The White House confirmed that President Joe Biden won’t deliver a live address to mark the 20th anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on Saturday.
Biden is traveling to three memorial sites in Pennsylvania, New York, and near Washington D.C. to mark the anniversary of the terrorist attacks
“The events are not set up that way,” White House press secretary Psaki said when asked Thursday about whether the president will deliver an address.
Instead, she said, Biden will release a video “in advance that will be available” on Saturday.
Biden is “attending an event with several other former presidents and of course former prominent officials in the morning in New York, in order to get to all of the events it just doesn’t work that way,” Psaki continued.
According to a schedule provided by the White House, the president will travel to the World Trade Center memorial in Lower Manhattan, the Pentagon Memorial in Virginia, and the Flight 93 memorial in Pennsylvania.
In recent weeks, Biden has faced blowback from even members of the Democratic Party for his administration’s handling of the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan. Some accused the administration of turning a blind eye to Americans who remain trapped inside the country after it was taken over by the Taliban, and others have said that the optics around the military pullout and chaotic evacuation damaged the United States’ standing among its allies.
Last year on Sept. 11, Biden appeared at a memorial event in New York City along with former Vice President Mike Pence, former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, and others.