Scott Walker Supports Donald Trump's Visit To Kenosha Suggesting People In The City Want To Thank Him
Former Republican Gov. Scott Walker thinks Donald Trump should visit Wisconsin, ignoring the Democratic governor Tony Ever's claim that the president's visit would lead to further unrest. Despite the concerns raised by the governor, the Republican suggests that the people in Kenosha are waiting with bated breath to thank the president.
Walker said he thinks Trump should absolutely visit Wisconsin, during an interview on Bill Hemmer Reports on Monday. Evers sent a letter to the president over the weekend, informing him that he and others were worried that his presence would hinder the city's healing process, and further delay their efforts to defeat division and move forward together.
Walkers, on the other hand, claimed that the president offered much-needed leadership and got things under control, in collaboration with local authorities. He went on to suggest that the people in Kenosha are restlessly waiting to express their gratitude for his efforts, and want to talk to him about how he could guide them to rebuild the great city moving forward.
Aside from that, Walker slammed the mayor of Portland who blamed Trump for the outbreak of deadly violence in his city last month. Walker went on to accuse liberals and Democrats of repeatedly failing in several cities including Chicago, Seattle, Portland, Madison in Wisconsin, New York, and in Kenosha, pointing out that Joe Biden and his running mate Kamala Harris failed to even to talk about this at the DNC.
He also claimed that things got under control in Wisconsin only after Trump provided additional law enforcement help in the state, suggesting that these types of unrests can outbreak anywhere else in the country. Walker said controlling such an outbreak requires mayors and governors to keep the politics aside and support the people that they have been elected to represent, Fox News reported.
He noted that Biden remained tight-lipped about the rioters in the state, watching three nights of violence that claimed two lives without saying a word. He attributed Biden's silence to a change in the polling and focus groups, suggesting that is why he brought up the same subject during his address in Pittsburgh.
"He knows he's in trouble," Walker said. During his speech on Monday, Biden suggested that Trump couldn't quell the violence because he has fomented it for years. He made these remarks in the Steel City, during which he criticized the violence and looting in the wake of the shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha.