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Joe Biden : et de trois pour Cincinnati !

Un peu plus de six mois après son investiture en tant que président et dix mois comme candidat, Joe Biden revient à Cincinnati, une des principales villes de l’Ohio au cœur de l’un des rares comtés où il a obtenu la majorité en novembre dernier. Il répondra aux questions de Don Lemon, animateur de la chaine CNN et répondra aux questions que se posent aujourd’hui les Américains dans un meeting de type town hall à la Mount St. Joseph University : la reprise de l’épidémie et la vaccination, l’inflation, la reprise économique, la polarisation de plus en plus forte, le projet de loi sur l’infrastructure à 3 500 milliards de dollars, le droit à l’avortement remis de plus en plus en question. Bref, les questions ne manquent pas.

Aux élections de 2020, Donald Trump a eu une large majorité en Ohio. La carte est de l’état est à l’image du pays : les centres urbains ont voté plutôt pour Joe Biden, les zones rurales pour le candidat républicain.

De nombreux présidents ont fait le déplacement dans cette ville aux confins de trois états : l’Ohio, la Kentucky et l’Indiana.

NOVEMBER 4, 1908: William Howard Taft, the only Cincinnatian to occupy the White House and a Woodward graduate, addresses a hometown crowd at the laying of the cornerstone for a new Woodward High School.

NOVEMBER 1, 1952: A beaming President Harry S. Truman is shown with Norwood’s Mayor R. Edward Tepe, center, and Michael V. DiSalle, Democratic candidate for Senator, in a limousine in front of the terminal just before leading a motorcade to the Netherland Plaza.

JUNE 12, 1961: Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower rides in a motorcade in Cincinnati. 
The Enquirer/Fred Straub

OCTOBER 5, 1962: President John F. Kennedy, rides down Fifth Street past the RKO ALbee Theater. At his side in the open limousine is Ohio’s governor, Michael V. DiSalle.
The Enquirer/Fred Straub

OCTOBER 17, 1964: President Lyndon B.  Johnson addresses the crowd in Government Square in Cincinnati.
The Enquirer/Herb Heise

JULY 14, 1970: Sidewalk Salutations: President Nixon went into the crowds lining his path into the Hotel Netherland-Hilton to shake hands and exchange words of greetings with exuberant Cincinnatians. Behind the Chief Executive, who came to Cincinnati for the All-Star Baseball Game, is U.S. Rep. Robert Taft Jr., (R, Cincinnati), Republican candidate for the Senate in November.
The Enquirer/Dick Swaim

OCTOBER 3, 1985: President Ronald Reagan is served lunch by Edith Muckle at the Ivorydale Manufacturing Plant in Cincinnati, Ohio. President Reagan visited the plant during a visit to promote his tax package.
AP Photo/Scott Applewhite

JANUARY 12, 1990: President George H.W. Bush shares lunch with John Pepper, president of Procter & Gamble Co.
The Enquirer/Gary Landers

MARCH 23, 1996: President Bill Clinton reaches into the crowd of well-wishers gathered outside the Maisonette restaurant. Clinton delighted the crowd stepping out from the $10,000-a-plate dinner to meet with the regular folks on the street.
The Enquirer/Michael E. Keating

JANUARY 8, 2002: Sarah Alf, top right, corner, listens as President George W. Bush speaks to the audience at Hamilton High School just before the official signing of the education reform bill, No Child Left Behind, Tuesday morning in Hamilton.
The Enquirer/Gary Landers

SEPTEMBER 22, 2011: President Barack Obama spoke to officials and supporters with the Brent Spence Bridge as backdrop. Obama mentioned the bridge in his jobs speech to Congress.
The Enquirer/Michael E. Keating

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