minneapolis, where she gave a speech that touched broadly on key themes without delivering on specific policy details.
She did not take questions from the guests, nor did she take questions from the media at any point during her public visit, which began about 2 p.m. and ended about three hours later.
"Joe has spent his entire career listening and bringing people together," Biden said at the last event at Utepils Brewery. "He will be a president for all Americans."
Minnesota Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan, Democratic U.S. Sen. Tina Smith and DFLer Esther Agbaje, who is running for state representative, warmed up the crowd, which stood socially distanced in the brewery's courtyard. They touted Biden and Harris' merits and called on women to turn the tide in this fall's election.
"Women, our voices are strong, but only if we use them," Smith said. "Are you ready to use them in this election?"
In her wide-ranging speech, Biden commended Minnesota's female politicians for breaking barriers, singling out the accomplishments of U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar. She wished President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump a "quick and full" recovery from COVID-19 and acknowledged that the pandemic has plunged the country into "chaos" and wrapped Americans in a "magnitude of loss."
She rallied her guests by highlighting the heart and strength of Americans, drawing parallels to her husband, who went back to work, she said, four days after they buried their eldest son, Beau Biden, after he died of cancer in 2015.