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Biden goes off script — again — causing a distraction for Harris in campaign's home stretch

President Joe Biden speaks during an event about his Investing in America agenda, Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2024, at the Dundalk Marine Terminal in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Daniel Kucin Jr.) (Daniel Kucin Jr., Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden was very publicly trying to rein himself in. “Don’t get going, Joe. Slow up,” he advised himself during a speech where he was criticizing Republican Donald Trump.

That was Tuesday afternoon. But by evening, Biden didn’t take his own advice, and now his off-the-cuff remark on a Zoom campaign call has created a new headache for Democratic nominee Kamala Harris less than a week before Election Day.

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It's not the first time Biden has created problems by going off script. But the latest incident served as a particular distraction just as Harris was trying to deliver a high-profile "closing argument' for her campaign emphasizing the need to unify the country after Trump's divisiveness.

Shortly before Harris was about to speak Tuesday night to a massive rally crowd on a stretch of grass not far from the White House, Biden got on a call with a Hispanic advocacy group and commented on a comic's recent insults at a Trump rally where he referred to Puerto Rico as a “floating island of garbage.”

Biden said: “The only garbage I see floating out there is his supporters.”

The president quickly sent out a social media post seeking to clarify his remarks about Trump. “His demonization of Latinos is unconscionable,” Biden said. “That’s all I meant to say.”

But his sharp words were quickly seized on by Republicans who said he was denigrating Trump supporters.

Biden, who withdrew from the presidential race in July following a disastrous debate performance and near mutiny within his own party, has been largely absent from the campaign trail since then. But he's intent on maintaining his relevance and cementing his legacy, and he has stepped up his political activity in recent days even as many in his party appear to be keeping their distance from him.

Harris, for her part, has been trying to differentiate herself from her unpopular boss. And she has been actively courting Republican voters.

Biden's remarks prompted Harris on Tuesday to say that she strongly disagreed "with any criticism of people based on who they vote for."

Her aides were already frustrated by another Biden gaffe last week, when, speaking about Trump, he told Democratic campaign workers in New Hampshire that “We got to lock him up."

He quickly caught himself to add: “Politically lock him up. Lock him out. That’s what we have to do.”

Harris supporters often chant “lock him up” at her rallies, a reference to Trump's many ongoing criminal cases but also a nod to his own 2016 campaign against Hillary Clinton, when his supporters chanted “lock her up."

Harris always quiets the chant, telling the crowd: “The courts will take care of that. We’ll take care of November.”

Biden has also stepped on her events at times. He made a surprise address to reporters in the White House briefing room just as Harris was about to go onstage in Michigan, and spoke from the Oval Office on Hurricane Helene, just Harris scrapped campaign events in Las Vegas to hurry back to Washington for a briefing at the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

He's also slipped up on who is running for president.

“We got a lot more work to do, Kamala and I — Kamala — Kamala does," Biden said last weekend.

In Baltimore on Tuesday, Biden was holding an infrastructure event at the port when he strayed into criticizing Trump and glancingly brought up the Puerto Rico comments made at the rally.

He pointed to new funding to "modernize ports in 27 different states and territories, from Pennsylvania, Georgia, Michigan and beyond — including, yes, Puerto Rico.”

Then he said of Trump: “I'd like to take that guy for a swim out there."