Jill Biden: We do not agree on everything, it is not necessary, we can still love and respect each other
Sky world news/jill Biden/Her energy and upbeat speech won over the campaign, in which Jill Biden was tirelessly involved with one message: Only her husband Joe will be able to unite an extremely divided country by entering the White House.
With a vigor sometimes seeming to exceed that of her husband, who has long limited his movements, this 69-year-old teacher has increased visits to key states, essential to the Democratic victory on November 3.
She calls on all Americans, "Democrats and Republicans, rural and urban," to come together to overcome political divisions, beat the pandemic and the economic crisis.
"We do not agree on everything, it is not necessary, we can still love and respect each other," she said in a speech the opposite of the diatribes of outgoing President Donald Trump.
It also shows a more intimate image of Joe Biden, whose life has been struck by "unimaginable tragedies".
Jill Biden tells in particular how the former vice-president of Barack Obama (2009-2017) found the strength to resume his activities at the White House, just days after the death of her son Beau, who died of cancer of the brain in 2015.
He learned to heal a family, and in the same way we heal a country: with love, understanding, small gestures of kindness, courage and unshakeable hope, she says, echoing the crises currently hitting the United States.
United. Joe and Jill Biden married in 1977, five years after a first tragedy, when a car crash took the senator's first wife and their young daughter.
Still young, his two surviving sons, Beau and Hunter, had themselves suggested their father marry Jill, Joe Biden recounted in memoirs, where he wrote: She brought me back to life.