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Biden was rude to reporters while speaking at the White House

Fox News: Biden swaggered at reporters during White House interaction
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Photo: Global Look Press/Hu Yousong
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U.S. President Joe Biden made rude remarks at the White House on Sunday, January 5, while responding to a question from reporters about the rising immigration in the country.

"I may be the oldest president, but I've known more world leaders than any of you have ever met in your whole damn life!" - Biden said, his words quoted by Fox News Channel.

This statement followed the American leader's response to the journalists' question about the plans for the migration policy of the US Republican President-elect Donald Trump. In particular, media employees mentioned that the politician may cancel the law on granting citizenship at birth to the children of migrants.

Biden in response called the actions of the elected president a threat to democracy and pointed out that the USA is a multinational country, to which a lot of people have always come, and this is how the connection of the state with the rest of the world is manifested. The incumbent president emphasized that by the time he took office, the number of migrants entering the States had decreased. In addition, Biden said that he sought to increase the number of Secret Service officers at the border with Mexico.

Earlier, on September 13, Biden, at a press conference with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, silenced a reporter and reprimanded him for violating White House protocol.

Later, on December 28, the US newspaper The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported that Trump's team could use military bases, the army and airplanes to deport illegal migrants from the US. According to the publication's sources, the president-elect plans to declare a state of emergency on immigration and expel illegals en masse on the first day after the inauguration.

Former United States ambassador to Switzerland Edward McMullen said on Nov. 7 that the Republican was looking for the most competent people to appoint to his administration to fight uncontrolled migration and execute strategies on the economy and foreign policy.

Trump, at the time still a presidential candidate, said in his final speech before the Nov. 5 election that migrants were the reason the U.S. was an occupied country. He promised to "save" every city and town that had been "invaded and conquered."

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