Taking the stage to chants of “Run Joe Run” in Youngstown, Ohio, Monday, former Vice President Joe Biden scolded President Donald Trump’s response to the attack in Pittsburgh while setting the stakes of the midterms for Ohio voters.
“Words matter,” Biden said. “Words from our leaders matter.”
Biden said the country feels “precariously close” to the scene described by the Irish poet W.B. Yeats in “The Second Coming,” quoting the warning that the “centre cannot hold.”
“It’s on our leaders to set the tone, to dial down the temperature,” to add “dignity to our national dialogue,” he said.
“This election is bigger than politics as usual,” he said. “This is about who we are as Americans.”
(MORE: Florida man Cesar Sayoc arrested in 'insidious' mail bomb spree as more packages are found)Biden, who frequently met with world leaders as a senior senator and as vice president, warned of dire consequences if Democrats don’t show up to vote next week.
“If we don’t turn things around there won’t be a NATO in five years,” he predicted.
(MORE: ‘Middle-class’ Joe Biden hits the trail for Dems, but will it win back working-class voters?)In a moment of reflection, he also sized up how own party: “Americans know who the Republican Party is but they’re not sure what the Democratic Party is.”
Biden appeared Monday with local Democratic Rep. Tim Ryan and gubernatorial candidate Rich Cordray - who knew his son Beau while both men served as state attorneys general.
“We need men and women of character. You put them in office, we will take back the world!” he said at the end of his remarks, setting off another round of “Run Joe Run!” cheers.