President Donald Trump’s campaign trolled Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden’s campaign by reserving the website and Twitter names of Biden’s outreach effort to attract Latino voters.
Biden on Wednesday announced “Todos Con Biden,” translated as “All with Biden” in Spanish, the name of a national network of supporters working to promote the former vice president among Latino voters. However, his campaign neglected to snatch up the domain or Twitter handle that would bear the same slogan.
“We are Latinos who will unite and mobilize to re-elect President Donald J. Trump. Another four years means more jobs, better education for our kids, and freedom from big government,” the landing page of Trump’s website reads.
Trump’s campaign team also took up the Twitter handle @TodosConBiden and has been posting videos of Biden’s public gaffes and content related to Biden’s words and actions related to the border wall and immigration.
Biden’s campaign told ABC News that it was “no surprise” regarding the trolling. A spokeswoman said that such a move seeks to “take attention away from this president’s appalling record of separating families and using immigrants as scapegoats, tormenting hatred and white supremacy, and trying to take away health care from millions of Americans who need it.”
Deputy Communications Director for Trump 2020 Erin Perrine told ABC News: “The Biden campaign continues to be inept with a deeply flawed candidate. Latinos are thriving under President Trump, and now thanks to the Biden camp, people can find out more about that success at www.todosconbiden.com.”
Trump often touts the record-low unemployment rates among Hispanics and others, including African-Americans and Asians, at his “Make America Great Again” campaign rallies.
Hispanic men over the age of 20 enjoyed an unemployment rate of just 3 percent, on par with white men over 20 at 2.9 percent.
In the past 16 months, the record-low unemployment rate has been rewritten six times for Hispanics since June 2018, when it hit 4.6 percent, breaking a record set in 2006.
The poverty rate among Hispanics in the United States fell to a historic low of 18.3 percent in 2017, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau—the lowest rate recorded since the agency first started tracking the data in 1972.