President Joe Biden kicked off the 2024 election season in Montgomery County, one day ahead of the third anniversary of the January 6 Capitol Insurrection.

President Joe Biden kicked off the 2024 election season in Montgomery County, one day ahead of the third anniversary of the January 6 Capitol Insurrection.

The president on Friday characterized the race as a battle for American democracy and wasted little time going after his expected November rival, Former President Donald Trump.

“Whether democracy is still America’s sacred cause is what the 2024 election is all about,” Biden said. “The choice is clear. Donald Trump’s campaign is about him, not America, not you. Donald Trump’s campaign is obsessed with the past, not the future. He’s willing to sacrifice our democracy to put himself in power. Our campaign is different.”

The location of Friday’s speech was meant to emphasize Biden’s message, just 20 miles from historic Valley Forge. But it also has political implications for the president.

“Philadelphia and southeast PA is essential to Biden in 2024,” Lauren Cristella, president of the Committee of Seventy said.

In 2020, Biden narrowly won Pennsylvania but ran up the score in the Philadelphia five-county area securing 764,000 more votes than Trump.

Biden also ramped up turnout earning 190,000 more votes in the area than Hillary Clinton in 2016.

But recreating that turnout could be hard for Biden, with lagging approval numbers and a lack of enthusiasm about the election in general.

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“Voter apathy is definitely a big issue. Even just anecdotally, conversations I’ve had recently, people just saying ‘I’m not ready for the texts. I don’t want to see all the ads. I just don’t want to pay attention to any of it,'” Cristella said.

Cristella said that apathy applies to both sides, and Trump has had his own issues heading into the election year.

Despite polls showing his firm grip on the Republican field, Trump faces a slew of legal battles and a Supreme Court fight over whether he can be blocked from the ballot.

RELATED: Pennsylvania’s top election official says he has no authority to remove Trump from ballot

The ever-controversial Trump being front and center once again could also be a factor.

“It’s certainly going to be in people’s faces a bit more, and we’ll see what people’s appetite for that brand of politics is,” Cristella said.

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Trump isn’t slated to visit Pennsylvania anytime soon as he focuses on early-voting Iowa. Meanwhile, Biden will travel to South Carolina on Monday.

Biden is expected to lay out then-President Donald Trump’s role in the insurrection, as a mob of the Republican’s supporters overran the Capitol.

President Joe Biden warned Friday that Donald Trump’s efforts to retake the White House in 2024 pose a grave threat to the country, the day before the third anniversary of the violent riot at the U.S. Capitol by then-President Trump’s supporters aiming to keep him in power.

Speaking near Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, where George Washington and the Continental Army spent a bleak winter nearly 250 years ago, Biden said that Jan. 6 2021, marked a moment where “we nearly lost America — lost it all.” He said the presidential race — a likely rematch with Trump, who is the far and away GOP frontrunner — is “all about” whether American democracy will survive.

The speech, the president’s first political event of the election year, was intended to clarify the expected choice for voters this fall. Biden, who reentered political life because he felt he was best capable of defeating Trump in 2020, believes focusing on defending democracy to be central for persuading voters to reject Trump once again.

“We all know who Donald Trump is,” Biden said. “The question we have to answer is who are we?”

Biden, laid out Trump’s role in the Capitol attack, as a mob of the Republican’s supporters overran the building while lawmakers were counting Electoral College votes that certified Democrat Biden’s win. More than 100 police officers were bloodied, beaten and attacked by the rioters who overwhelmed authorities to break into the building.

“What’s Trump done? He’s called these insurrectionists ‘patriots,’” Biden said, “and he promised to pardon them if he returns to office.” He excoriated Trump for “glorifying” rather than condemning political violence

At least nine people who were at the Capitol that day died during or after the rioting, including several officers who died of suicide, a woman who was shot and killed by police as she tried to break into the House chamber, and three other Trump supporters who authorities said suffered medical emergencies.

Biden said that by “trying to rewrite the facts of Jan. 6, Trump is trying to steal history the same way he tried to steal the election.”

Trump, who faces 91 criminal charges stemming from his efforts to overturn his loss to Biden and three other felony cases, argues that Biden and top Democrats are themselves seeking to undermine democracy by using the legal system to thwart the campaign of his chief rival. The Supreme Court on Friday agreed to decide whether Trump could be kept off the ballot because of his efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss.

Speaking in Iowa Friday, Trump accused Biden of “abusing George Washington’s legacy” to attack him and his supporters, adding his own dire warning about the stakes in the campaign, saying, “This election is your last chance to save America.”

Biden, in his remarks, seized on Trump’s grievances and his pledges to get retribution on his political enemies.

“Donald Trump’s campaign is about him,” Biden said. “Not America. Not you. Donald Trump’s campaign is obsessed with the past, not the future.”

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He added: “There’s no confusion about who Trump is or what he intends to do.”

Before his remarks, Biden, joined by his wife Jill, participated in a wreath laying ceremony at Valley Forge National Arch, which honors the troops who camped there from December 1777 to June 1778. He also toured the home that served as Washington’s headquarters.

Biden invoked Washington’s decision to resign his commission as the leader of the Continental Army after American independence was won — and the painting commemorating that moment that resides in the Capitol Rotunda — to cast Trump as unworthy of Washington’s legacy.

“He could have held onto that power as long as he wanted,” Biden said of Washington. “But that wasn’t the America he and the American troops of Valley Forge had fought for. In America, our leaders don’t hold on to power relentlessly. Our leaders return power to the people – willingly.”

Although the chaos of Jan. 6 came down on members of both political parties, it is being remembered in a largely polarized fashion now, like other aspects of political life in a divided country.

In the days after the attack, 52% of U.S. adults said Trump bore a lot of responsibility for Jan. 6, according to the Pew Research Center. By early 2022, that had declined to 43%. The number of Americans who said Trump bore no responsibility increased from 24% in 2021 to 32% in 2022.

A Washington Post-University of Maryland poll released this week found that about 7 in 10 Republicans say too much is being made of the attack. Just 18% of GOP supporters say that protesters who entered the Capitol were “mostly violent,” down from 26% in 2021, while 77% of Democrats and 54% of independents say the protesters were mostly violent, essentially unchanged from 2021.

Biden said that “politics, fear, money” have led many Republicans to abandon their criticism of Trump after the Jan. 6 attack.

“These MAGA voices who know the truth about Trump and Jan. 6th have abandoned the truth and abandoned democracy,” Biden said. “They’ve made their choice. Now the rest of us – Democrats, Independents, mainstream Republicans – we have to make our choice. I know mine. And I believe I know America’s.”

Biden has frequently invoked the dangers of Jan. 6 since his 2021 inauguration on the same Capitol steps where police officers were struggling to battle back rioters just two weeks earlier. On the first anniversary of the Jan. 6 attack, Biden had stood in the Capitol’s Statuary Hall, a historic spot where the House of Representatives used to meet before the Civil War. On Jan. 6, rioters filled the area, some looking for lawmakers who had run for cover.

“They weren’t looking to uphold the will of the people,” Biden said of the rioters. “They were looking to deny the will of the people.”

On the second anniversary, Biden presented the nation’s second highest civilian award to 12 people who were involved in defending the Capitol during the attack.

Friday’s appearance included supporters and young people motivated by the attack to get involved in politics, campaign advisers said.